Paterson and Hudson River Railroad

Paterson and Hudson River Railroad
Map
Overview
HeadquartersJersey City, New Jersey
LocaleJersey City to Paterson
Dates of operation1833–1852
SuccessorNew York and Erie Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

Paterson
Passaic
NY&E Bergen County Branch
Rutherford
Hackensack Jct.
DL&W connection
Croxton Yard
Marion jct.


The Paterson and Hudson River Railroad was a railroad that operated in New Jersey and connected the cities of Jersey City and southeast Paterson. The railroad was started in 1833.

The company was the first in the United States to build moveable bridges for rail, crossing the Passaic River and Hackensack River.[1]

Originally the Paterson and Hudson River Railroad used a troop of horses to pull the cars along the rails.[2] The first steam locomotive to operate on the line was called the McNeil and manufactured by Robert Stephenson and Company then assembled by Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works.

A decade after opening, the railroad's importance increased when the Paterson and Ramapo Railroad was built connecting north Paterson to Suffern, New York just over the state line. Travelers could use a combination of the two lines (and another transportation method for the 34-mile (1.2 km) between the two Paterson terminals) to travel between Suffern and New York City faster than the New York and Erie Railroad. The lines were eventually connected. In 1852, the New York and Erie Railroad leased the track rights of the P&HR and P&R and combined their lines into the "Union Railroad", which soon became the new New York and Erie Railroad mainline.[3] Erie took ownership in 1953.[4]

The first stations west of Bergen Junction along the line included "Germantown", "Hackensack" along the Hackensack River (close to the present-day Secaucus Junction and the former Harmon Cove station) and "Boiling Spring" (at the site of the present-day Rutherford station). [5]

  1. ^ Allen, Richard Sanders (2004), Covered Bridges of the Northeast, Courier Corporation, ISBN 9780486436623
  2. ^ Jersey City And Its Historic Sites - (Get NJ!) (Accessed November 30, 2008).
  3. ^ Erie Railroad Home Page (Erie Lackawanna Historical Society) (Accessed November 30, 2008.)
  4. ^ "SALE OF RAILROAD UPHELD BY COURT; Paterson and Hudson River's Transfer to Erie Ownership is Sustained by Ruling" (PDF). The New York Times.
  5. ^ "NYC Area Rail Map 1860". Archived from the original on 2017-06-28. Retrieved 2021-08-24.