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Great Notch station

Great Notch station was a small New Jersey Transit facility in the Great Notch section of Little Falls, New Jersey. The station was served seven times a day, three inbound morning trains to Hoboken Terminal and four outbound evening trains from Hoboken by the Montclair-Boonton Line from Monday to Friday. Located at the intersection of Notch Road and Long Hill Road, it was the second of three stations in Little Falls, the other two being Montclair State University and Little Falls and, after electrification, was the first on the line to be strictly served by diesel trains. However, most trains bypassed this station and continued on to Little Falls (westbound) and Montclair State University (eastbound). The station was served by a double track which ended west of the station. The last trains stopped at the station on January 15, 2010, at 7:41pm.

Great Notch
The station on December 19, 2009, a month prior to closing.
General information
Coordinates40°52′26″N 74°12′21″W / 40.8738°N 74.2058°W / 40.8738; -74.2058
Owned byNew Jersey Transit
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks1 track, 1 siding
ConnectionsNJT Bus: 191, 195, and 705
Construction
Platform levelsGround
Parkingunder 20[1]
Bicycle facilitiesNo
Other information
Station code1747 (Erie Railroad)[2]
Fare zone7[3]
History
OpenedJanuary 1, 1873[4][5][6]
ClosedJanuary 17, 2010[7]
Rebuilt1905,[8] 1988
ElectrifiedSeptember 30, 2002
Previous namesCaldwell Junction[9]
Key dates
June 20, 1891Caldwell Branch service began[10]
February 18, 1966Station agency closed[11]
April 17, 1988Depot caught fire[12]
Passengers
20092286[13] 87%
Former services
Preceding station NJ Transit Following station
Little Falls Montclair-Boonton Line
limited service
Montclair State University
Preceding station Erie Railroad Following station
Little Falls
toward Sterling Forest
New York and Greenwood Lake Railway Montclair Heights
Cedar Grove Caldwell Branch Terminus

Train service at Great Notch originated in 1873, as part of the Montclair Railway. Service to Caldwell began in 1891, when the Caldwell Railway opened, serving Great Notch, Overbrook Hospital, Verona, and Caldwell. The station at Great Notch was first constructed in 1905 as a double station building for the Erie Railroad. The station was a green and red building serving the New York and Greenwood Lake Railway, along with the Caldwell Branch. The station also used an old boxcar as a tool shed for maintenance. By the early 1970s, the station had fallen into disrepair, and by 1974, was repainted Erie Railroad-style red with the tool shed box car removed. The station was abandoned when the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad went out of business and was later picked up by New Jersey Transit. After making deals with the mayor of Little Falls, New Jersey Transit gave the station a one-year "trial" to attract ridership. Ridership went down, however, and so the trial was canceled on December 18, 2009. The town of Little Falls was contacted by New Jersey Transit at that time, reporting that the Great Notch station would be closed on January 17, 2010 due to the "anemic" ridership at the station.

History edit

Train service at Great Notch originated with the introduction of the Caldwell Railway, a service that went from the community of Caldwell, New Jersey to the New York & Greenwood Lake Railway. Twelve trains a day served Caldwell, Verona and Overbrook Hospital. The station at Great Notch was deemed Caldwell Junction, inferring the junction between the two railways.[9] The branch was extended the following year to the municipality of Essex Fells, where it connected with the Morristown & Erie Railroad after the latter was extended to that point in 1903.

 
Great Notch station c. 1912

The Great Notch station depot was built in 1905 for the New York & Greenwood Lake Railway, a subsidiary of the Erie Railroad. The station was built as a green-red "type five" frame structure. While the main building was 12' × 28' × 18' in size, the station also included an old boxcar used as a tool house. The box car was only 12' × 45' and served the station for several decades. The station (telegraph call "GA") was just west of the Great Notch interlocking signal tower (telegraph call "GN"), which was built in 1900 to serve the junction of the Greenwood Lake Railway and its Caldwell Branch, heading south (railroad westbound) for the communities of Cedar Grove, Verona, Caldwell and Essex Fells. The station also served a local yard for train storage for the branch line via a wye.[8] At Essex Fells, connections could be made for train service to Morristown via the Morristown and Erie Railroad. The Caldwell Railroad diverged from the current New Jersey Transit line about 0.25 miles (0.40 km) west of the New Jersey Transit Great Notch station and followed its own route to Caldwell.[14] The station at Great Notch was more than just a building for people at the railroad. The station had a large water tower next to GA Signal and a potbelly stove. The station was tended by a husband and wife combination, serving the locals their daily newspapers and their mail. Great Notch did not receive mail delivery until the mid-1950s.[15]


