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The Henry Street Station Post Office is a contributing property to the district, and is an individually listed National Historic Landmark. The historic district is administered by the City of Morristown and the Crossroads Downtown Partnership, 501(c) non-profit organization dedicated towards the redevelopment of downtown Morristown.
8 miles southeast of Morristown off State Route 160: Morristown: Built by Alexander Outlaw for his son-in-law, Joseph Hamilton 11: St. Paul Presbyterian Church: St. Paul Presbyterian Church: August 10, 1979 : West of Lowland
The station opened on February 25, 2006. Bergenline Avenue is the only stop in the HBLR system with an underground platform. Located 160 feet below the Hudson Palisades in the former Weehawken Terminal tunnel of the West Shore Railroad , [ 5 ] it is reached by elevators traveling from street-level entrances located just north of bus bays. [ 6 ]
Both M Station buildings are set back 45 feet from Morris Street, creating a 10,000-square-foot landscaped promenade and two public plazas with seating. ... As part of the M Station plan ...
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Bergenline Avenue then and now: Facing south toward 32nd Street, circa 1900 (left), and in 2010 (right). Originally, Bergenline Avenue was the width of a cowpath, and was not regarded as a business center. Street car tracks were expected to be laid on Palisade Avenue, where the Union Hill's Town Hall was located.
After issues of congestion and competition arose, the DL&W decided to build its own tunnel for what is commonly known as its Morristown Line. [2] [3] Construction of the North Bergen Tunnel began in 1873; it came into service in 1877. [4] The South Bergen Tunnel opened in 1910, [5] soon after a new Hoboken Terminal was inaugurated.
Morristown station is a NJ Transit rail station on the Morristown Line, serving the town of Morristown, in Morris County, New Jersey, United States. It serves an average of 1,800 passengers on a typical weekday. Construction of the historic station began in 1912 and the facility opened November 3, 1913.