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  • Obscure right-of-way around South Kearny

  • Pertaining to all railroading subjects, past and present, in New Jersey
Pertaining to all railroading subjects, past and present, in New Jersey

Moderator: David

 #1446086  by MaRoFu
 
While browsing some abandoned rail lines on Google Earth, I noticed what looked like some right of way branching off of the Erie Newark Branch, directly next to the junction with the abandoned Lower Boonton Line. It appears to head into South Kearny, and there is even a bridge along the Northeast Corridor when you follow along it, where the presumed tracks went under. It's hard to find any remains from there, as it's been mostly paved over.

Judging by the direction of the right-of-way, I'm pretty sure this was some rail line that connected the Erie Newark Branch to the Lackawanna line heading to Hoboken Terminal. I'm guessing this was built when Erie and Lackawanna merged, to allow Newark Branch trains to reach Erie-Lackawanna's new main terminal, Hoboken.

Plus, you can even see the line marked on Apple Maps! Any more information on this is appreciated.
 #1446143  by pumpers
 
You are right, it is an obscure one. I always wondered about it myself (and another abandoned ROW across the meadowlands which turns out to be closely related), until about a year ago I stumbled on this link about the Pennhorn Creek RR (once part of the Erie mainline coming out the now abandoned Bergen Arches in Jersey City.)
http://warofyesterday.blogspot.com/2012 ... lroad.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
From this link and poking elsewhere and looking at old tax maps, etc, I learned the following approximate summary which helps understand what your ROW is and why it came and went. As it says on the above link, most of the Erie-related details are not "in the books" as far as I can find. See number 7 about your ROW. I'm sorry to be so long-winded. Corrections welcome.

In short, it all has to do with various railroads (which were becoming acquired by the Erie and the Lackawanna) in the late 1800s, long before the E-L merger ) which were trying to cross the Hackensack River, and then get through Bergen Hill to the waterfront.

Going back to the 1830s, at first the only way through the Bergen Hill was the "Bergen Hill cut" (through Journal square, etc) from what I think was called the United Transportation companies (which later became the PRR). When other RR's like the Erie, Lackawanna, etc came along , they all had to tie into this line (at Marion Junction in western Jersey city) and pay for its use.

1. In 1861(?) the Erie built its own "Long Dock" tunnel through Bergen Hill, which is still in use for freight. The main purpose was to connect the Erie main line (formerly Paterson and Hudson RR) to the waterfront (Pavonia area) in Jersey City .

2. The Morris and Essex division of the Lackawanna used to end in Newark (you had to transfer to what became the PRR), but then in 1863 they built across the meadowlands (in the current alignment they still use), and built a bridge just north of modern M&E bridge used by NJ transit,to connect to the Erie Long Dock tunnel to get to the waterfront. They then turned north to get to Hoboken.

3. 1873, the Erie built the Newark and Hudson RR to connect to the Paterson and Newark RR - to give what became the Newark Branch. After coming across the meadowlands from Harrison going slightly south of due east, to cross the Hackensack and get to the waterfront, they tied into the M&E just short of the M&E bridge. See the topo link at the end to see some remnants. So this Erie branch ran on the M&E for a mile to so to get to the Erie Long Dock tunnel.

4. The Erie and Lackawanna didn't get along, so by 1877(?) the M&E built their own tunnel through Bergen Hill (north of the Erie tunnel), and their own bridge over the Hackensack river (at the current location) just the south of the existing bridge. THey tied their line across the meadowlands into the new bridge. (Once across the Hackensack, the line crossed over the Erie to get to their tunnel - the current tunnel which takes you straight to Hoboken. (well, the Lackawanna added a 2nd tunnel next to it later, both still in use)

5. So once the M&E tied into their new bridge just to the south of the old one, the Erie Newark branch took over ownership of the old M&E bridge and route to the Erie Long Dock tunnel. The Erie Newark Branch and Morris & Essex no longer connected, with the Newark Branch crossing the Hackensack just north of the (current) M&E location.

6. Going back to the 1860's(?), there was the Greenwood Lake(??) RR and Montclair RR's (Montclair to Jersey city), which after a few false starts combined to give the eventual NY & Greenwood lake. Eventually taken over by the Erie. THey (or maybe originally the Montclair) had their own bridge over the Hackensack River well to the north, near or at the location of the now abandoned Lower Boonton Bridge you refer to. (What came to be known as the lower Boonton Branch originally was the Erie NY&GL). Once in Jersey City, they at first tied into the Bergen cut at Marion, via the original Paterson and Hudson River RR.

7. In the late 1800's, once the Erie Newark and Hudson (modern Newark Branch) had taken over the old M&E bridge and route to the Erie Long Dock tunnel, the Erie formed the "Arlington RR" to connect the NY&GL to the Newark and Hudson, west of the old M&E Bridge (now part of the Erie) to cross the Hackensack and get to the Long Dock tunnel. **** I think this is the ROW you are talking about ****

8. The PRR line to the North River (what they called the Hudson River) tunnels to NY Penn Station came later, in the very early 1900's with the advent of electrification (the tunnels were too long for steam). The Arlington RR alignment was not dead yet so hence the overpass over the Arlington RR (and another overpass over the Newark and Hudson to the south).

