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In November 2006, the railroad began operations in Albany, New York. [6] The company plans to begin passenger excursions out of Pilesgrove Township, New Jersey by the end of 2022. [7] Passenger excursions along the Salem Branch are operated as the Woodstown Central Railroad out of a passenger station in South Woodstown. [8]
Images of America: Keyport Firefighting. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738563619. Snell, James P. (1881). History of Hunterdon and Somerset Counties, New Jersey: With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers. Everts and Peck. Warrick, John R. (1990). Central Jersey's Southern Division. Lakeside Productions.
The Woodstown and Swedesboro Railroad was chartered on March 21, 1871, opened on February 23, 1873, leased to the WJ on January 1, 1883, and fully merged on January 1, 1888. [ 27 ] On January 21, 1882, the WJ built a line from the end of the Swedesboro Railroad to Riddleton Junction on the Salem Railroad upon request of agricultural interests ...
Junction of former Lehigh Valley Railroad, Central Railroad of New Jersey main lines and Reading Railroad Port Reading Branch Bound Brook 40°33′38″N 74°31′52″W / 40.560536°N 74.531243°W / 40.560536; -74.531243 ( Bound Brook
902 and 903 operated an excursion on an ex-Reading line owned by Penn Eastern Rail Lines in October of that year, [2] but no more trips are planned for 2008. [ 3 ] In January 2010, the 902 and 903 were loaned to Steamtown National Historic Site for a year to maintain the locomotives in exchange for excursion rights.
Woodstown is a borough in Salem County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of the 2020 United States census , the borough's population was 3,678, [ 8 ] an increase of 173 (+4.9%) from the 2010 census count of 3,505, [ 17 ] [ 18 ] which in turn reflected an increase of 369 (+11.8%) from the 3,136 counted in the 2000 census .
Map of rail lines around Essex, Hudson, and Union counties in New Jersey. The grey CNJ line from Bayonne to Elizabeth was carried by the CNJ's Newark Bay Bridge. The Newark Bay Bridge of the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ) was a railroad bridge in New Jersey that connected Elizabethport and Bayonne at the southern end of Newark Bay.
They moved their equipment to the Chester Branch of the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ) with the hope of starting a railroad there. BR&W was officially incorporated in 1961. The railroad's name is derived from the Black River, a river near Chester and the original name of the borough. The "and Western" is standard railroad nomenclature.