Freehold Secondary

The Freehold Secondary is a partially active rail line in New Jersey, the active portion of which is owned and operated by Conrail Shared Assets Operations (CSAO). The portion which is in use runs from Jamesburg, NJ, to the current end of service at Freehold, NJ. Technically, the line continues to a junction with the Southern Secondary in Farmingdale, NJ, but this portion has been out of service since the early 2000s.

History

Construction and early history (1851-1879)

The Freehold and Jamesburg Agricultural Railroad was incorporated in 1851 to connect Freehold with the Camden and Amboy Railroad in Jamesburg. The first section between the aforementioned towns was opened to traffic in 1853. In 1868, the line was extended to a connection with the Northeast Corridor (then Camden and Amboy Railroad's main line). On the other end of the line, a firm known as the Squankum and Freehold Marl Company built track from Freehold to Farmingdale in 1868, and leased it to the Freehold and Jamesburg in the same year. The final link in the railroad, between Farmingdale and Sea Girt was built by the Farmingdale and Squan Village Railroad Company which was incorporated on April 3, 1867, and mandated to finish construction of their line by July 1, 1877. Its line was leased to the Freehold and Jamesburg in 1874. Also in 1874, the line between Jamesburg and Monmouth Junction (the connection with the Northeast Corridor) was sold to the Camden and Amboy Railroad.[1][2] On May 24, 1879, the three companies were merged to form a new company also called the Freehold and Jamesburg Agricultural Railroad Country. In the Board of Directors Election held on June 24, 1879, Strickland Kneass was elected president (he had been named president on the merger documents in May, but had not been formally elected by the board until June). Since June 1, 1879, the company's trackage has been operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad.[1][2]

Pennsylvania Railroad/Penn Central operation (1879-1976)

Operation continued and prospered under the Pennsylvania Railroad, and both freight and passenger trains used the line up until the Pennsylvania Cut its Trenton-Jamesburg-Sea Girt train on May 29, 1962. The line famously hosted dying President Garfield, and his private train as it traveled from Washington, DC, to where he died in Elberon, NJ.[3] In 1939, the line hosted the King and Queen of England's private train, en route to Red Bank, NJ.[4][5] After dieselization, the line's passenger trains were a favorite with railfans because of their use of Doodlebugs, a gas electric car.[6][7] Freight service continued after the end of passenger service, but in 1964, the section between Sea Girt and Farmingdale was torn up. It is now a bike trail.[8][9]

Conrail (1976-present)

In 1976, Conrail took over the operations of seven northeastern railroads, including the Penn Central, who operated the line after the 1968 merger of the Pennsylvania and the New York Central Railroad (the New Haven Railroad was incorporated into the merger in 1969, but its inclusion was of little consequence to this particular line). Unlike other routes that it operated, Conrail did not abandon the remaining portions of the Freehold Secondary, but a 1978 division map marks the section between Freehold and Jamesburg as a "light density line."[10] In the 1999 breakup of Conrail, the line went to Conrail Shared Assets (CSAO), a joint switching and terminal railroad created in order to serve the New York, Philadelphia and Detroit markets equally from both carriers. CSAO initially kept the entire line open, but since the early 2000s, there has not been a train east of the Prestone plant in Freehold.

Current operations

Conrail Local Freight WPSA-31 (Wayfreight Philadelphia division SAyerville - 31) runs on Mondays, Wednesdays and at times, Fridays to Freehold to serve the remaining customers on the line: These include (list is not complete)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.