9. Around 1910, when the Erie built their Bergen Arches, more or less right next to the Long Dock Tunnel, and the Penhorn Creek RR alignment (going past the current Secaucus station) to handle all the extra passenger traffic from the arches. There was a lot of reconfiguration to create overpasses, etc. I haven't figured out the details, but the Erie built the "modern" "lower Boonton Bridge" (NYGL) , at or near where the original NYGL bridge was, and sent the NYGL traffic back that way, no longer using the Arlington RR, part of Newark and Hudson, and the (ex M&E) bridge. The Newark Branch was also tied into this new bridge with an alignment (their "modern one") crossing the meadowlands going slightly north of east instead of slightly south of east. This connection may also have been built by the "Arlington RR", not sure.
The old M&E (now Erie) bridge over the Hackensack was then abandoned (1911 according to the Penhorn Creek site). A power plant (now itself now being shut down by PSE&G) was built over the ROW just east of the Hackensack in Jersey City. You can easily see it on Google maps.

10. The Erie kept tracks to serve industry just west of the old bridge (I think Koppers was one) until perhaps even the Conrail days - not sure if they came down from the NY&GL over the ROW you mention, or over from the old Newark Branch alignment. Anyone know? The topo map below would suggest coming down from the NY&GL. And after the EL merger, perhaps the area was served from a connection to the M&E (also shown on the topo).

Here is a topo map (hope the link works) which still shows track on the NYGL connection to original Newark Branch (Arlington RR) and some of the original Newark Branch. Where the stub end tracks are on the west side of the Hackensack, just north of the M&E (Lackawanna) line, with the powerplant marked across the river, was the old Newark Branch alignment & bridge over the Hackensack.
http://mapper.acme.com/?ll=40.75027,-74 ... 5C%2C%20nj" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Whew. Jim S
Last edited by pumpers on Fri Oct 06, 2017 9:24 am, edited 1 time in total.
 #1446186  by pdtrains
 
Well, despite the pre-1920 history, If you're talking about the track that goes by the WMCA towers.. I can tell u from when i worked in Croxton yard 1970 ish.... That track was there and I think it was in service....there were several industries down there. It was probably served by the Newark Stock train, which was a local out of croxton that worked the lower end of the newark branch. The track, like the newark branch at the same area, always looked like it was about to be overridden by the water of the swamp. the ROW was maybe 2 feet higher than the water in the swamp. Track-ballast/sand-water. It was probably abandoned by CR...who made everyone in North Jersey drive to a pad at croxton for "rail service" if they wanted it. I guess there was a pad in Patterson, too.
And then 99 out of 100 industries closed up shop in NJ anyway. Taxes, too many business/manufacturing laws, high real estate prices...made it more advantageous to sell to a developer who put up townhouses. It was also obviously high maintenance, keeping the track out of the water...

Now everything from DB draw to Montclair or newark is turning to dust, save a part of the Orange Branch that is now light rail. And it sounds like there are no customers on the newark br at all right now, so who knows what's going to happen there.

At what few factories are left, seem to still be slowly closing, as North Jersey turns into one big bedroom community. Kinda like Long Island and Connecticut are.
 #1446188  by pumpers
 
pdtrains, You sure are right about all that water. Here is a Google Streetview looking south at the ROW from the Eastern spur of the NJ Turnpike. https://www.google.com/maps/@40.756848, ... 312!8i6656" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; I wonder how many feet it was under during Sandy!
I also looked at historicaerials.com , and the track was still alive in 1979. Coming from Croxton, it looks like you started on the Newark Branch towards Newark, and then reversed to go down past radio towers. On the 1979 view you can still see a few cars down at the very end by the Koppers site by the Hackensack River, and also a few at a customer back on a stub of the original Newark and Hudson, just north of Belleville Turnpike right where it meets the Newark Turnpike, reached by reversing again when down close to Koppers.
Jim
 #1446194  by pdtrains
 
Yea....i think they would pull up past the switch and shove down. Locals still ran w cabooses back then. and they probably had a backup hose with them on the caboose. Enough tracks down there..that there most likely was a runaround that they used to switch across from Koppers. If it still was connected to the M&E, too, it could have been worked by "the Pusher", which was a sort or local/transfer job that worked between croxton and Hoboken freight yard, and would run out the M&E to work the Harrison Branch. It was the only job I knew of that used one of the "T cabooses" and a lot of the time one of the SW-8's. I dont ever remember hearing them talk about working Koppers, tho. It wouldda been a pita with all the passenger traffic to clear for. Remember, no radio back then. A crew would have to get permission from a phone box to open a switch on the main, etc. Much easier for the Stock train to work those tracks.

At least the Newark Br ROW isnt under water...
 #1446206  by pumpers
 
At least by 1979, on aerial photo I mentioned, there was no more M&E connection

Amazing how we survived and work got done and all that, without radios, cell phones, internet, email, Facebook, yada yada...
 #1447603  by pumpers
 
cr9617 wrote:Kinda related, some nice pics of koppers coke in 1942.
https://www.google.com/culturalinstitut ... ryId=place" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I finally had time to really look at the photos. At least the on the ones where there is a reference, like the M&E "Lower Hack" bridge over the Hackensack River in the distance, or the M&E tracks looking back towards Harrison, the photos have left and right flipped . Probably all the photos. I've seen this happen before when old photos (or more likely negatives) are scanned.

Also, I found a 1910 map showing the Erie NY&GL, using the Arlington RR connection, coming down on the ROW of the original post in this thread to meet the Erie Newark Branch (labelled Paterson and Newark) and then cross the Hackensack river using the old M&E bridge, with the M&E (DL&W) crossing just south of it in its modern alignment
http://mapmaker.rutgers.edu/HUDSON_COUN ... y_1911.gif" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
(the link title says 1911, but "1910 Jersey Journal" is written on the map.)

JS
 #1451399  by ebtmikado
 
In later years, that line was known as the Arlington Branch.
It gave Erie access to Koppers. It diverged from the Newark Branch,
but the RoW to the NY&GL is still visible.

Lee