MarketCentral Railroad of New Jersey
Company Profile

Central Railroad of New Jersey

The Central Railroad of New Jersey, also known as the Jersey Central, Jersey Central Lines or New Jersey Central, was a Class I railroad with origins in the 1830s. It was absorbed into Conrail in April 1976 along with several other prominent bankrupt railroads of the northeastern United States.

History
19th century in New York City, The earliest railroad ancestor of the CNJ was the Elizabethtown & Somerville Railroad, incorporated in 1831 and opened from Elizabethport to Elizabeth, New Jersey, in 1836. Horses gave way to steam in 1839, and the railroad was extended west, reaching Somerville at the beginning of 1842. The Somerville and Easton Railroad was incorporated in 1847 and began building westward. Originally laid to a track gauge of , it was changed to standard gauge in 1847. In 1849, it purchased the Elizabethtown & Somerville and adopted a new name: Central Railroad Company of New Jersey. The line reached Phillipsburg, on the east bank of the Delaware River, in 1852. It was extended east across Newark Bay to Jersey City in 1864, and it gradually acquired branches to Flemington, Newark, Perth Amboy, Chester, and Wharton. The New Jersey Southern (NJS) began construction in 1860 at Port Monmouth. The railroad worked its way southwest across lower New Jersey and reached Bayside, New Jersey, on the Delaware River west of Bridgeton, New Jersey in 1871. The NJS came under control of the CNJ in 1879. CNJ's influence briefly extended across the Delaware River in the form of the Baltimore & Delaware Bay Railroad, from Bombay Hook, Delaware, east of Townsend, to Chestertown, Maryland. That line became part of the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) family in 1901. 20th century in 1910 In 1901, the Reading Company (RDG), successor to the Philadelphia & Reading, acquired control of the CNJ through purchase of a majority of its stock, and at about the same time Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (B&O) acquired control of the RDG, gaining access to New York over RDG and CNJ rails. In 1929, CNJ inaugurated the Blue Comet, a deluxe coach train operating twice daily between Jersey City and Atlantic City. It was painted blue from the pilot of its 4-6-2 to the rear bulkhead of its observation car, and its refurbished cars offered a level of comfort much higher than the usual day coach of the era. The train was the forerunner of the coach streamliners that blossomed nationwide in the late 1930s and the 1940s. It succumbed to automobile competition in 1941. Also in 1929 CNJ purchased a 30 percent interest in the Raritan River Railroad, a 12-mile (19 km) short line from South Amboy to New Brunswick. In 1931 it acquired total ownership of the Wharton & Northern Railroad and a partial interest in the Mount Hope Mineral Railroad from Warren Foundry & Pipe Corporation. Following World War II, passenger traffic diminished, and was almost entirely commuter business, requiring great amounts of rolling stock for two short periods five days a week. Three-fourths of CNJ's freight traffic terminated on line; the railroad was essentially a terminal carrier, which meant little if any profit. In addition, taxes levied by the state of New Jersey ate up much of CNJ's revenue. In 1946, the lines in Pennsylvania were organized as the Central Railroad of Pennsylvania (CRP) in an effort to escape taxation by the state of New Jersey. CNJ resumed its own operation of the Pennsylvania lines at the end of 1952. The CRP continued in existence as owner of the Easton & Western, four miles of track in Easton, Pennsylvania. The merger between the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway and Norfolk and Western Railway proposed in 1965 sought to counter the impending PRR merger with New York Central Railroad merger was to have included CNJ, but the bankruptcy of Penn Central Transportation Company killed that prospect. CNJ drafted elaborate plans for reorganization; they came to naught as neighboring railroads collapsed. Conrail took over freight operations of the CNJ on April 1, 1976; passenger routes were transferred to the New Jersey Department of Transportation, including the present New Jersey Transit North Jersey Coast Line and Raritan Valley Line. In 1961, the Lehigh and New England Railroad was abandoned, and CNJ acquired a few of its branches and organized them as the Lehigh and New England Railroad. In 1963, Lehigh Coal & Navigation sold its railroad properties to the RDG, although the lease to the CNJ continued. In 1964, the state of New Jersey began subsidizing commuter service, and the tax situation changed in 1967. In 1965, CNJ and the Lehigh Valley Railroad consolidated their lines along the Lehigh River in Pennsylvania and portions of each railroad's line were abandoned; the commercial anthracite traffic that had supported both railroads had largely disappeared. CNJ operations in Pennsylvania ended March 31, 1972. CNJ maintained a small carfloat terminal in The Bronx. It was the site of the first successful Class 1 railroad diesel operation. Over the years, CNJ maintained an extensive marine operation on New York Bay, including a steamer line to Sandy Hook. On April 30, 1967, CNJ's last marine service—the ferry line between Manhattan and CNJ's rail terminal at Jersey City—made its last run, which was also the last day for the terminal itself; the next day CNJ passenger trains began originating and terminating at the PRR station in Newark via the Aldene Connection, where New York City passengers could transfer to either PRR or Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) trains. On August 6, 1978, the Bayonne "Scoot" ran for the last time. The CRRNJ Newark Bay Bridge would be abandoned and the lift spans demolished in July and August 1980. In 1979, CNJ emerged from bankruptcy as Central Jersey Industries, later renamed CJI Industries. In 1986, it merged with the packaging company Triangle Industries, owned by Nelson Peltz. ==Main initial corridors==
