Lackawanna Cut-Off

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from New Jersey Cut-Off)
Jump to: navigation, search
The westbound Lackawanna Limited comes off the Pequest Fill shortly after the opening of the Lackawanna Cut-Off. Taken from the signal tower at the east end of Greendell Siding, this early-1912 photo was used as a template for a Phoebe Snow poster that promoted the Lackawanna Railroad as having the shortest NYC-Buffalo route.
A map of the Lackawanna Cut-Off in northwestern New Jersey showing stations and major points of interest. The new Andover station will be located just west (left on map) of Roseville Tunnel.

The Lackawanna Cut-Off is a railroad line that was built by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad starting in 1908. The line was part of the Lackawanna Railroad's 400-mile (645 km) mainline that ran from Hoboken, New Jersey, to Buffalo, New York. Operated between 1911 and 1979, it was the last major railroad mainline constructed in New Jersey. It was abandoned in 1983 and its tracks were removed the following year.[1]

Also called the New Jersey Cut-Off, the Hopatcong-Slateford Cut-Off, the Lackawanna Highline, or simply the Cut-Off, the line runs west from Port Morris Junction — near the southern tip of Lake Hopatcong in New Jersey, about 45 miles (72.4 km) west-northwest of New York City — to Slateford Junction near the Delaware Water Gap in Pennsylvania, a total of 28.45 miles (45.9 km).[2]

The Lackawanna Cut-Off is an example of early 20th-century right-of-way construction, which minimized grades and curves and was built without vehicular crossings. It was one of the first railroad projects to use reinforced concrete on a large scale. One of the largest such projects in the U.S. at the time, its large cuts, fills, and embankments required the movement of millions of tons of fill material using techniques similar to those on the Panama Canal.[1] Running through hills and across valleys, the Cut-Off never exceeds a gradient of 0.55%, and only one curve has a speed limit of less than 70 mph (110 km/h).[2]

In 2011, after a more than quarter-century effort to restore rail service on the line, track construction began on the easternmost 7.3 miles (11.8 km) of the Cut-Off between Port Morris Junction (the connection with the NJ Transit rail system) and Andover, New Jersey. The so-called Andover Extension of the Cut-Off is slated to open to rail service in 2014.

Contents

[edit] History and planning (1851–1908)

The story of the Lackawanna Cut-Off begins more than a half-century before the first train ran on the line. The Lackawanna's "Old Road" via Oxford, New Jersey, chartered in 1851 and completed in 1862 under the supervision of railroad magnate John I. Blair, was meant to provide a more or less straight route between the mainlines of the Lackawanna Railroad in Pennsylvania and the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ). But when the railroads' proposed end-to-end merger fell through, and the Lackawanna subsequently merged with the Morris and Essex Railroad in New Jersey, the Old Road was immediately transformed into a circuitous and, therefore, obsolete route. All this during its first decade of operation.[1]

The eastern portal of Oxford Tunnel on the Old Road in August 2011. Operational problems here led to the building of the Lackawanna Cut-Off.

The operational problems caused by the Old Road worsened as the railroad's business grew, and by the beginning of the 20th century it had become the Lackawanna's chief bottleneck. Trains were limited to 50 mph (80 km/h) on the route, and 20 mph (32 km/h) through the route's two tunnels. By 1901, the increasing size of locomotives and train cars required the installation of gantlet track (two overlapping tracks that in effect were a single track) through the 2996-foot (915-m) Oxford Tunnel.[1] A second 975-foot (300-m) tunnel (actually two single-track tunnels) near Manunka Chunk also had chronic drainage problems that occasionally plagued operations.[1][2]

William Truesdale, who had become president of the Lackawanna in 1899, recognized early on that the railroad needed to replace the Old Road.[2] By 1905, engineers had surveyed more than a dozen potential routes between Port Morris, New Jersey, and Slateford, Pennsylvania. Because any east-west route in northwest New Jersey would cross the north-south hills at a right angle, tunneling seemed inevitable. Indeed, several of the surveyed routes would have required much longer tunnels than already existed on the Old Road. For instance, Line "C" — the surveyed lines were given letters — would have passed about a mile south of the town of Hope, New Jersey (roughly five miles (8 km) north of where the Old Road ran), and would have required three tunnels totaling four miles (6.5 km) in length. On the other hand, Line "M", which ran about 10 miles (16 km) north of the Old Road, and which of all the surveyed routes most closely mirrored the route eventually chosen, would have required no tunneling, but would have been longer and would have had speed restrictions near Roseville and Tranquility, N.J..[1][2]

Indeed, the only way to avoid the operational problems associated with Line "M" would be to build the world's largest land-bridge across the Pequest River Valley, which Truesdale wanted, but which the civil engineers on his staff thought impossible to build. Truesdale, an adroit corporate executive with a strong tendency towards perfectionism, was acutely aware of the political pitfalls of spending an enormous sum of company money on a railroad line that wasn't first-rate in every respect. So, Truesdale pushed for the seemingly impossible land-bridge to be built, and prevailed. The result would come to be known as the Pequest Fill.[1]

[edit] Building the right-of-way (1908–1911)

A May 1909 view of the Wharton Fill from atop Roseville Tunnel, 10 months into construction.

