Former transfers On October 30, 1954, a connection between the
IND Brooklyn Line and the
BMT Culver Line opened, and the Culver Line was transferred from BMT to IND control. Service through the new connection commenced, and the BMT
Culver Shuttle was instituted between Ditmas Avenue and
Ninth Avenue, making Ditmas Avenue an inter-division transfer station. When the BMT Culver Shuttle ceased on May 11, 1975, the station was left to be served by the IND Culver Line only. On March 5, 1944, when the elevated
BMT Myrtle Avenue Line was removed from the
Brooklyn Bridge elevated tracks, and cut back from
Park Row to Bridge–Jay Streets, a paper transfer was added at Bridge–Jay Streets to the
Brooklyn Bridge trolley lines, specifically the
Smith Street Line,
DeKalb Avenue Line, and
Seventh Avenue Line. Bridge trolleys were discontinued on March 6, 1950, and the transfer was replaced with one to the
IND Sixth Avenue Line. Manhattan-bound passengers received a transfer when boarding the Myrtle Avenue Line west of
Broadway, but Brooklyn-bound passengers could only get one when entering at
Broadway – Nassau Street, near Park Row. In addition, similar trolley transfers were provided at High Street – Brooklyn Bridge, at the Brooklyn end of the bridge. The Myrtle Avenue Line west of Broadway closed on October 3, 1969, and the transfer was replaced with one to the
B54 bus route, which ran under the line. The transfers at High Street – Brooklyn Bridge were discontinued at some point, but the B54 transfer remained for a long time. When the
Broadway Elevated spur to
Broadway Ferry closed to passengers on July 2, 1916, a paper transfer was added to the
Broadway Ferry Shuttle streetcar line. The shuttle was moved from Broadway Ferry to
Lorimer Street when the
BMT Canarsie Line opened through
Williamsburg on June 30, 1924, and
Broadway Line streetcars were rerouted to the ferry. Later the transfer was to the
Meeker Avenue Line, now part of the
B24 bus route. A paper transfer The lower level, serving the Jamaica Line, opened in 1888. The station became a transfer station when the
Myrtle Avenue Elevated platform on the upper level opened in 1889. When Myrtle Avenue Line service west of this station ended in 1969, the upper level was abandoned and all Myrtle Avenue Line trains from the east merged onto the Jamaica Line tracks. ==Queens==