The route runs mostly along Essex Street and Avenue C from Battery Park City to Kips Bay. The M9 stays on Houston Street until Avenue C and Peter Cooper Village. Eastbound buses continue to 20th and 23rd Streets and use 1st Avenue to access 25th Street, where they terminate. Westbound buses then use 29th Street, 23rd Street, and Avenue C to access Houston St, where they head back to the West Side.
On November 29, 1893, the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad was merged into the Metropolitan Street Railway. The line was cut back to Avenue A at 24th Street by 1907; the trackage on 35th and 36th Streets was removed, while the other trackage became parts of the Lexington Avenue Line and 42nd Street Crosstown Line.
Buses were substituted for streetcars in September 1919. Service was suspended, but brought back in March 1929 by the Hamilton Bus Company. The Triangle Bus Corporation took over in 1935, and the New York City Omnibus Corporation acquired the route in 1940. That company changed its name to Fifth Avenue Coach Lines in 1956; the Manhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority took over operations in 1962.
Recent history
Originally a streetcar line, the Avenue C Line is now part of the M9 route, as well as the M21, which operates on the Houston Street Line. Both the Avenue C and Houston Street segments were served by a single route, the M21, until June 2010.
In 2010, the M9, which ran to 14th Street-Union Square via Avenue B and north of Houston St, was rerouted to Avenue C up to 23rd Street only due to a budget crisis and was rerouted back to Park Row to replace the M15 to City Hall.[5] On January 6, 2013, the M9 was extended north to 29th Street via First Avenue from 23rd Street and south to Battery Park City from City Hall.[6]