To finance the enormous cost of building the Cut-Off, Truesdale created a new corporation in 1908, the Lackawanna Railroad of New Jersey.[2] As built, the route ran from the crest of the watershed at Lake Hopatcong to Slateford on the Delaware River, 2 miles (3 km) south of the Delaware Water Gap. The line was 28.45 miles (45.8 km) in length, some 11 miles shorter than the Old Road's 39.6 miles (64 km). The new line reduced the ruling grade of 1.1% to 0.55%.[2] The Cut-Off runs downgrade from east to west, save for a short stretch of less than 0.1% upgrade on the Pequest Fill east of Greendell that accounts for the entire 11 feet (3.4 m) of "rise and fall" on the Cut-Off.[2]

The Cut-Off would have 1,560 degrees (more than four complete circles) less curvature than the Old Road, as well as none of the significant operational problems associated with the Old Road's tunnels. A 1,024 feet (312 m) tunnel at Roseville was required when construction of a cut there encountered unstable rock. This most likely disappointed Truesdale, whose experience with the Old Road made him want to avoid any tunnels on the new line. Fortunately, Roseville Tunnel caused no major operational problems, and a 70 miles per hour (110 km/h) speed limit was permitted through the tunnel.[2]

The line was built without grade crossings, a modern design feature that the Lackawanna was already introducing in the more heavily-populated region to the east; grade separation eliminated the nuisance and hazard of automobiles and horse-drawn vehicles crossing the right-of-way.

Construction began August 1, 1908, and was divided into seven sections, each the responsibility of a different contracting company. Each section would require heavy cuts and fills. A total of 14,621,100 cubic yards (11,000,000 m3) of fill material was required for the entire project, more than could be obtained from the project's cuts. So, the Lackawanna Railroad bought about 760 acres (310 ha) of farmland for borrow pits.[2] The earth and gravel was scooped out to a depth of 20 feet (6 m) and hauled up onto the embankments. During construction, several foreign governments sent representatives on inspection tours.[1]

The Pequest Fill extended westward from a point 1 mile (1.6 km) east of Andover, NJ, to 1 mile (1.6 km) west of Huntsville, New Jersey. It is 110 feet (34 m) tall and 3.12 miles (5.0 km) long, and required 6,625,000 cubic yards (5,100,000 m3) of fill.[2] The original Huntsville schoolhouse is buried under the Pequest Fill; the DL&W paid for a second schoolhouse to be built nearby.[3]

The line's largest cut, Armstrong Cut, just west of Johnsonburg, N.J., is 100 feet (30 m) deep and 1 mile (1,600 m) long, mostly through solid rock. It would be the site of a massive rockslide in 1941. The line's deepest cut is Roseville Cut, just west of Roseville Tunnel, at 130 feet (40 m) deep.[4]

During the summer of 1911, as construction fell behind schedule on the Roseville section, contractor Waltz & Reece Company used torchlight, as there was no electricity available, to work around the clock.[1]

The Paulinskill Viaduct in Hainesburg, New Jersey, was the largest concrete bridge in the world when it was constructed.[1]

The Cut-Off's 73 reinforced concrete structures include underpasses, overhead bridges, culverts, and, most notably, two viaducts.

The Paulinskill Viaduct (sometimes called the Hainesburg Viaduct after a nearby town) crosses the Paulins Kill. At 115 feet (35 m) high (about the height of the Statue of Liberty from crown to foot) and 1,100 feet (340 m) long, it was at the time the world's largest reinforced concrete viaduct.[2]

The Delaware River Viaduct, 65 feet (20 m) tall and 1,450 feet (440 m) long,[2] has five arches that span 150 feet (50 m) each. For stability, its abutments were excavated 62 feet (19 m) down to bedrock.[1]

Three reinforced concrete stations were built in the towns of Greendell, Johnsonburg and Blairstown. Greendell and Johnsonburg, located in rural areas, provided only modest business for the railroad, whereas Blairstown was more of a regional center and became a regular stop for passenger trains.[1]

Three reinforced concrete interlocking towers were built on the line: Port Morris Junction and Greendell Towers in New Jersey and Slateford Junction Tower in Pennsylvania. Greendell Tower, about 12 miles (19 km) west of Port Morris, controlled the crossovers, long passing siding, and short freight siding there. It was manned until 1938,[4] when its operation was transferred to Port Morris Tower. Slateford Jct. Tower, which controlled the junction with the Old Road, remained in operation until January 1951, when its functionality was transferred to East Stroudsburg Tower, about 6 miles (10 km) west. Port Morris ("UN") Tower, which controlled the junction with the line to Washington, New Jersey, remained in operation until the end of freight operations on the Cut-Off in January 1979.[1]

