The
Central Railroad of New Jersey established the
Newark and New York Railroad in 1866 to construct a branch from
Jersey City, New Jersey, to
Newark, New Jersey. The line cost a then-exorbitant $300,000 per mile. The line was elevated through Newark, with the Newark terminus located on Broad Street "between Fair and Mechanic." Service over the branch began on August 2, 1869. The current building was constructed between 1916–1917 at a cost of $483,000. Trains operated east-west over the Newark and New York branch to the
Jersey City (with a ferry transfer to the
Liberty Street Ferry Terminal in
New York City) or north-south via the
Newark and Elizabethport Branch to
Perth Amboy and points beyond. In
Elizabethport, passengers could transfer to trains on the Jersey Central main line. Through service to Jersey City ended on the morning of February 3, 1946, when the
collier Jaeger Seam struck and damaged the
Hackensack Drawbridge, which carried the Newark and New York Branch across the
Hackensack River. The Jersey Central instituted shuttle service between Newark and
Kearny, and west from Jersey City to
West Side Avenue. Intended as a temporary measure, this service pattern became permanent after the Jersey Central abandoned plans to rebuild the bridge. Service at Newark Broad Street ended on April 30, 1967. Under the
Aldene Plan, Jersey Central passenger trains on the main line were re-routed to serve Newark Penn Station over the
Lehigh Valley Railroad. Newark Broad Street closed, and all passenger service ended on the Newark and New York branch and the Newark and Elizabethport branch. Developer Harry Grant purchased the station from the city in 1986 for $1.2 million, with plans to build the
Renaissance Mall on the property. Grant subsequently declared bankruptcy, and the mall was never completed. The
Prudential Center was eventually built on the same space and opened in 2007. The head house, including the facade on Broad Street, remains and was included as a
contributing property of the Four Corners Historic District in 2000. That status notwithstanding, it sold to a private developer in 2016 for retail use. , the facade remains standing. == Notes ==