By the early 1970s, the Great Notch station, which was falling into disrepair, received a new paint job, changed from the red-green-cream colors for the Erie Railroad to a new all red Erie Lackawanna paint scheme. The abandoned tool shed made out of the old wooden boxcar was also removed. Due to the removal of the tool boxcar, the propane tanks that heated the station building were also made visible.[8] After the ending of the Erie Lackawanna Railroad in 1976,[16] the Great Notch station lay abandoned. In June 1979, the State of New Jersey began to remove the tracks for the Caldwell Branch, which also lay abandoned at Great Notch.[17] Currently, what was the track leading to the Caldwell Branch is a siding. On April 16, 1988, the newly rehabilitated station building was destroyed by fire. The burned out structure was razed on April 23. New Jersey Transit, who owned the station depot, replaced it with glass structures to seat 90 people.[12]

During the construction of the Montclair Connection in 2001, the adjacent Great Notch Yard received a major upgrade, becoming a new state-of-the-art yard with new trains storage facilities.[18]

Closure edit

 
The station looking towards Hackettstown prior to closure

When Montclair State University station opened in 2004 [19] and the Wayne Route 23 Transit Center's train platform opened in 2008,[20] this made Great Notch one of three stations in Little Falls, and it did not nearly have the ridership either of the other two stations had. The opening of Montclair State University Station helped to pull away commuters from Great Notch due to its location very near it. The small parking lot facing the station had very little room for cars and a parking lot on the opposite side of the single tracked station was isolated from it by fencing. Further exacerbating the problem was that the small lot abutting Notch Road was not marked specifically for train passengers only. Great Notch had (and still has) a bus stop on the corner of Notch and Long Hill Roads that serves buses headed for Port Authority Bus Terminal, and commuters using the bus would park in the train station's parking lot (and still do, as it was never blocked off) and catch the bus up the street.

In January 2008, without knowledge of the township council, New Jersey Transit announced further and drastic service cuts at Great Notch. The only train to serve outbound customers was a train leaving for Hoboken Terminal in the morning, and two trains from Hoboken would serve the station at night.[21]

 
The site at Great Notch station in July 2010, six months after the closing of the station by New Jersey Transit

The future of the 103-year-old station was placed into further jeopardy on August 12, 2008, when New Jersey Transit announced to the community of Little Falls that they would possibly close the station as early as October 2008.[22] A few days after the announcement, rebuttal by the community began to appear, with a public hearing was announced for September 3 to work on plans for Great Notch.[23] The service with only one inbound train (to Hoboken) and two outbound trains (from Hoboken) was canceled on April 1, 2009. On that day, New Jersey Transit announced it would add two more trains in each direction on April 16 as a "one-year trial" for station ridership. The town hoped to get the then 67-person a day average to 100 people using the station by April 1, 2010, when the trial was set to expire. The mayor of Little Falls, Michael DeFrancisci, urged people to use the station more.[24] However, by December 2009, ridership had declined to 9 per day.[13]

On December 18, 2009, New Jersey Transit contacted Little Falls and said that the station would close in January 2010, three months before the year-long trial period to build ridership was set to end. The transit authority cited continued low ridership, as on average nine passengers a day boarded the train at Great Notch.[7] On December 21, 2009, New Jersey Transit announced the closure stating that the "anemic" ridership had remained at Great Notch, with only an average of 9 boardings a day, compared to 203 at the local Little Falls station and 597 at the Montclair State University Station.[13] The last train to depart Great Notch was the 6:51pm train from Hoboken Terminal on January 15 leaving Great Notch at 7:41pm, as weekend trains do not run on this portion of the Montclair-Boonton Line.[3]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Baxter, Raymond J.; Adams, Arthur G. (1999). Railroad Ferries of the Hudson: And Stories of a Deckhand. Fordham, New York: Fordham University Press. ISBN 9780823219544.
  • Catlin, George L. (1873). Homes on the Montclair Railway, for New York Business Men. A Description of the Country Adjacent to the Montclair Railway, Between Jersey City and Greenwood Lake. New York, New York: Montclair Railway Company.
  • Whittemore, Henry (1894). History of Montclair Township, State of New Jersey: Including the History of Families who Have Been Identified with Its Growth and Prosperity. New York, New York: The Suburban Publishing Company. Retrieved February 6, 2020.

