| The Malbone Street Wreck   
by Brian Cudahy
 Reviewed by Paul Matus  Page 2 
 The NarrativeCudahy starts 
      slowly in setting the scene of his story by describing the ordinary 
      events of November 1, 1918, a common literary device. The Great War is 
      near an end, the famous and deadly influenza epidemic of 1918 is in full 
      swing, an important election campaign is reaching its climax. He falls 
      into a little too much minutiae, 
      perhaps, as he tells us the times of the high and low tides off Governor's 
      Island. For a moment I suspected that the evening high tide would, in some 
      odd and unsuspected way, impact on our story--perhaps we would learn that 
      a ferryboat delayed by the inrushing tide would arrive late at nearby 
      Fulton Ferry, delaying a train that would make the Malbone Street train 
      late in turn ... but this didn't happen. I suppose I've simply read too 
      many old English novels.
 In the second 
      chapter, we learn some of the history of the Brighton Beach Line, the 
      route where the train would meet its fate. This does not bear too heavily 
      on the story, but it does explain how the deadly curve, the final 
      essential element in the unfortunate chain of events, came to 
      be.
 In chapter three, the story begins to attain 
      its focus, as Cudahy accurately describes the causes of the Brotherhood 
      of Locomotive Engineers strike without which the BRT would not have 
      been scrambling for motormen, even to the extent of sending an insufficiently 
      trained dispatcher out on the road at the controls of a train 
      full of rush hour passengers.
 We meet Edward 
      Luciano, the motorman of the ill-fated train, in the fourth chapter. 
      Cudahy describes his regular job, some of his training, and important 
      details of his personal life which may have contributed to his actions on 
      the Brighton Line that day. The motorman's name, in itself, is an issue in 
      the narrative, as different contemporary accounts give him a number of names, various 
      combinations of Edward, Anthony, Antonio for his given and middle names; 
      Lewis, Luciano or Luciana for his surname. Cudahy cites anti-Italian 
      prejudice as motivation for Luciano using the Anglicized version of his 
      surname, but he doesn't tell us whether Luciano was an immigrant or native 
      born, which may have had some bearing on this. He correctly tells us that 
      he was known as "Billy" Lewis to his friends, a note I've seen nowhere 
      else.
 At any rate, Edward Luciano was the name 
      under which the motorman was indicted, and perhaps that is the reason 
      Cudahy settled on that name.
 The fourth chapter describes 
      the events leading up to Luciano being assigned as motorman of the train, 
      and describes the route by which the train reached Park Row from its 
      origin at Kings Highway on the Culver Line. From Park Row, we get a 
      detailed description of the train's actions from 
            
                   
         the time it left Park Row via the Fulton 
      Street and Brighton Lines until it met its fate at Malbone 
      Street.
 This is perhaps 
      the most absorbing chapter of the book, in that Cudahy, with some 
      conjecture, creates a plausible picture of the ride, Luciano's actions, 
      and the grim results..
 Chapter five tells of 
      the immediate aftermath of the tragedy, the rescue effort and Cudahy's 
      idea of what Luciano did in the wake of the 
      accident.
 The following chapter takes 
      us through the legal proceedings that followed--the Kangaroo Court [my 
      characterization] assembled by the transit-hating Mayor Hylan and the 
      actual trial of the motorman and five officials of the BRT on charges of 
      manslaughter. It doesn't give away any great secret to reveal that all 
      were acquitted, a result which Cudahy attributes mainly to 
      prosecutorial incompetence, but which must also take into account the 
      inherent weaknesses of the case.
 The 
      Epilogue sums up "where they are now" or at least where they were in the 
      years following the accident--the fate of the BRT and its successor BMT and some 
      of its officials, the Brighton Line and the crash site, Hylan, Luciano and 
      even Malbone Street itself. As we conclude, Cudahy has told his story in an 
      economical 104 pages.
 
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