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Van Cortlandt Park Monoliths in Bronx, New York

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On the side of a walking trail in a wooded Bronx park sits a row of small monoliths made up of a variety of stones, evenly spaced, with no markings except the familiar run of graffiti.

The stones exude an air of mystery, as if they're some sort of ancient monument in the middle of the Bronx. Their origins, though, are tied to a modern construction project, the erection of Grand Central Terminal more than 100 years ago.  

When plans were drawn up for the construction of Grand Central at the beginning of the 20th century, stone samples were imported to New York and left out to determine  how they would fare in the elements. In the end, however, cost rather than durability, won out, and Grand Central was built out of inexpensive Indiana limestone.

The monoliths’ location along the trail in the Bronx is no accident. From 1870 to 1958, a commuter rail line, the Putnam Line, ran through the area. Freight trains would continue to use the line until the 1980s. After the line shut down, the tracks were covered over with walking trails. Relics from the railway remain along the path. Rusted out skeletal remains of train stations and old railway bridges spring up along the trail, the only remnants of a forgotten railroad.

For more on the monoliths, see Scouting New York. 


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