Because down there they find themselves in what is still officially part of Grand Central Rail Terminal – and at a platform a three-quarter-century old rail baggage car that for decades was wrongly thought to be the one-time armour-plated personal carriage of President Franklin D Roosevelt.
Platform 61 was built in 1913, abandoned only a few years later as surplus to need, and when the Waldorf Astoria was built above it in 1931, re-opened for use by wealthy VIP guests who – as was the fashion at the time – owned their own luxury rail carriages.
The wheelchair-bound President Roosevelt, who had polio in his later years, used Platform 61 in October 1941 to get into the hotel, complete with his armour-plated motor car that was taken by special car-elevator up to street level.
The custom-made Roosevelt carriage was built with 2cm thick armour-plating on floors and sides, 7.5cm thick bullet-proof glass windows, and even had machine-gun ports; it is now displayed at the Gold Coast Railroad Museum in Miami, Florida – putting a lie to the myth that it lays rusting-away under the Waldorf Astoria.
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Photos:
[] ONE-TIME Presidential carriage at the Gold Coast Railroad Museum in Miami today.
[] RAIL baggage car under New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel that was long believed
(mistakenly) to be Franklin D Roosevelt’s Presidential carriage.
(Photos: Wikimedia)
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