Railroad bridge The lower level of the Centre Street Bridge, a continuation of Centre Street in Newark, was first constructed for the
New Jersey Railroad, which later became part of the
Pennsylvania Railroad. On September 15, 1834, the bridge opened on a single level for trains. A cutoff around the bridge opened in 1870 and the old route became the Centre Street Branch of the New Jersey Railroad, being cut from the main line to the south when the latter was elevated around 1904. On March 1, 1901, a Pennsylvania Railroad train derailed its rear cars on the bridge at 10:23 that evening. When it derailed, the rear cars were dragged for 100 yards across the trestle. The train, a locomotive and five cars, had just left the Centre Street station when it derailed. The bridge had no guard rails at the time, and the rails hung over the bridge. The cars were disconnected, and the passengers continued to
Jersey City. The reason for the cars jumping the rails was not known. In July 1901, the states of New Jersey and New York proposed improvements to several local bridges to the
United States Congress. The proposal asked for $45,000 (1901
USD) in improvements of dredging and maintaining the channel of the
Passaic River below the bridge. Ten workers, known as
sandhogs died during a construction accident. On April 2, 1911, almost ten years after the proposed improvements, construction began on a new high-speed line in Newark along the
Hudson and Manhattan Railroad. It was proposed to be completed by the end of the summer in that year, to help commuters to
New York City. The same proposal asked for authorization of a proposal for subways in the city by the state of New Jersey. The bridge at the time was made of steel with concrete flooring and pavement. The upper-level was to have a clearance of and there was to be a long drawbridge in the center. The upper level was to be used by the new passenger line and the lower level was to be used for the freight line of the Pennsylvania Railroad. The new high-speed line and double-decker Centre Street Bridge was completed on November 18, 1911. The last rail that had to be constructed was completed that very day for the eighty-six Newark-bound trains to run in each direction of that line. The drawbridge's only use was for the freight line that was to go along the lower level of the bridge. As proposed, the upper level was given to the line. On November 25, 1911, the bridge re-opened once again as a double level bridge. connecting to the H&M to
Park Place. On June 27, 1937, a proposal was made by the city of Newark and the counties of Hudson and Essex to convert the upper level of the span to a roadway after proposing that the
Hudson and Manhattan Railroad, now the
Port Authority Trans-Hudson, to be moved onto tracks that paralleled
Route 21, which was assigned in 1927.
Road bridge The Centre Street Bridge was later designated as a state highway under the public highway system. The
New Jersey State Highway Department had recently designated
Route 25A, which became
Route 58, and later
Interstate 280 to the south in the proximity of the bridge. The state highway department a few years later designated the alignment of the upper level span of the bridge as New Jersey State Highway Route 25A-D, which was a suffixed spur of Route 25A. Even with the designation, State Highway Route 25A-D did not connect to its parent or grandparent routes. However, unlike Route 25A, Route 25A-D did not appear in the state laws. The route remained intact along the bridge from Route 21 and Center Street in Newark to Second Street in Harrison until January 1, 1953, when the state highway department completed a second
renumbering of state highways in New Jersey. Route 158 appeared in maps along the Centre Street Bridge as a publicly used highway until 1960, when it disappeared from the maps. Route 158's official decommissioning date is currently unknown, but the Centre Street Bridge was torn down around 1979. == Major intersections ==