The Cut-Off cost $11,065,511.43 to build in 1911. Although monetary conversion calculations from 1911 US dollars would approximate the cost of building the Lackawanna Cut-Off at $276 million in 2012 dollars, the cost of replacing the original track configuration has been estimated by NJ Transit to be $275 million alone, a figure that would not include replacement of the 73 reinforced concrete structures, nor the construction of the fills and cuts on the line, and the acquisition of the right-of-way. As a result, it can be reasonable conjectured that the cost of rebuilding the Cut-Off today might exceed the $276 million figure by several fold." [2][5] It would take the Lackawanna Railroad 30 years to pay off the bonds that financed the building of the Cut-Off, so the Lackawanna Railroad of New Jersey would remain a separate corporate entity until 1941, when it was merged into the Lackawanna Railroad.[1][6])

[edit] Operations (1911-1979)

A brochure about the construction of the Cut-Off, given to reporters during November 1911 inspection trips.

The first revenue train to cross the Cut-Off is thought to have been train #15, a westbound passenger train that with the change in timetable would have entered onto the Cut-Off at Port Morris at approximately 12:15 am on the morning of December 24, 1911.[2]

The Cut-Off shaved 20 minutes off the schedule for passenger trains and saved freight trains a full hour.[2] Long-distance trains, such as the Lackawanna Limited, which traveled from Hoboken to Buffalo, and provided sleeping car service on to Chicago and St. Louis, shifted to the Cut-Off. The Old Road was immediately downgraded to secondary status.[1]

The Cut-Off was built to permit an unrestricted speed of 70 mph (110 km/h) on curves with a degree of curvature of 2°. The overall speed limit on the line was later raised to 75 mph (121 km/h) and then to 80 mph (130 km/h), after the installation of heavier rail and in recognition of the fact that roughly 85% of the line was tangent (straight) track. The table of speed restrictions shows that, for example, a westbound train passing the location of the future Andover Station had 20 miles (32 km) of 80 mph (130 k/hr) running, interrupted only by two short 75-mph (121 k hr) speed restrictions near Blairstown.


List of Speed Restrictions (<80 mph, 130 km h) on Cut-Off[7] ("Milepost" indicates miles west of Hoboken.)

Speed Restriction (point of interest) Milepost Milepost Curvature Speed limit -

mph (km/h)

Port Morris Junction (to/from New York City and Hoboken, NJ) 45.8 -- #20 switch[8] 40 (64)
1st curve west of Port Morris (Route 602 grade crossing) 46.8 47.1 70 (110)
2nd curve west of Port Morris (Route 605 overhead bridge) 47.6 48.1 70 (110)
4th curve west of Port Morris (east of Lake Lackawanna) 49.3 50.1 70 (110)
Roseville Tunnel (Byram Township) 51.6 51.8 -- 70 (110)
1st curve west of Roseville Tunnel (Andover Station) 52.5 53.0 70 (110)
1st curve west of Johnsonburg Station 63.1 63.4 1°30' 75 (121)
1st curve east of Blairstown Station 64.1 64.3 1°30' 75 (121)
1st curve east of Slateford Jct (west of Delaware River Viaduct) 73.2 73.5 3°30' 50 (80)
Slateford Junction (to/from Scranton, PA) 74.3 -- #25 switch[9] 50 (80)

Of course, while trains were officially restricted to 80 mph on the Cut-Off, engineers likely exceeded the speed limit occasionally to make up time on the schedule. No official records exist, but the Lackawanna's Hudson-type 4-6-4 locomotives were known to have been capable of exceeding 100 mph (161 km/h) with their passenger trains along suitable stretches of track.[2]

The western end of Roseville Tunnel posed a couple of operational problems, including snow and ice buildup and occasional rockslides. A watchman was posted in a shanty to keep an eye out for slides until a mechanical detector was installed to change trackside signals to red when such an event occurred.[10] Over the years, the daylighting (removal of the land above) Roseville Tunnel has been occasionally discussed. The cost and scale of such a project has never been determined.

At the outset, the Lackawanna's woman in white—Phoebe Snow—advertised the Cut-Off in posters that showed the Pequest Fill and proclaimed the Lackawanna as the "Shortest Route" to Buffalo. In 1949, when the Phoebe Snow, the Lackawanna's premier streamlined train, was inaugurated, the Cut-Off was considered a scenic highlight of the trip to Buffalo.

Freight operations along the Cut-Off were generally uneventful. Fast freights during the Lackawanna era were typically permitted a 60-mph speed limit. The speed limit for freights during the Erie Lackawanna and Conrail eras was 50 mph. Local freight operations serving customers on the Cut-Off continued into the Conrail era.

[edit] Rise and Fall of the Lackawanna Railroad

The Cut-Off was part of the Lackawanna Railroad's mainline from New York City to Buffalo, New York. Note that this 1922 DL&W map shows all major rail lines in the region, except those of its competitor, the Erie Railroad.

