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East Yaphank is a proposed station in the hamlet of East Yaphank, New York on the Main Line (Greenport Branch) of the Long Island Rail Road. The station would serve Brookhaven National Laboratory and would replace the existing Yaphank station .
Yaphank station was replaced by a second station building in 1875 that contained elaborate gingerbread woodwork. Before World War II, Yaphank station was known as the stop for the "Camp Siegfried Special", a train that took members of the German American Bund from parts of New York City to an infamous Hitler Youth camp known as Camp Siegfried. [5]
The six stations on the Main Line east of Ronkonkoma also see very limited week-round trains, and are often used for recreation rather than commuting. Jamaica is a major transfer station between branches, as it provides the interchange from the eastern Long Island stations to the western New York terminals and vice versa.
East Yaphank station; Elmhurst station (LIRR) S. Sunnyside station (New York City) This page was last edited on 23 December 2020, at 02:30 (UTC). ...
Yaphank (/ ˈ j æ p æ ŋ k /) is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Suffolk County, New York, United States. The population was 5,945 at the time of the 2010 census. [4] Yaphank is located in the south part of the Town of Brookhaven.
County Route 102 was a formerly proposed four-lane county road in Yaphank, that began along East Main Street east of CR 21 (Yaphank Avenue). Unlike the existing East Main Street, it was not intended to become Moriches–Middle Island Road and cross over the Long Island Expressway.
CR 21 in Yaphank: East Main Street Extension I-495 exit 68 / CR 46 in East Yaphank: Unbuilt route CR 103: CR 51 Cedar Swamp Road in Riverhead: CR 58 or I-495: Unbuilt route CR 104: 7.44 11.97 CR 80 in Quogue: Quogue-Riverhead Road & Riverleigh Avenue NY 24 / CR 63 / CR 94 in Riverside: Formerly NY 113: CR 104A: CR 80 in East Quogue
LIRR station: New York Avenue, Walt Whitman Road, Broad Hollow Road, Broadway (Amityville) Replaced the Huntington Railroad in 1919 and the Huntington Traction Company (present-day site of Walt Whitman Shops to Halesite) in 1927. Previously owned by Alert Coach Lines until 1985. Directly served SUNY Farmingdale and Walt Whitman Shops.