Northern Railroad of New Jersey The Northern Railroad of New Jersey was chartered in 1854. When it opened on May 28, 1859, it was the second railroad in modern Bergen County (following only the
Paterson and Hudson River Railroad) with stage connections to Hackensack and other points. The northern terminal was
Piermont, New York, on the
New York and Erie Rail Road, which had opened in 1841. After running on the Erie for one mile, trains reached the Northern's own line at
Sparkill, New York, and ran for 21 miles to another junction with the Erie at
Croxton in
Jersey City, New Jersey. From there trains ran on the Erie and the
New Jersey Railroad for two and a half miles to the terminal later called
Exchange Place. Passengers could continue by ferry to Chambers St in
Manhattan. Because of its running over the Erie, the Northern was built to the same
broad gauge. By September 1859, there were three passenger trains in each direction, with one express running from Piermont to Jersey City in 70 minutes. Sometime in the 1860s the Northern began running service westward from Sparkill on the Erie's
Piermont Branch as far as
Monsey, New York. The southern terminal was moved to the Erie's
Jersey City Terminal late in 1868, about six months before the Northern Railroad's formal lease to the Erie. At that time the company had six locomotives, 21 passenger and baggage cars, and 30 freight cars. Not long after, a nominally separate company, the Nyack and Northern Railroad, built from
Nyack south to meet the Northern at Sparkill, and from its opening in May 1870 Nyack became the northern terminal for most Northern Railroad trains. The Northern track was changed to standard gauge along with the rest of the Erie system in 1878. The Northern Railroad was mainly a commuter and local line, with significant freight business only near its southern end. Business dropped off in the 1930s, and in 1942 the company's property was sold off to its long-term lessor, the Erie. From that time it was the Northern Branch.
Erie and Erie Lackawanna and later,
Bergen Arches. By 1954, the Northern Branch had only three rush hour passenger trains each way. Between 1956 and 1958, the allied Erie and
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad (DL&W) consolidated their diminishing passenger services at the Lackawanna's
Hoboken Terminal. During transition Erie trains continued to use the Erie Pavonia Terminal for about an hour in each rush hour, to distribute the heaviest crowds. A Northern Branch train was the very last to leave
Pavonia Erie Terminal in 1958. Two years later, the Pavonia Terminal was razed in 1961. The two companies merged in 1960 to form the
Erie-Lackawanna Railroad. The Northern Branch ran from Hoboken for only eight years. Operation was complicated by the lack of a direct connection. Trains leaving Hoboken had to run out over the new connection (1956) from the DL&W
Boonton Branch to the Erie Main Line, pass a switch which would be thrown, back up about two miles on the former route toward the Erie terminal to where the Northern Branch joined the Erie Main, wait for another switch, and then proceed forward again into the Northern Branch. The move added 15 to 20 minutes to running time. Because commuter services cost more to run than they earned in fares, the Erie-Lackawanna ended passenger service on several branches in 1966. On the Northern Branch, the entire railroad north of Sparkill was abandoned in January and passenger service on the rest of the branch was eliminated in October. The last timetable, April 24, 1966, shows three rush hour trains each way taking 60 minutes to run from Hoboken to Sparkill, only 10 minutes longer than 1954 schedules because of some station closings. Although freight service on the line continued, service into New York state stopped in the late 1970s after the
Continental Can Company in Piermont closed.
Conrail & CSX descends to the Meadowlands. Parallel line originally developed as
Hudson Connecting Railway, now
NYS&W. By the consolidation of Erie Lackawanna and
Penn Central (among others) into
Conrail in 1976, both the
West Shore Railroad and the Northern Branch fell under the control of Conrail. As trains accessing the Northern Branch in Jersey City had to go to
Journal Square and reverse direction, and the connection included a
grade crossing of Newark Avenue, freight trains typically used the
New Jersey Junction Railroad and West Shore Railroad, renamed as Conrail's
River Line, to go through northern New Jersey. Around 1994, a short elevated track, known as the Marion Running Track, was built to connect the
Passaic and Harsimus Line towards
Kearny with the Northern Branch. This provided the Northern Branch with a direct connection to other lines heading west and south at
Marion Junction. After the breakup of Conrail in 1999, the Northern Branch was divided.
Conrail Shared Assets Operations retained the tracks from Marion Junction to the CSX yard in
North Bergen, known as the Northern Running Track. CSX was given the remaining section north to Northvale, in addition to the West Shore Railroad running through the yard, known as the
Bergen Subdivision of the River Line. With
New Jersey Transit's 2000 creation of the
Hudson–Bergen Light Rail on the River Line east of the CSX North Bergen Yard, freight trains needed an alternate route to get to the CSX Albany Division. Trains were re-routed via the Northern Running Track to access the
Bergen Subdivision and this part of the Northern Branch became major CSX rail corridor from
Upstate New York. At that time, the Northern Running Track was improved to handle the heavier traffic that had formerly used the River Line on the east side of the
New Jersey Palisades.
New Jersey Transit paid for the project, which included double-tracking the line, changing Marion Junction and Bergen Junction, and building overpasses on Secaucus Road and
Paterson Plank Road. The rest of the Northern Branch continues north to the New York state line, and is a minor spur. == Route guide ==