The Lackawanna Railroad was one of the most profitable corporations in the United States when it built the Cut-Off.[1][2] Over time, that profitability would decline, somewhat after World War I and especially after World War II, due to a combination of economic and political reasons, eventually leading to a merger with the railroad's bitter rival, the Erie Railroad, in 1960. That merger would have significant consequences for the Lackawanna's mainline in general and the Cut-Off in particular.[2]

[edit] E-L merger and Conrail (1957–1979)

In anticipation of the merger with the Erie Railroad, the Cut-Off was single-tracked in 1958, leaving an elaborate 4-mile (6 km) passing siding at Greendell and shorter passing sidings at Port Morris and Slateford. After the 1960 merger, freight traffic was shifted to the Erie's mainline through Port Jervis, NY.

In January 1970, the last E-L passenger train ran, closing Blairstown station., the only station still open on the Cut-Off at that time. But the year also saw nearly all of the railroad's freight traffic return to the Lackawanna mainline and the Cut-Off after the New Haven Railroad and the Penn Central Railroad merged and closed the New England Gateway interchange at Maybrook, N.Y.

In 1972, the Central Railroad of New Jersey abandoned all its operations in Pennsylvania (which by that time were freight-only), causing additional through freights to be run daily between Elizabeth, N.J., on the CNJ and Scranton on the E-L. The trains, designated as the eastbound SE-98 and the westbound ES-99, travelled via the Cut-Off and were routed via the CNJ's High Bridge Branch. This arrangement ended with the creation of Conrail.[11] Initially, Conrail's freight schedule over the Cut-Off did not much change from the E-L's due to labor contracts that restricted any immediate alterations. This, too, would change. In early 1979, Conrail suspended freight service on the Cut-Off, citing the E-L's early-1960s severing of the Boonton Branch near Paterson, New Jersey, and the grades over the Pocono Mountains as the primary reason for removing freight traffic from the entire Hoboken-Scranton route and consolidating this service within its other operating routes.

Ex-Reading Railroad #2102, a 4-8-4 locomotive, heads up an eastbound railfan excursion over the Cut-Off, having just exited Roseville Tunnel headed for Hoboken in June 1973.
A westbound Conrail freight snakes its way through the Delaware Water Gap in summer 1977. The position of the locomotives suggests that the caboose is still on the Cut-Off and is nearing Slateford Junction.

The end of service on the Cut-Off and the Old Road severed a corridor that had operated continuously since the American Civil War.

[edit] Efforts to save the tracks (1979–84)

After Conrail removed the Cut-Off from service in early 1979, all routine maintenance on the line was discontinued, and two sections of rail were removed at Port Morris Jct., effectively disconnecting the main track, although the Port Morris Wye track was left in place. Yet because Conrail had already replaced thousands of crossties on the Cut-Off, the line was arguably in better physical condition than it had been since the Lackawanna days.

Supporters of the Cut-Off convinced Amtrak to operate an inspection train between Hoboken and Scranton to look at operating intercity trains on the line. Dubbed the "Pocono Mountain Special", the 133-mile (215 km) inspection trip was run on a dreary November 13, 1979. But with no Amtrak funding available and insufficient political support, the idea of Hoboken–Scranton service faded. The Pocono Mountain Special was the the last passenger train, and the only Amtrak train, to operate on the Cut-Off in the 20th century.[12]

Several attempts were made to purchase the line from Conrail. The Monroe County Railroad Authority in Pennsylvania pursued funding to pay for the $6.5 million price-tag that Conrail had set for the 88-mile (142 km) section of track between Port Morris and Scranton. The agreement was to have included a $4.1 million loan (at 3.25% per annum) from the federal government, plus a bond issue to cover the balance of the purchase price, plus additional unspecified rehabilitation costs. Conrail was to receive permission to remove one track from Analomink to Scranton (about 40 miles, 65 km), with an option for the state to purchase the second track to Moscow for Steamtown National Historic Site operations out of Scranton. The agreement stipulated that the designated operator of the railroad would be expected to repay the loan using revenue from operations.[12]

On August 10, 1983, the U.S. Department of Transportation told Monroe County officials that the federal loan guarantee had been revoked in favor of the financially ailing Detroit and Mackinac Railroad in Michigan. In spite of this, a list of 16 potential operators was gathered, of which seven submitted proposals on August 26, 1983. Even with the revocation of the federal loan guarantee, officials in Monroe County continued to be optimistic that Congress could be convinced to provide the needed financial support to the project.[12]

In the end, the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) provided Conrail with the legal ability to abandon the Cut-Off. In 1983, the ICC ruled that track could be abandoned if it were "out of service" — if it had no originating or terminating shipments for two years and was not required for service to any other trackage. Until that time, a rather lengthy regulatory process had discouraged railroads from abandoning unwanted routes.[13] The Cut-Off, placed out of service four years before the ICC ruling and free of shippers left on the line, immediately met the requirements for abandonment.

