Greendell station

40.975305°N 74.818920°W / 40.975305; -74.818920

GREENDELL
Greendell station in May 2015.
General information
Location18 Wolfs Corner Road, Green Township, New Jersey 07860
Coordinates40.975305°N 74.818920°W / 40.975305; -74.818920
Platforms2
Tracks2
Other information
Station code58 (DL&W)[1]
History
OpenedDecember 24, 1911
ClosedJune 20, 1943[2][3]
Previous namesGreenville (December 23, 1911October 1916)
Services
Preceding station Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Following station
Johnsonburg
toward Buffalo
Main Line Lake Hopatcong
toward Hoboken
Greendell station (foreground) and tower (background) in 1988, four years after the tracks were removed on the line. The shot looks eastbound towards the Pequest Fill.

Greendell is one of three original railway stations built by the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad (DL&W) along its Lackawanna Cut-Off line in northwestern New Jersey. The station, which still stands in Green Township at milepost 57.61 on the Cut-Off, began operations on December 23, 1911, one day before the line itself opened and the first revenue train arrived.

Contractor Walter H. Gahagan built the station building and its signal tower, called "GD tower" after its telegraph call letters.[4] The facility controlled a somewhat elaborate 4-mile (6.4 km) siding with multiple switching points, built to accommodate freight traffic on the railroad's double-track main line. Located about midway between Slateford Junction and Port Morris Junction and a few miles east of the ruling grade on the Cut-Off, the siding allowed slow freights to pull off the main line and wait for faster trains to pass.

Initially called Greensville, the station was renamed Greendell in October, 1916. As time went on, its modest passenger patronage relegated the station to a flag stop: most trains skipped it and stopped at Blairstown station on the Cut-Off instead. Finally, the station closed in 1938.[5]

The Lackawanna vied for Green Township's freight business (mostly related to farming and agriculture), with the Lehigh & Hudson River Railway, which had arrived some three decades earlier. As business declined during the 1930s, the tower was closed — either on January 8, 1932 or March 10, 1935; company records conflict — and its functions transferred to Port Morris Tower.[6] Greendell, however, would continue to serve freight customers right up to the end of rail service on the Cut-Off.

In anticipation of the 1960 merger with the Erie Railroad, the Lackawanna single-tracked the Cut-Off in 1958, but retained the siding to keep some operational flexibility. In the mid-1960s, as fewer and fewer trains were being run over the Cut-Off by the Erie Lackawanna, Greendell Siding was cut to about 1.5 miles (2.4 km): about the length of the longest freight trains being run at the time. January 6, 1970 saw the end of passenger service, but a revival of freight traffic on the Cut-Off, and Greendell Siding survived until Conrail finally ended rail service on the Cut-Off in late 1978. The final freight shipment to a customer on the Cut-Off was delivered by Conrail to Greendell. The tracks were removed from the Cut-Off by Conrail in 1984.

As of 2023, the station building has been secured. The Lackawanna Cut-Off Historical Committee, a New Jersey-based historical group, is raising funds to restore the station building and surrounding site.

Service along the Cut-Off is being partially restored, with NJ Transit service from Andover to New York City projected to start by late 2026 or early 2027. Amtrak has also proposed to extend service along the Cut-Off to Scranton, Pennsylvania.

See also

References

  1. List of Station Numbers. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad (Report). 1952. p. 1.
  2. "Lackawanna Railroad Timetables" (PDF). New York, New York: Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. March 10, 1943. p. 4. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
  3. "Lackawanna Railroad Timetables" (PDF). New York, New York: Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. June 20, 1943. p. 4. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
  4. Legend has it that the new facilities didn't receive electricity until after service started since it wasn't available in the area.
  5. Taber, Thomas Townsend; Taber, Thomas Townsend III (1980). The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad in the Twentieth Century 2, p. 739. Muncy, PA: Privately printed. ISBN 0-9603398-2-5.
  6. Lackawanna's Silent Sentinels - Their Concrete Towers, by Bob Bahrs; Flags, Diamonds and Statues, Vol 21, No. 2 (April, 2012)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.