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The Atlantic City Express Service (ACES) was an inter-city rail service, operating from February 2009 until September 2011. It was operated by New Jersey Transit under contract and funded by the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority, with support from the Borgata, Caesars, and Harrah's casinos.
A successor to the former Amtrak service, Atlantic City Express Service (ACES), began a weekend express train from New York Penn Station to Atlantic City on February 6, 2009. The service was sponsored by several casinos and was run by New Jersey Transit over the Northeast Corridor and the Atlantic City Lines, with a stop in Newark. [4]
Also operating along the line, but not making any stops along it, was the Atlantic City Express Service (ACES), a route owned by Caesars Entertainment and the Borgata and operated by NJ Transit under contract. This route operated between the Atlantic City Rail Terminal and Pennsylvania Station in Midtown Manhattan. This service began in ...
ACES (train), also known as the Atlantic City Express Service, was a rail service operated by New Jersey Transit. Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Atlantic City Express .
The station was also served by the Atlantic City Express Service (ACES) from 2009 until it was formally discontinued on March 9, 2012. [ 5 ] The terminal was designed by TAT/SSVK, Architects and dedicated on May 22, 1989. [ 6 ]
Egg Harbor City Atlantic City Line: Egg Harbor City: Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines: September 17, 1989 [21] Elberon North Jersey Coast Line: Long Branch: Central Railroad of New Jersey: August 25, 1875 [28] [29] Elizabeth Northeast Corridor Line North Jersey Coast Line: Elizabeth: Pennsylvania Railroad: December 21, 1835 [47]
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The Atlantic City Railroad was a Philadelphia and Reading Railway subsidiary that became part of Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines in 1933. At the end of 1925, it operated 161 miles (259 km) of road on 318 miles (512 km) of track; that year it reported 43 million ton-miles of revenue freight and 204 million passenger-miles.