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Morristown station is a NJ Transit rail station on the Morristown Line, serving the town of Morristown, in Morris County, New Jersey, United States. It serves an average of 1,800 passengers on a typical weekday. Construction of the historic station began in 1912 and the facility opened November 3, 1913.
[1] [2] There are two 300-foot (91 m) high-level platforms with 100-foot (30 m) canopies serving the Atlantic City Line's two tracks, and one 200-foot (61 m) low platform with a 60-foot (18 m) canopy serving the River Line's single track. [3] The station has 275 free parking spaces available to commuters.
Two lots offer daily parking, and all three have permit-only parking run by the borough of Madison. The station also has bicycle racks and lockers. [30] The station is in fare zone 11. [31] NJ Transit manages a bus connection at Madison station, the 873, which runs six days a week (excluding Sunday) from Parsippany–Troy Hills to Livingston.
Morristown (/ ˈ m ɒr ɪ s t aʊ n /) is a town in and the county seat of Morris County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [20] Morristown has been called "the military capital of the American Revolution" because of its strategic role in the war for independence from Great Britain.
View of the station house. The Queen Anne-style station house was built in 1890 by the Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western Railroad. The identifying stylistic features of the station are the hipped roof with broadly-flared eaves which are supported by dramatic, oversized, decorative wooden brackets, the patterning of the horizontal exterior wood siding and vertical corner boards and multi-paned ...
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Around the year 1000, the Morristown area was inhabited by Munsee Lenape people. Circa 1500, Morris County was part of the Lenapehoking , i.e., modern-day New Jersey . [ 3 ] Arrowheads found in Munsee encampments throughout the Washington Valley suggest that they hunted wolf, elk, and wild turkey for game and likely ate mussels from the ...