June 24, 2026 · 6:18 PM

Quietly Gone — Ep 9: The Tubes Below the City

Beneath the streets of Lower Manhattan — steel tubes, pressurized air, and 97,000 letters a day. The story of New York City's pneumatic mail network, from a secret tunnel under Broadway to the last letter sent in 1953.

Quietly Gone — Ep 9: The Tubes Below the City
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For fifty-six years, the United States Post Office ran a network of pressurized steel tubes beneath the streets of Lower Manhattan — moving close to a hundred thousand letters a day through twenty-seven miles of underground pipe, without trucks, without traffic, without weather delays. This episode tells the full story: from Alfred Ely Beach secretly digging a passenger pneumatic tunnel under Broadway in 1870, to the Post Office launching the real mail-tube system in 1897, through the peak years when ten exchange stations kept the city's commercial correspondence moving at thirty miles an hour underground — and finally to 1953, when a last ceremonial letter was sent and the hatch was sealed.
What stays with me is the end of it. Not just the shutdown, but what the shutdown erased: the craft knowledge of the men who ran the exchange stations. The ones who could tell by the sound of a carrier arriving which line it had come from. That knowledge had nowhere to go when the system closed. It went quiet with the tubes. And the tubes themselves — portions of that original steel pipe network — are still down there today, beneath the taxis and the broadband cables and the steam mains, unmarked at street level, waiting for no one.

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