For the purposes of this article, the Jersey City area extends North to Edgewater (the Northern end of the line along the Hudson River), South to Bayonne and includes Kearny Junction and Harrison but not Newark. Many routes east of Newark are listed here.
Railroad Name Abbreviations
1833
1834
- September 15: The New Jersey Railroad, which 38 years later would become the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), begins regular trips from Newark to Jersey City's first terminal. The route crosses the Passaic River on the Newark, over Centre Street Bridge to the Hackensack River and onto Jersey City, on the West side of the Palisades. It uses temporary tracks and horse-drawn trains around and over the Bergen Hill, to the Terminal on the Hudson at Paulus Hook for transfer to ferries bound for New York City.
1836
1837
1838
1858
1861
1862
1864
- July 29: The CNJ's Jersey City extension opens, from about Spring Street in Elizabeth to the Jersey City terminal, including a long bridge across Newark Bay.
1868
1869
1870
1871
- January 9: The frog war between the Erie and DL&W ends, with the frog being placed to allow DL&W Boonton Branch trains to run through the Erie's tunnel.
1872
1873
- The Pennsylvania Railroad constructs a new passenger ferry terminal with 12 tracks and six platforms. The wooden terminal is built on piers over the water.
- The Hudson Connecting Railway, part of the New Jersey Midland and later NYS&W, completed to West End Junction with Erie connection to Marion Junction.
1877
- May 12: The DL&W opens its new tunnel through the Palisades, ending its trackage rights through the Erie's tunnel. Included with the tunnel are western approaches to the DL&W mainline and Boonton Branch; the former includes a new bridge over the Hackensack River, south of the old one (which is then used only for the Erie's Newark and Greenwood Lake Branches). The new alignment at first crosses the New Jersey Midland Railroad (NYS&W) at grade.
1883
1884
1885
- December 5: NYC leases the West Shore Railroad for 475 years from January 1, 1886, with the privilege of an additional 500-year term.
1886
1887
1889
1890
1891
- The Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), rebuilds the passenger ferry terminal to replace the old terminal which was partially destroyed by fire. The new terminal is raised above the old level to accommodate new elevated rails that eliminate grade crossings in the city.
1892
1894
1897
1900
- The Greenville and Hudson Railway (LVRR) completes construction of a line roughly parallel to the National Docks Railway from the Newark Bay bridge to the Jersey City terminal. Upon completion, the Lehigh Valley Railroad has a wholly owned route from the coal fields of Pennsylvania to its terminal in Jersey City.
1908
1909
1910
1911
1937
1939
1959
Weehawken Terminal closes. The Weehawken is the last ferry to the terminal on March 25, 1959, at 1:10 am, ending 259 years of continuous ferry service.
1960
- The Erie Railroad trains shift to Hoboken Terminal, as the company merges with the Lackawanna Railroad.
Erie trains began moving to Hoboken in Oct 1956 for off peak and weekend trains. Peak hour trains began using Hoboken on March 25, 1957, with the exception of Nyack and NYS&W trains which continued to use the few remaining tracks in Jersey City. NYS&W trains were later discontinued and Nyack trains used a backup move to reach Hoboken until they were discontinued in 1966.
1967
- With the Aldene Plan, Communipaw Terminal, the last Jersey City terminal closes. Lehigh Valley trains now terminate at Newark Penn Station, as do Reading Railroad trains. CNJ Trains run over LV from Roselle Park, NJ to Newark, NJ then on the PRR and terminate at Newark Penn Station, and use a small yard in Harrison. It was not until the late 1990s, when the midtown direct service was instituted, that NJ TRANSIT ran a service of some Raritan Valley trains to Hoboken (Penn Sta. New York).
1983
NY Waterway re-institutes ferry service across the Hudson.
1994
A short, partially elevated track, known as the Marion Running Track, is built to connect the ex-PRR Passaic and Harsimus Line from Kearny to the ex-Erie Northern Branch. This reconfiguration provided the ex-NYC West Shore (aka River Line) with a more direct connection to other lines heading west and south at Marion Junction.
1999/2000
Conrail Shared Assets Operations created. CSX River line is shifted to the re-newed Northern Running track to North Bergen Yard.
2000
The HudsonâÂÂBergen Light Rail opened to the public on April 15, 2000, with an initial operating (MOS) The extension to southern terminal at 8th Street opened January 31, 2011.
2001
NJ Transit renovates Bergen Tunnels.
2003
Secaucus Junction opened on December 15, 2003.
2009
On July 26, 2009, NJ Transit began shuttle service to the Meadowlands station at the Meadowlands Sports Complex.
2010
On October 7, 2010, New Jersey governor Chris Christie announced that the Access to the Region's Core, which included a new right-of way from Secaucus Junction under the Hudson Palisades and Hudson River to Midtown Manhattan was officially cancelled.
2019
ExpressRail at Port Jersey opened on June 17, 2019.
See also
Sources
- Poor's and Moody's railroad manuals
- New-Jersey Railroad Improvements, New York Times February 23, 1870, page 5
- Local News in Brief, New York Times November 28, 1870, page 8
- Almost a Riot, New York Times December 3, 1870, page 1
- Local News in Brief, New York Times December 15, 1870, page 8
- Local News in Brief, New York Times January 10, 1871, page 8
- New-Jersey, New York Times August 24, 1872, page 8
- The New Bergen Tunnel, New York Times May 12, 1877, page 10
Notes
External links