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Main menu. move to sidebar hide. ... Harrison Street station; Haskell station; Hawthorne station (New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad) Hawthorne station (NJ ...
Haskell was a former commuter railroad station in the Haskell section of Wanaque, Passaic County, New Jersey, United States.Located at the Doty Road grade crossing in Wanaque, trains operated on the Erie Railroad's New York and Greenwood Lake Railway between Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City and Wanaque–Midvale station.
Haskell is an unincorporated community located within Wanaque Borough, in Passaic County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [3] Haskell was formed in 1898 as a company town for a smokeless powder mill of the Laflin & Rand Powder Company .
The oldest active station to be listed on NRHP was Hackensack's 1869-built Anderson Street station, until it was destroyed in a fire and explosion in 2009, and thus was delisted. Proposals to revive service on the West Trenton Line and Lackawanna Cut-Off include the re-use of some listed stations in both New Jersey and northeastern Pennsylvania.
This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Essex County, New Jersey.Latitude and longitude coordinates of the sites listed on this page may be displayed in an online map.
MORE ON SEA STREAK: Why an unheralded horse carries the hopes of NJ racing in Monmouth Park's $1 million Haskell Won the $100,000 Long Branch on opening day at Monmouth Park by 7 ½ lengths ...
Wanaque–Midvale was a former commuter railroad station of the Erie Railroad's New York and Greenwood Lake Railway branch in Wanaque, New Jersey, United States.When built in 1873, the station served trains running from Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City to Sterling Forest on the New York–New Jersey border alongside Greenwood Lake and trains going to Ringwood on the Ringwood Branch.
The Babylon Railroad Company began in 1870 as a horse-drawn trolley from the South Side Railroad's Babylon Station to the Fire Island Ferry. After the Central Railroad of Long Island opened in 1873 passengers could access the horse car to the Great South Bay at the Watson House. [1] A second line was opened from Babylon Station into Amityville ...