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Southern New Jersey Railroad: Union Transportation Company: UTR 1888 1976 Consolidated Rail Corporation: United New Jersey Railroad and Canal Company: PRR: 1872 1976 Consolidated Rail Corporation: Vincentown Branch of the Burlington County Railroad: PRR: 1861 1915 Camden and Burlington County Railway: Vineland Railroad: CNJ: 1877 1917 Central ...
The Ninth Street Bridge in Boise, Idaho, also known as the Eighth Street Bridge, crosses the Boise River and is a 2-span, pin-connected Pratt through truss design constructed by the Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co. and completed in 1911. Each span is 160 ft (49 m) and includes six full panels and two end panels, supported by concrete piers at ...
The Central Railroad of New Jersey acquired the entire route in 1889. [21] The connection between Atlantic Highlands and the New Jersey Southern routes was made in 1892 with the construction of a railroad bridge over the Shrewsbury River and the closing of the Sandy Hook boat docks.
Central Railroad of New Jersey: May 17, 1897 [24] [25] Anderson Street Pascack Valley Line: Hackensack: Erie Railroad: September 9, 1869 [26] Original 1869-built station house destroyed in a 2009 fire Annandale Raritan Valley Line: Annandale: Central Railroad of New Jersey: July 4, 1852 [27] Asbury Park North Jersey Coast Line: Asbury Park
This diagram is current as of March 2022.This is a route-map template for rail transport in New Jersey, a United States railway network.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.
This is a route-map template for the Northeast Corridor, an Amtrak train service in the United States.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
Federal officials plan to reopen the same grant in 2025, and a spokesperson for Amtrak, a national passenger railroad company, told the Statesman the company continues to support bringing rail ...
JP Rail, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation doing business as SRNJ, [2] operates tracks in the Winslow area that originally belonged to the New Jersey Southern Railroad, and which were later acquired by the Central Railroad of New Jersey (in the 1880s) and subsequently Conrail (1976) and the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT; 1984). [3]