Even without the federal loan guarantee, the Monroe County Railroad Authority (with support from PennDOT and the bizarre threat of the use of a privately owned World War II tank against Conrail) would block Conrail's attempt to completely remove the track in Pennsylvania. However, the political support could only delay temporarily Conrail's removal of the tracks on the New Jersey section of the Cut-Off.[12]

[edit] Further efforts to save the line (1984–2001)

Members of several rail advocacy organizations promote the restoration of service on the Lackawanna Cut-Off and the 1989 New Jersey bond issue for the acquisition of rail rights-of-way on WFMV, 106.3 FM, a radio station in the Blairstown train station

A Conrail train began removing track in summer 1984. Starting at the east end of the Delaware River Viaduct, the train worked eastward, and pulled the last rail on October 5.[14] The wooden ties and rock ballast were left in place, which was somewhat unusual for Conrail, which typically removed all components (rails, wooden ties, signals, poles, rock ballast) when dismantling a rail line.[12]

The following year, Conrail sold all of the now-abandoned right-of-way, except for the easternmost 1.5 miles (2.4 km) (which Conrail temporarily retained ownership to), to Jerry Turco, a developer. Turco said he had never intended to buy the Cut-Off, discovering its availability after approaching Conrail in late 1984 to acquire a small parcel of the Lehigh and Hudson River Railway (L&HR) right-of-way in Andover so that he could expand his adjacent nursing home operation. Conrail, the owner of the abandoned L&HR, reportedly countered by offering to sell Turco the entire 32-mile L&HR right-of-way from Sparta Junction in Sparta, NJ to BD Junction in Belvidere, NJ. Conrail further offered to add the Cut-Off (the L&HR right-of-way crossed under the Pequest Fill near Tranquility, NJ), offering Turco a package deal for a total of nearly 60 miles (97 km) of rights-of-way. Turco accepted, reportedly paying roughly $2 million for the package. Conrail removed the track from the L&HR, as Turco had only acquired the land and not the track.

In 1986, Turco announced plans to remove the fill material from the Pequest Fill and other large fills from the Cut-Off and to transport it to the now-defunct Westway (New York) project in New York City. The second part of Turco's plans involved the dumping of garbage and construction materials into the large cuts on the right-of-way. While it was never entirely clear if Turco was serious about pursuing his proposed Rebar Landfill, as it was called, or if it was just a ploy to stir up public opposition to the plan in order to gain political support and to force the New Jersey state government to step in and acquire the Cut-Off by condemnation, it is clear that the controversial Turco proposal became a rallying point for preserving the Cut-Off, and helped galvanize support for a $25 million state bond issue for acquiring abandoned rail rights-of-way in New Jersey.

During this time, Conrail sold the remaining 1.5-mile (2.4 km) parcel of right-of-way near Port Morris to Burton Goldmeier, a developer who reportedly wanted to use the Cut-Off as an access road to a proposed development project. It was rumored that Conrail initially retained ownership of the Goldmeier parcel so as prevent Turco from entering into an agreement with a competing freight railroad that might attempt to reactivate the Cut-Off. Whether that is true or not is not known, but by the time Conrail sold the Goldmeier parcel, it had already placed additional constraints into its agreement covering the Pennsylvania trackage west of Slateford Junction, strongly suggesting that Conrail was uneasy about the possibility of another railroad entering the New York market via the Cut-Off.

As such, when voters approved the bond issue in November 1989, it opened the door for the preservation of the Lackawanna Cut-Off. As expected, the New Jersey Department of Transportation began the use of eminent domain against the corporations that Turco and Goldmeier had established in New Jersey for the Cut-Off. Of the two parcels, acquisition of Turco's parcel was by far the most complicated as Turco had established separate corporations for the sections of right-of-way in each municipality that his section of the Cut-Off ran through: Knowlton, Blairstown and Frelinghuysen townships in Warren County; Green, Byram, and Andover townships and Stanhope and Andover boroughs in Sussex County; and Roxbury Township in Morris County. In addition, separate corporations had been set up for the Paulinskill Viaduct and the Delaware River Viaduct, as well as for the mile (1.6 km) of right-way in Pennsylvania (which would be subsequently acquired by Pennsylvania's Monroe County Authority). In addition to these corporations, Turco created a holding company to oversee these other companies: OLC, Inc., OLC standing for Old Lackawanna Cut-Off.

[edit] Efforts to restore rail service (2001–present)

By 2001, the State of New Jersey and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania had acquired their respective portions of the Cut-Off for a total of $21 million. In 2003, U.S. Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania secured initial funding for the restoration of passenger rail service between Scranton and New York City.[15]

The new bridge built over County Route 521 shown here just before it opened in November 2006, was built as an exact replica of its older companion

Work progressed slowly but steadily. In July 2006, the final environmental review was submitted to the Federal Transit Administration for review and approval.[16] The following February, the Lackawanna County and Monroe County Railroad Authorities were merged to form the Pennsylvania Northeast Regional Rail Authority. One of the objectives of the rail authority was to help expedite the effort to restore passenger service on the Pennsylvania side of the Lackawanna Cut-Off project.

