Gunther and His Railroad by 
      Morton Morris
Page 
      2
        The author, in 1886. Paul Matus 
Collection
 The author, in 1886. Paul Matus 
Collection
      The Transportation 
      Problem
      That was a problem that gave myself and my neighbors 
      of what is now Bath Beach, Ulmer Park and Coney island more food for 
      thought 35 years ago [from 1906] than it does today. Ulmer Park was then 
      called Guntherville; Bensonhurst was Locust Grove, and Benson Avenue and 
      Bay 18th Street was Wright's Corner station. other regular stops on, the 
      old Brooklyn, Bath and Coney Island Railroad, that ran between 25th Street 
      and Fifth Avenue to Coney Island, were: New Utrecht Avenue, now Van Pelt 
      Manor; The Gully, now 74th Street station; Kowenhoven's Lane, now 
      Homewood; Weir's Hill, now 62nd Street; and City Line, now called 39th 
      Street.
     Those were the regular 
      stops.
     Then there were many irregular 
      ones.
     But first something about the owner 
      and president of the road.
     The old Brooklyn, 
      Bath and Coney Island Railroad was the first ever run to Coney Island. it 
      was built by Charles L. Gunther.
     Mr. Gunther 
      was born February 7, 1822. His parents were German, his father having been 
      Christian G. Gunther, and for about fifty years was the leading fur 
      merchant of New York.
     He was educated at 
      Nazareth, Pa., and on returning to New York entered the Columbia Grammar 
      School. At an early age he was taken into the firm of C. C. Gunther & 
      Company, comprising his brothers and father.
     
      He was interested in politics and became a member of the Young Men's 
      Committee and cast his vote for Polk and Dallas, in 
      1844.
     He was one of the founders of the 
      Democratic Union Club.
     In the spring of 1863 
      he was elected a sachem of Tammany Hall, having two years previous to that 
      time been nominated for mayor, but defeated.
     
      In 1863 he ran again for mayor and was elected by a plurality of 7000. He 
      took his seat January 1, 1864.
     After his 
      retirement from the mayoralty, he devoted himself entirely to his private 
      affairs and was one of the first to recognize the great possibilities of 
      Coney Island. He built the first steam railroad to the beach, thereby 
      incurring the enmity of the old Dutch farmers of Gravesend and New 
      Utrecht. He also built a hotel at Coney Island called the Tivoli, but it 
      never proved profitable. He also built another hotel at Locust Grove, now 
      about Cropsey Avenue and Bay 29th Street, but that was destroyed by 
      fire.
     Later he went into politics again, and 
      ran for senator of the seventh district, but was defeated. He died January 
      22, 1885.
     At the beginning of the operation 
      along what is now the West End Line of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit system, 
      horse cars were used. They were operated from 25th Street and Fifth 
      Avenue, along New Utrecht Avenue, then known as "the old plank road." At 
      first these cars made one trip in the morning and one in the 
      afternoon.
     When the spirit of progress decided 
      to flap its wings over the situation, a small "dummy" engine was 
      purchased. The engine proper and passenger car were all one, with seats 
      for about forty people. The fare for the round trip from Coney Island to 
      25th Street was fifty cents, with an additional five cent fare if a 
      passenger wished to continue into the business district of Brooklyn. In 
      other words, the car fare for the round trip in those days from the 
      vicinity of Fulton Street and Myrtle Avenue to Coney Island was sixty 
      cents. The ferry charges were additional, of course, to get to New York 
      and back.
     The arrival of a spick and span 
      "double ender" engine, called the "Modock," was celebrated with 
      considerable enthusiasm as a most determined step in the march of progress 
      in the transportation development.
     By "double 
      ender" it was meant that this marvel possessed the alacrity of being able 
      to run either forwards or backwards. We soon di that this accomplishment 
      of the Modock's possessed a never-ending source of entertainment for the 
      patrons of the line. 
     Not even the engineer was 
      ever quite positive at any time, on starting out on a trip, which part of 
      the Modock would become animated first or which direction it would be most 
      likely to take.
      Continued on page 3
      
      
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