You are not logged in

New York Magazine

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Skip to content, or skip to search.

 

Cultural Capital

5/ 8/08

2:35 PM

Matt Lauer Shows Us FDR’s Secret Train

If you’re like us and have always been obsessed with that secret subway stop beneath the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, today is your day! As part of the Today show’s “Access Granted” series, Matt Lauer visits the now-abandoned subway track that was used as a special VIP entrance for fancy-pants rich people with their own private subway cars.

The storied Track 61 was also used by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, so he could enter and leave the hotel without the public realizing he couldn’t walk unassisted because of his polio. Lauer shows us FDR’s private train car, still down on the tracks. The armored car features bulletproof glass and special suspension to support the president’s paralyzed lower body. The train was also a safety measure in case FDR needed to be spirited out of New York City in the event of a national catastrophe.

Watch the video and marvel that there was ever a time when presidents tried to hide their handicaps, as opposed to more current administrations, which like to parade them out in the open like a 2-year-old boy who’s just discovered his wee-wee. —Noelle Hancock

Matt Lauer Goes Underground for “Secret” Train Car [Gothamist]

Advertising

Edited by Chris Rovzar and Jessica Pressler

  • Get the RSS feed
Daily Intel Features

Media | Politics | Business | Real Estate | Parties

21 Questions: The New York questionnaire.

Company Town: Daily media, fashion, finance, and real estate news.

Developing: Real estate news.

Early and Often: Political news you can use.

Gossipmonger: Your daily dose of tabloid.

Ink-Stained Wretches: News from the world of print media.

Intel: Our scoopage, for your pleasure.

Neighborhood Watch: Hyper-local news delivered daily.

Party Lines: Celebrities say the darnedest things

Sex Diaries: A New Yorker's week between the sheets.

The Sports Section: The thrill of victory, the agony of defeat.

White Men With Money: Read all White Men With Money posts