In May 2008, the North Jersey Transportation Authority approved funding to rebuild the first 7.3 miles (11.7 km) of the Cut-Off between Andover and Port Morris Junction.[17][18] By 2009, the environmental assessment for the rest of the project to Scranton was completed, with a "Finding of No Significant Impact" (FONSI).[19] The EPA subsequently concurred with this finding in July 2009.

Brush removal and general preparation to re-lay tracks between Port Morris and Andover was originally slated to begin in 2010 but was delayed because a small area of wetlands was identified near County Route 605 in Stanhope. There, a narrow stream passes along the north side of the right-of-way. The stream, which is not seen on the 1906 survey map, may have been underground within the adjacent hill until construction of the Cut-Off exposed it. Having done so, the contractor built retaining walls to channel the stream which runs year round. With abandonment of the line, and lack of regular maintenance, however, the stream has spread over the right-of-way, causing the area to meet the technical definition of wetlands.[20] Also, the Sierra Club, an environmental group, objected to brush clearing along the line during the mating season of the Indiana bat, an endangered species.[21] This has caused further delay.

As of the beginning of 2012, most of the right-of-way between Port Morris and Lake Lackawanna (roughly the halfway point between Port Morris and Andover) had been cleared of trees and debris and ballasted. The section between Lake Lackawanna and Andover, however, was still awaiting approval of environmental permits for right-of-way clearing. The laying of railroad track began at Port Morris in September 2011, and just under about one mile (1.5 km) had been laid west of Port Morris as of December 2011, when a Norfolk Southern rail train brought 7.5 miles (12.5 km) of continuously-welded rail to Port Morris, sufficient to re-lay a single track to Andover. As of March 2012, construction of track is complete up to the County Road 602 crossing and has continued to the west to Lake Lackawanna (a total of about 4 miles, 6.4 km), with the exception of the aforementioned area of wetlands that is temporarily delaying installation of about 0.5 miles (0.8 km) of track in between the County Road 602 crossing and the overhead bridge for County Road 605.[22]

[edit] New Jersey Transit proposal

Lackawanna Cut-Off — NJ Transit proposal
Junction to left Track turning from right
74.3 Slateford Junction — to Poconos, Scranton, PA, Binghamton, NY
Unknown BSicon "hKRZa" Track turning right
Old Road via Portland, PA
Unknown BSicon "exhWGRENZE"
73 Delaware River Viaduct over Delaware River; NJ / PA stateline
Unknown BSicon "hAKRZoe" + Unknown BSicon "exSTR"
I-80 near Columbia, NJ
Unknown BSicon "exKRZo"
NYS&W Railroad
Unknown BSicon "exWBRÜCKEa"
71.6 Paulinskill Viaduct over Paulins Kill
Unknown BSicon "exhKRZe"
LNE & NYS&W/Paulinskill Valley Trail
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
64.8 Blairstown — new station proposed
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
60.7 Johnsonburg — no new station proposed currently
Unknown BSicon "exBST"
57.6 Greendell — proposed maintenance facility; west end of Pequest Fill
Unknown BSicon "exKRZo"
Lehigh and Hudson River Railway
Unknown BSicon "exKRZo"
Sussex Branch
Unknown BSicon "hAKRZoe" + Unknown BSicon "exSTR"
US 206
Unknown BSicon "exHST"
53 Andover — new station proposed; east end of Pequest Fill
Unknown BSicon "exTUNNEL1"
52 Roseville Tunnel
Unknown BSicon "xABZgxr+r"
45.7 Port Morris Junction
Stop on track
45.5 Lake Hopatcong (Landing)NJ Transit station - line to New York City

In 2008, the North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority (NJTPA) approved a proposal by New Jersey Transit to restore rail service to the Lackawanna Cut-Off and onward along the old DL&W mainline in Pennsylvania to Scranton.[23] The approval made the project eligible for Federal Transit Administration (FTA) funding for engineering and design work.

NJ Transit proposed to reopen train service in two phases:

  • Phase I (also known as the Minimal Operating Segment) - will extend rail service to Andover (7.3 miles, 11.8 km), where a new station at Roseville Road will be built with 125 parking spaces. This site was chosen because it is the area's only land parcel of sufficient size that is at grade with the Cut-Off and near a major highway; the site is about 1.1 miles (1.8 km) from US Route 206 and about 0.9 miles (1.5 km) from Sussex County Route 517. Initially this section will be operated as a single-track railroad with a 70 mph (113 km/hr) speed limit, using dual-mode locomotives. Construction of this section of track is currently in progress.[24] Twelve daily Midtown Direct trains between Andover and New York, six eastbound and six westbound, will be run.
  • Phase II - will extend rail service along the remainder of the Cut-Off (21 miles, 34 km) and into Pennsylvania, possibly as far to Scranton (60 miles, 97 km), a total of 88 miles (142 km). The estimated cost would be $516 million for track, station sites, signals, and bridgework along the Cut-Off; station sites and signals to Scranton, and additional locomotives and passenger cars. Steps in this phase include:
    • Rebuilding the remainder of the Cut-Off as a single-track railroad (with concrete ties and welded rail), but with an 80 mph (129 km/hr) speed limit, reflecting the more favorable curvature of the line west of Andover;
    • Removing and rebuilding the bridge deck of the Delaware River Viaduct;
    • Partially rebuilding the decking of the Paulins Kill Viaduct;[23]
    • Constructing passing sidings west of Andover station and in Blairstown, New Jersey;
    • Re-opening the station at Blairstown, with 230 parking spaces;
    • Building a maintenance-of-way facility at Greendell, a former station site.
    • Replacing an overhead roadway bridge at Slateford Jct. that was removed and filled in during the 1990s.[23]
The temporary end of track on the Cut-Off has been reached near Lake Lackawanna (out of view to left). Note the uncleared right-of-way in the background in this photo taken Feb 17, 2012. Due to a delay in obtaining state environmental permits, work on the remaining section to Andover, NJ will not resume until Dec 2012. Work east of this point continues, however.

