On Park Avenue at 89th Street (NYC) there are iron grates -- perhaps 15' x 15' --venting the railroad tracks underneath. The grates date from the 1870's, but may have been altered. The slate coping flags (about 12" wide and 1' to 3' long) that surround the iron grates at the edge bear unusual incised inscriptions, irregularly carved, obviously done free-hand, not uniformly placed on the stones. These include, for instance: C No 11 Mc JH C No 11 HV PMK I 7 H N 91 HWS The coping stones (which look 19th century) may have been reused from earlier railroad projects - the tracks were covered in the 1870's, but were open to the sky from 1834 to that time. It occurred to me that the flags might have come from the original trackbed, and that these inscriptions might be related to the original rail operations or waypoints. But the maintenance of way people at Metro-North (our local rail line) say they don't recognize any rhyme or reason to them. (All the other grates have been rebuilt, and these are the last surviving ones - otherwise I might be able to develop a wider sample.) The inscriptions definitely do not have the character of graffitti. Do any NYHIST subscribers have a psychic hotline to what these might mean? Christopher Gray "Streetscapes" Columnist, Sunday Real Estate Section The New York Times office: 246 West 80th Street New York City 10024 voice: 212-799-0520 fax: 212-799-0542 e: [log in to unmask]