Main initial corridors
CNJ had its northeastern terminus at Elizabethport, New Jersey. In 1864, CNJ extended its railroad across the bay into Bayonne, and north to the Jersey City terminus. It used a succession of bridges over the years, the last being Newark Bay Bridge, demolished in the 1980s. From Elizabethport, trains went to different corridors. One headed towards Elizabeth and Plainfield and points west and southwest. The second went south towards Perth Amboy and today's North Jersey Coast Line and different southern New Jersey destinations. CNJ operated several trains into Pennsylvania and other points west or south, in association with the RDG. B&O also used CNJ tracks for the final approach to Jersey City. ==Portions still operated==
Portions still operated
• Aldene-High Bridge (Main Line): New Jersey Transit (NJT) Raritan Valley Line • Jersey City-Bayonne (Main Line and Newark and New York Branch): NJT Hudson-Bergen Light Rail • Perth Amboy-Bay Head: NJT North Jersey Coast Line • Elizabethport-Aldene; Elizabethport-Perth Amboy; Red Bank-Lakehurst: Conrail Shared Assets Operations • Lakehurst-Woodmansie: Cape May Seashore Lines • Winslow Junction – Vineland, NJ: Southern Railroad of New Jersey – Mostly abandoned, sporadically paved over, buried, and or removed between Williamstown and Vineland, NJ following damaged sustained to the line in 2003. Remnant of CNJ Southern Division Main line. • Dover & Rockaway Branch (Wharton-Rockaway); High Bridge Branch (Kenvil-Flanders): Morristown & Erie Railway • White Haven PA – Laurel Run PA: Reading Blue Mountain and Northern – remnant of the joint operation with the Lehigh Valley post-1965 • Vineland – Bridgeton, NJ: Winchester and Western Railroad – Remnant of CNJ Southern Division Main line. • Bridgeton – Port Norris, NJ :: Winchester and Western Railroad – Bridgeton – Bivalve, NJ branch line torn up East of Whitehead Rd, in Port Norris, remainder operational. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File:CRRNJ Terminal, Liberty State Park, Jersey City NJ.jpg|Communipaw Terminal, Jersey City File:CRR NJ back.JPG|Communipaw Terminal, rear File:New York City Railroads ca 1900.png|Map of CNJ and other terminals in New York region, circa 1900 File:CRR NJ signs10.JPG|Reproduction of a tablet designator for the Blue Comet File:Camelback.jpg|CNJ camelback locomotive built by Baldwin in 1912. File:Elizabeth, NJ-1.jpg|Elizabeth Station File:CRRNJ Newark Lafayette Broad jeh.jpg|Broad Street station, Newark ==Predecessor railroads==
Predecessor railroads
• Buena Vista Railroad • Carteret & Sewaren Railroad • Carteret Extension Railroad • Cumberland & Maurice River Railroad • Cumberland & Maurice River Extension Railroad • Elizabeth Extension Railroad • Freehold & Atlantic Highlands Railroad • Lafayette Railroad • Manufacturers' Extension Railroad • Middle Brook Railroad • New Jersey Terminal Railroad • New Jersey Southern Railroad • Navesink Railroad • Passaic River Extension Railroad • Raritan North Shore Railroad • Sound Shore Railroad • Toms River Railroad • Toms River & Barnegat Railroad • Vineland Railroad • Vineland Branch Railway • West Side Connecting Railroad • West End Railroad ==Named passenger trains==
Named passenger trains
CNJ operated several named trains, most of which were interstate operations: • Blue Comet: Jersey City, New Jersey-Atlantic City, New JerseyBullet: Jersey City-Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania via Allentown, PennsylvaniaCrusader: Jersey City-Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (with RDG) • Interstate Express: Syracuse, New York-Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (with the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad and RDG) • Mermaid: Sandy Hook, New Jersey-Scranton, Pennsylvania • Queen of the Valley: Jersey City-Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (with RDG) • Wall Street: Jersey City-Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (with RDG) • Williamsporter: Jersey City, New Jersey-Williamsport, Pennsylvania Several non-CNJ trains operated over CNJ trackage north of Bound Brook, New Jersey to the Jersey City terminal: • Capitol Limited: Jersey City, New Jersey-Chicago, Illinois (B&O) • National Limited: Jersey City, New Jersey-St. Louis, Missouri (B&O) • Royal Blue: Jersey City, New Jersey-Washington, D.C. (B&O) == Heritage units ==
Heritage units
To celebrate its 30th anniversary in 2012, Norfolk Southern painted 20 new locomotives with predecessor schemes. NS #1071, an EMD SD70ACe locomotive, was painted with the CNJ orange and blue. In 2019, NJ Transit painted locomotive 4109 in a heritage scheme based on that of the CNJ GP40P. ==See also==
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