Stations in Pennsylvania would include Delaware Water Gap (a new station near the Delaware Water Gap Visitors' Center in Smithfield Township, PA, with 900 parking spaces in a five-story parking garage); East Stroudsburg (a new station site, slightly south of the old station site, with 228 parking spaces); Analomink (a new station, near the old station site, with 250 parking spaces); Pocono Mountain (a new station, near the old Mount Pocono station, with 1,000 parking spaces); Tobyhanna (an existing station, with 102 parking spaces); and Scranton (a new station, west of the existing station, with 30 parking spaces). All stations on the line would have high-level platforms and would comply with Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) standards.[23]

Passenger service to Scranton and points east would consist of 18 trains a day (nine eastbound and nine westbound) to Hoboken or New York City. By 2030, it is estimated that the service would carry 6,000 passengers a day from northeastern Pennsylvania and northwestern New Jersey to jobs in New Jersey and New York City.[23]

Future commuters traveling to Hoboken using this service would board a Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) train to travel into lower Manhattan or would switch to a Hudson-Bergen Light Rail train to points along the New Jersey side of the Hudson River. A two-hour travel time from northeastern Pennsylvania to New York City has been estimated, similar to the commute from New York's northern suburbs such as Poughkeepsie, Brewster, and New Haven, Connecticut. NJ Transit will operate the service to Scranton, which is projected will cost about $26 million a year.[25]

[edit] Stations and landmarks (Port Morris – Scranton)

Milepost* Town Station/Landmark Notes
45.7 Roxbury Township Port Morris Junction Junction between Lackawanna Cut-Off and Montclair-Boonton Line to Hoboken Terminal and Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan (via Midtown Direct service) – nearest station at Lake Hopatcong (MP 45.5). NJT's Port Morris rail yard is also located here Morris Canal passed under Cut-Off just west of tower (canal filled-in by mid-1920s).
51.6 Byram Township Roseville Tunnel No station, 1024 foot (315 m) double-track tunnel.[21]
53 Andover Andover Proposed NJT station - new station on Cut-Off.[26]
57.6 Green Township Greendell Future maintenance-of-way facility on Cut-Off. Station and tower closed in 1938.[21]
60.7 Frelinghuysen Township Johnsonburg No station currently proposed. Old station closed 1940, partially rebuilt in early 1990s; demolished in 2007.
64.8 Blairstown Township Blairstown Proposed NJT station using existing station building. The only regularly scheduled stop for passenger trains on the Cut-Off.[26]
71.6 Knowlton Township Paulinskill Viaduct No station. Also known as Hainesburg Viaduct.
73 Stateline (NJ/PA)(Delaware River) Delaware River Viaduct No station. I-80 passes under arches of viaduct on New Jersey side of the river.
74.3 Slateford Slateford Junction Junction between Lackawanna Cut-Off and Old Road - Interlocking tower (no station)
77.2 Delaware Water Gap Delaware Water Gap Proposed station.[26] Old station (about 0.5 miles (800 m) east of proposed station) vacated in 1967.
81.6 East Stroudsburg East Stroudsburg Proposed station (south of old station site).[26]
86.8 Analomink Analomink Proposed station (near old station site).[26]
100.3 Mount Pocono Pocono Mountain Proposed station north of former station in Coolbaugh Township near PA 611.[27]
107.6 Tobyhanna Tobyhanna Station closed January 1958. Proposed station using existing station building.[27]
133.1 Scranton Scranton Proposed station[26] (existing station building currently a Radisson Hotel).

(* Note - Milepost refers to the number of miles west of Hoboken, NJ.)

