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The M&U was sold at a foreclosure sale on January 15, 1947 to the three feed dealers, Manning, Simmons and Clark, who reorganized the company as the Middletown and New Jersey Railway Company, Inc. on October 1, 1947. Traffic in the 1950s was dominated by a large GLF feed mill near Dolson Ave. in Middletown. By the mid-1950s, the three owners ...
July 1: NJM begins 99-year lease of Middletown, Unionville & Water Gap Railroad, to connect with NYOM [21] 1872 Combined NYOM/NJM line opens from Middletown, New York, to Jersey City [3] [15] [22] [23] 1873 July 9: First train runs across the railroads from Oswego, New York, to Jersey City via NJM [24] [3] [23] September 4: NYOM lease of NJM ...
A map of the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway, the most recent successor of the Midland Railway. The NJ Midland went bankrupt and was sold to receivers in March 1875. By December 1878, a dispute broke out between various bondholders, some of whom disputed that the Hudson Connecting Railway should be included in the proceedings. [13]
The New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway (reporting mark NYSW), also referred to as the Susie-Q or the Susquehanna, and formerly referred to as the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad, is an American Class II freight railway that operates over 400 miles (640 km) of trackage in the states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.
The carrier's property was acquired by reorganization, the original road extending from Middletown to the New York-New Jersey State line, a distance of 14.103 miles. The road was constructed by the Middletown, Unionville and Water Gap Railroad Company, under contract (the terms are not of record) between October 8, 1866, and May 8, 1868, and ...
The New York, Ontario and Western Railway, commonly known as the O&W or NYO&W, was a regional railroad founded in 1868. The last train ran from Norwich, New York, to Middletown, New York, in 1957, after which it was ordered liquidated by a U.S. bankruptcy judge. It was the first Class I U.S. railroad to be abandoned in its entirety. [11]
Middletown was the main station along the Erie Railroad mainline in the city of Middletown, New York. Located on Depot Street, the station was first opened in 1843 with the construction of the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad, which had originally terminated at Goshen .
The Middletown Village Historic District is a 80-acre (32 ha) historic district located on both sides of Kings Highway, south and west of NJ 35.The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 3, 1974, for its significance in education, military history, political history, religion, and settlement.