References edit

  1. ^ Cunningham, Jennifer H (January 3, 2010). "It's end of the line for Great Notch station: Low ridership cited in rail stop's closure". The Record. Bergen County, N.J. p. L.3. ProQuest 426660189.
  2. ^ "List of Station Names and Numbers". Jersey City, New Jersey: Erie Railroad. May 1, 1916. Retrieved November 23, 2010.
  3. ^ a b (PDF). Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit. November 8, 2009. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  4. ^ Catlin 1873, p. 33.
  5. ^ Whittemore 1894, p. 47.
  6. ^ Baxter & Adams 1999, p. 147.
  7. ^ a b "Today's News". Little Falls, New Jersey: Township of Little Falls. 2009. Retrieved December 19, 2009.
  8. ^ a b c Yanosey, Robert J. (2006). Erie Railroad Facilities (In Color). Vol. 1. Scotch Plains, New Jersey: Morning Sun Books Inc. pp. 74–75. ISBN 1-58248-183-0.
  9. ^ a b Jaeger, Phillip Edward (2000). Images of America: Cedar Grove. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 9780738504520. Retrieved August 31, 2010.
  10. ^ "Eagle Feathers". The Madison Eagle. June 26, 1891. p. 3. Retrieved March 11, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ Hordiuk, Bohdan (February 21, 1966). "End of Another Era". The Herald-News. Passaic, New Jersey. pp. 35–36. Retrieved March 15, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  12. ^ a b "Going Down [Photo]". The Bergen Record. Hackensack, New Jersey. April 21, 1988. p. B3. Retrieved January 29, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  13. ^ a b c "New Jersey Transit Announces Closure of Great Notch Station". Newark, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit. December 21, 2009. Retrieved December 21, 2009.
  14. ^ Map of Erie Railroad Stations (Map). Cartography by Erie Railroad. Erie Railroad. 1920.
  15. ^ (PDF). Little Falls, New Jersey: Little Falls, New Jersey. January 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 9, 2011. Retrieved December 21, 2009.
  16. ^ Grant, H. Roger (1994). Erie Lackawanna: The Death of an American Railroad, 1938-1992. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804723572. OCLC 246668407.
  17. ^ "Old Caldwell Branch at End of the Line". The New York Times. June 10, 1979. pp. NJ25. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  18. ^ "Introducing The Midtown Direct Montclair" (PDF). Trenton, New Jersey: New Jersey Transit. September 2002. Retrieved October 11, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ . New Jersey Transit. October 20, 2004. Archived from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  20. ^ "New Wayne/Route 23 Transit Center Opens January 12, 2008". New Jersey Transit. January 2008. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  21. ^ "Letter To The Editor". The Record. January 20, 2008.
  22. ^ "Save Great Notch". Little Falls, New Jersey: Little Falls Transportation Committee. August 25, 2008. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  23. ^ "Public Hearing Notice - Proposed Closing of Great Notch Rail Station". New Jersey Transit. August 25, 2008. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  24. ^ Cunningham, Jennifer H. (April 1, 2009). "Great Notch Riders Get Wish: More Trains". The Herald News. Retrieved October 10, 2009.

