Paterson (NJT station)

Paterson

Looking at Paterson's Market Street station from street level.
Coordinates 40°54′53″N 74°10′02″W / 40.9146°N 74.1673°W / 40.9146; -74.1673Coordinates: 40°54′53″N 74°10′02″W / 40.9146°N 74.1673°W / 40.9146; -74.1673
Owned by New Jersey Transit
Line(s)
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Connections NJT Bus: 161, 703, 707, 712, 744, 746, 748
Construction
Parking 124 spaces
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code 2303 (Erie Railroad)[1]
Fare zone 6[2]
History
Opened 1930
Rebuilt 2001
Traffic
Passengers (2012) 677 (average weekday)[3]
Services
Preceding station   NJ Transit Rail   Following station
toward Suffern
Main Line
toward Hoboken
Preceding station   Erie Railroad   Following station
Main Line
South Paterson
Newark BranchTerminus

'Paterson Station is a New Jersey Transit commuter rail train station located on an elevated viaduct above Market Street in downtown Paterson, New Jersey. The railway through the station is double tracked, for north and south traffic on the NJT Main Line.

Station layout

   Main Line toward Suffern (Hawthorne)
 Port Jervis Line no stop
   Main Line toward Hoboken (Clifton)
 Port Jervis Line no stop

The Paterson station consists of a high-level island platform spanning from Market Street to Ward Street in downtown Paterson. Handicapped passengers must access the station via an elevator located on Ward Street.

The station is located in an area of Paterson near Center City Mall, the Passaic County Courthouse and county government offices, and the Paterson campus of Passaic County Community College where several city and county roads intersect with Market and Ward Streets.

History

The former Paterson station of the Erie Railroad on November 30, 1913, prior to the track being raised

Paterson Station has always only served one railroad line: the Main Line of the Erie Railroad, along with its successors, the main lines of the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad (EL), Conrail legacy EL division, and finally the present-day New Jersey Transit Main Line. However, the Main Line itself has changed substantially over the years, leading to significant changes in usage, destinations, and connections.

Originally a single track at grade, the elevated station was built between 1924-30 when the Erie Railroad eliminated street level crossings on its Main Line in Paterson. The Erie Main line ran from Jersey City to Chicago via Binghamton, Buffalo, Akron, Ohio, and Marion, Ohio. Major long distance passenger and freight trains passed through this section of track, and many of those passenger trains stopped at Paterson. This situation was stable from the inception of the station until the early 1960s, when the Erie Railroad was in major financial difficulties.

Due to the financial issues, the Erie merged with the Lackawanna in 1960, to form the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad, or EL. The EL immediately looked to reduce costs by eliminating redundant lines. Serendipitously, four government agencies had been developing plans that, to succeed, required changes or destruction to sections of the Erie Main Line:

With the 1960 EL merger, the legacy Lackawanna lines were now available to create a new Main Line, and the legacy Erie lines were available to create new routes for the Boonton line. Acceding to the above government requests became possible, with the triple benefit of removing government pressure, eliminating redundancy in the lines and schedules, and reducing costs for maintenance, capital, and taxes with the abandonment or sale of rights of way. The route 21 and downtown Passaic plans require severing the entire Passaic portion of the Main Line, and stranded adjacent sections in Clifton, and Paterson and beyond. Included in this stranded section was the Paterson station.

To fix this problem, a connection from the Boonton Branch was built. This allowed the Main Line to realign on a parallel route, with minimal construction, running trains from Hoboken (instead of Jersey City) through the Boonton Branch stations that had previously provided minor competition to the Erie stations. Once these trains reached Paterson, they used the new connection to continue on the original Main Line tracks, including service to Paterson Station. The connection was single-tracked for many years, but double-tracked in 2002.

(The remainder of the Boonton Branch, also severed at I-80, was realigned to continue on the old Erie Greenwood Lake Branch.)

The EL went bankrupt in the early 1970s. Conrail took over its operations, but the Main Line did not fit Conrail's plans, since the realignments were much less efficient than the original Main Line and Boonton Branch for straight freight traffic. The severing of various freight lines and the new connections required to create a contiguous east-west line through New Jersey to Pennsylyvania was circuitous and involved fairly steep ruling grades. As a result, Conrail wished to abandon all freight operations on the former E-L lines. The State of New Jersey agreed to take over the "E-L" commuter lines from Conrail. The Main Line saw little to no freight traffic after this transfer. Some maps still list the trackage as Conrail or Erie-Lackawanna.

Destinations

The station now only serves commuter line, with no full service/long distance passenger traffic. It has direct service to Hoboken over the current Main Line, over the legacy Boonton Branch connection mentioned above. Heading north, service goes to Port Jervis and Suffern, a joint service of New Jersey Transit and the New York Metro-North Railroad.

Previously, service ran through to the Erie Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City, and to Pennsylvania, New York, and midwestern locations via the Main Line and various branches. This involves a mix of commuter and full service passenger trains.

In addition, for a brief period after the Main/Boonton realignment, additional service along the Newark Branch was available from Paterson, through Clifton, Nutley, Belleville, northern Newark, and then going east through Kearny. EL abandoned that branch in 1966.

References

  1. "List of Station Names and Numbers". Jersey City, New Jersey: Erie Railroad. May 1, 1916. Retrieved November 23, 2010.
  2. "Main and Bergen County Line Timetables" (PDF). Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit Rail Operations. November 7, 2010. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  3. "QUARTERLY RIDERSHIP TRENDS ANALYSIS". New Jersey Transit. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 27, 2012. Retrieved January 4, 2013.

External links

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