[edit] Andover Extension construction photos

[edit] The Cut-Off – an east to west photo gallery

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Lowenthal, Larry; William T. Greenberg Jr. (1987). The Lackawanna Railroad in Northwestern New Jersey. Tri-State Railway Historical Society, Inc.. pp. 10–98, 101. ISBN 978-0960744428. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Taber III, Thomas Townsend (1980). The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad in the Twentieth Century, Vol. 1. Lycoming Printing Company. pp. 18, 34–39, 53, 131, 134–139, 144, 146–148, 172–173. ISBN 9780960339846. 
  3. ^ Touring the Lackawanna Cutoff "During the Cut-Off's construction, the railroad chose to purchase the structure and build the town another one farther away rather than changing the alignment of the rail line. As the construction progressed, the old school house was buried under tons of rock, to the sound of cheering school children who watched from a distant hillside."
  4. ^ a b c d e f Taber III, Thomas Townsend (1981). The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad in the Twentieth Century, Vol. 2. Lycoming Printing Company. pp. 739, 745, 747. ISBN 9780960339846. 
  5. ^ http://www.dutotmuseum.com/history.htm
  6. ^ The Lackawanna Cut-Off, New Jersey Tel-News, by Donald Maxton, July, 1990
  7. ^ Lackawanna Railroad Timetable No. 85, dated Nov 14, 1943
  8. ^ Railroad Switch
  9. ^ Railroad Switch
  10. ^ The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad in the Twentieth Century (2 volumes) by Thomas T. Taber III, 1977 and 1980.
  11. ^ Erie Lackawanna East, Karl R. Zimmermann, Quadrant Press, Inc., 1975.
  12. ^ a b c d e Dorflinger, Donald (1984-1985). "Farewell to the Lackawanna Cut-Off (Parts I-IV)". The Block Line (Morristown, New Jersey: Tri-State Railway Historical Society). 
  13. ^ "Free to Compete" by Michael W. Blaszak, Trains, October 2010, page 31.
  14. ^ The Block Line, Tri-State Railof that year. According to Conrail, the 39-foot (12 m) sections of 131 lb (55 kg/m) stick rail that was removed from the Cut-Off was to be welded together into quarter-mile (406 m) sections and was destined to be re-laid on other sections of the Conrail system<Tri-State Railway Historical Society, Inc., Fall 1984, p.22.
  15. ^ SENS. SPECTER AND SANTORUM ANNOUNCE APPROVAL OF FEDERAL FUNDING FOR THE SCRANTON-NYC PASSENGER RAIL SERVICE PROJECT: Transportation Funding as Part of FY03 Omnibus Appropriations Bill, press release dated February 14, 2003
  16. ^ Lackawanna Cutoff Passenger Service Restoration, dated July 27, 2006
  17. ^ Frank, Howard. (May 31, 2008). Small step for commuter rail eyed. Pocono Record. Retrieved online: 2 June 2008.
  18. ^ Lockwood, Jim. (June 4, 2008). Plans move forward to revive Lackawanna Cutoff rail line. The Star-Ledger. Retrieved online: 4 June 2008.
  19. ^ New Jersey Transit website [1] Retrieved online: 6 Sept 2009
  20. ^ Original survey map of the Lackawanna Cut-Off, dated September 1906.
  21. ^ a b c NJ Transit – New Jersey-Pennsylvania Lackawanna Cut-off Passenger Rail Restoration Project Draft Environmental Assessment
  22. ^ http://pennjerseyrail.org
  23. ^ a b c d e NEW JERSEY – PENNSYLVANIA LACKAWANNA CUT-OFF PASSENGER RAIL SERVICE RESTORATION PROJECT ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT Prepared by: U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Transit Administration and NEW JERSEY TRANSIT in Cooperation with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, June 2008
  24. ^ Bombardier press release
  25. ^ Transit officials discuss plan to restore rail service to New York City Pocono Record - January 18, 2007
  26. ^ a b c d e f Map of proposed service, accessed December 7, 2006
  27. ^ a b "http://www.njtransit.com/pdf/Appendix%20V%20-%20Revised.pdf"

[edit] Other sources

  • The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad in the Nineteenth Century (1 volume) by Thomas Townsend Taber III, Lycoming Printing Company, 1977.
  • Farewell to the Lackawanna Cut-Off (Parts I-IV), by Don Dorflinger, published in the Block Line, Tri-State Railway Historical Society, Inc., 1984-1985.
  • Erie Lackawanna - Death of an American Railroad, 1938-1992, by H. Roger Grant, Stanford University Press, 1994.
  • The Lackawanna Story - The First Hundred Years of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad , by Robert J. Casey & W.A.S. Douglas, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1951.
  • Erie Lackawanna East, by Karl R. Zimmermann, Quadrant Press, Inc., 1975.
  • The Route of Phoebe Snow - A Story of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, by Shelden S. King, Wilprint, Inc., 1986.
  • The Lackawanna Cut-Off Right-of-Way Use and Extension Study (for the Counties of Morris, Sussex and Warren), Gannett Fleming and Kaiser Engineers, Corp., September 1989.
  • Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, Timetable No. 85, November 14, 1943
  • Erie-Lackawanna Railroad Company, Timetable No. 4, October 28, 1962
  • Map of Proposed Route of Lackawanna Railroad From Hopatcong to Slateford. L. Bush - Chief Engineer. September 1, 1906.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export