External links edit

great, notch, station, small, jersey, transit, facility, great, notch, section, little, falls, jersey, station, served, seven, times, three, inbound, morning, trains, hoboken, terminal, four, outbound, evening, trains, from, hoboken, montclair, boonton, line, . Great Notch station was a small New Jersey Transit facility in the Great Notch section of Little Falls New Jersey The station was served seven times a day three inbound morning trains to Hoboken Terminal and four outbound evening trains from Hoboken by the Montclair Boonton Line from Monday to Friday Located at the intersection of Notch Road and Long Hill Road it was the second of three stations in Little Falls the other two being Montclair State University and Little Falls and after electrification was the first on the line to be strictly served by diesel trains However most trains bypassed this station and continued on to Little Falls westbound and Montclair State University eastbound The station was served by a double track which ended west of the station The last trains stopped at the station on January 15 2010 at 7 41pm Great NotchThe station on December 19 2009 a month prior to closing General informationCoordinates40 52 26 N 74 12 21 W 40 8738 N 74 2058 W 40 8738 74 2058Owned byNew Jersey TransitPlatforms1 side platformTracks1 track 1 sidingConnectionsNJT Bus 191 195 and 705ConstructionPlatform levelsGroundParkingunder 20 1 Bicycle facilitiesNoOther informationStation code1747 Erie Railroad 2 Fare zone7 3 HistoryOpenedJanuary 1 1873 4 5 6 ClosedJanuary 17 2010 7 Rebuilt1905 8 1988ElectrifiedSeptember 30 2002Previous namesCaldwell Junction 9 Key datesJune 20 1891Caldwell Branch service began 10 February 18 1966Station agency closed 11 April 17 1988Depot caught fire 12 Passengers20092286 13 87 Former servicesPreceding station NJ Transit Following stationLittle Fallstoward Hackettstown Montclair Boonton Linelimited service Montclair State Universitytoward New York Penn Station or HobokenPreceding station Erie Railroad Following stationLittle Fallstoward Sterling Forest New York and Greenwood Lake Railway Montclair Heightstoward Jersey CityCedar Grovetoward Essex Fells Caldwell Branch TerminusTrain service at Great Notch originated in 1873 as part of the Montclair Railway Service to Caldwell began in 1891 when the Caldwell Railway opened serving Great Notch Overbrook Hospital Verona and Caldwell The station at Great Notch was first constructed in 1905 as a double station building for the Erie Railroad The station was a green and red building serving the New York and Greenwood Lake Railway along with the Caldwell Branch The station also used an old boxcar as a tool shed for maintenance By the early 1970s the station had fallen into disrepair and by 1974 was repainted Erie Railroad style red with the tool shed box car removed The station was abandoned when the Erie Lackawanna Railroad went out of business and was later picked up by New Jersey Transit After making deals with the mayor of Little Falls New Jersey Transit gave the station a one year trial to attract ridership Ridership went down however and so the trial was canceled on December 18 2009 The town of Little Falls was contacted by New Jersey Transit at that time reporting that the Great Notch station would be closed on January 17 2010 due to the anemic ridership at the station Contents 1 History 2 Closure 3 See also 4 Bibliography 5 References 6 External linksHistory editTrain service at Great Notch originated with the introduction of the Caldwell Railway a service that went from the community of Caldwell New Jersey to the New York amp Greenwood Lake Railway Twelve trains a day served Caldwell Verona and Overbrook Hospital The station at Great Notch was deemed Caldwell Junction inferring the junction between the two railways 9 The branch was extended the following year to the municipality of Essex Fells where it connected with the Morristown amp Erie Railroad after the latter was extended to that point in 1903 nbsp Great Notch station c 1912The Great Notch station depot was built in 1905 for the New York amp Greenwood Lake Railway a subsidiary of the Erie Railroad The station was built as a green red type five frame structure While the main building was 12 28 18 in size the station also included an old boxcar used as a tool house The box car was only 12 45 and served the station for several decades The station telegraph call GA was just west of the Great Notch interlocking signal tower telegraph call GN which was built in 1900 to serve the junction of the Greenwood Lake Railway and its Caldwell Branch heading south railroad westbound for the communities of Cedar Grove Verona Caldwell and Essex Fells The station also served a local yard for train storage for the branch line via a wye 8 At Essex Fells connections could be made for train service to Morristown via the Morristown and Erie Railroad The Caldwell Railroad diverged from the current New Jersey Transit line about 0 25 miles 0 40 km west of the New Jersey Transit Great Notch station and followed its own route to Caldwell 14 The station at Great Notch was more than just a building for people at the railroad The station had a large water tower next to GA Signal and a potbelly stove The station was tended by a husband and wife combination serving the locals their daily newspapers and their mail Great Notch did not receive mail delivery until the mid 1950s 15 By the early 1970s the Great Notch station which was falling into disrepair received a new paint job changed from the red green cream colors for the Erie Railroad to a new all red Erie Lackawanna paint scheme The abandoned tool shed made out of the old wooden boxcar was also removed Due to the removal of the tool boxcar the propane tanks that heated the station building were also made visible 8 After the ending of the Erie Lackawanna Railroad in 1976 16 the Great Notch station lay abandoned In June 1979 the State of New Jersey began to remove the tracks for the Caldwell Branch which also lay abandoned at Great Notch 17 Currently what was the track leading to the Caldwell Branch is a siding On April 16 1988 the newly rehabilitated station building was destroyed by fire The burned out structure was razed on April 23 New Jersey Transit who owned the station depot replaced it with glass structures to seat 90 people 12 During the construction of the Montclair Connection in 2001 the adjacent Great Notch Yard received a major upgrade becoming a new state of the art yard with new trains storage facilities 18 Closure edit nbsp The station looking towards Hackettstown prior to closureWhen Montclair State University station opened in 2004 19 and the Wayne Route 23 Transit Center s train platform opened in 2008 20 this made Great Notch one of three stations in Little Falls and it did not nearly have the ridership either of the other two stations had The opening of Montclair State University Station helped to pull away commuters from Great Notch due to its location very near it The small parking lot facing the station had very little room for cars and a parking lot on the opposite side of the single tracked station was isolated from it by fencing Further exacerbating the problem was that the small lot abutting Notch Road was not marked specifically for train passengers only Great Notch had and still has a bus stop on the corner of Notch and Long Hill Roads that serves buses headed for Port Authority Bus Terminal and commuters using the bus would park in the train station s parking lot and still do as it was never blocked off and catch the bus up the street In January 2008 without knowledge of the township council New Jersey Transit announced further and drastic service cuts at Great Notch The only train to serve outbound customers was a train leaving for Hoboken Terminal in the morning and two trains from Hoboken would serve the station at night 21 nbsp The site at Great Notch station in July 2010 six months after the closing of the station by New Jersey TransitThe future of the 103 year old station was placed into further jeopardy on August 12 2008 when New Jersey Transit announced to the community of Little Falls that they would possibly close the station as early as October 2008 22 A few days after the announcement rebuttal by the community began to appear with a public hearing was announced for September 3 to work on plans for Great Notch 23 The service with only one inbound train to Hoboken and two outbound trains from Hoboken was canceled on April 1 2009 On that day New Jersey Transit announced it would add two more trains in each direction on April 16 as a one year trial for station ridership The town hoped to get the then 67 person a day average to 100 people using the station by April 1 2010 when the trial was set to expire The mayor of Little Falls Michael DeFrancisci urged people to use the station more 24 However by December 2009 ridership had declined to 9 per day 13 On December 18 2009 New Jersey Transit contacted Little Falls and said that the station would close in January 2010 three months before the year long trial period to build ridership was set to end The transit authority cited continued low ridership as on average nine passengers a day boarded the train at Great Notch 7 On December 21 2009 New Jersey Transit announced the closure stating that the anemic ridership had remained at Great Notch with only an average of 9 boardings a day compared to 203 at the local Little Falls station and 597 at the Montclair State University Station 13 The last train to depart Great Notch was the 6 51pm train from Hoboken Terminal on January 15 leaving Great Notch at 7 41pm as weekend trains do not run on this portion of the Montclair Boonton Line 3 See also editCaldwell Branch to Essex FellsBibliography editBaxter Raymond J Adams Arthur G 1999 Railroad Ferries of the Hudson And Stories of a Deckhand Fordham New York Fordham University Press ISBN 9780823219544 Catlin George L 1873 Homes on the Montclair Railway for New York Business Men A Description of the Country Adjacent to the Montclair Railway Between Jersey City and Greenwood Lake New York New York Montclair Railway Company Whittemore Henry 1894 History of Montclair Township State of New Jersey Including the History of Families who Have Been Identified with Its Growth and Prosperity New York New York The Suburban Publishing Company Retrieved February 6 2020 References edit Cunningham Jennifer H January 3 2010 It s end of the line for Great Notch station Low ridership cited in rail stop s closure The Record Bergen County N J p L 3 ProQuest 426660189 List of Station Names and Numbers Jersey City New Jersey Erie Railroad May 1 1916 Retrieved November 23 2010 a b Montclair Boonton Line Timetables PDF Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit November 8 2009 p 2 Archived from the original PDF on July 28 2010 Retrieved October 10 2009 Catlin 1873 p 33 Whittemore 1894 p 47 Baxter amp Adams 1999 p 147 a b Today s News Little Falls New Jersey Township of Little Falls 2009 Retrieved December 19 2009 a b c Yanosey Robert J 2006 Erie Railroad Facilities In Color Vol 1 Scotch Plains New Jersey Morning Sun Books Inc pp 74 75 ISBN 1 58248 183 0 a b Jaeger Phillip Edward 2000 Images of America Cedar Grove Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing p 27 ISBN 9780738504520 Retrieved August 31 2010 Eagle Feathers The Madison Eagle June 26 1891 p 3 Retrieved March 11 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Hordiuk Bohdan February 21 1966 End of Another Era The Herald News Passaic New Jersey pp 35 36 Retrieved March 15 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Going Down Photo The Bergen Record Hackensack New Jersey April 21 1988 p B3 Retrieved January 29 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c New Jersey Transit Announces Closure of Great Notch Station Newark New Jersey New Jersey Transit December 21 2009 Retrieved December 21 2009 Map of Erie Railroad Stations Map Cartography by Erie Railroad Erie Railroad 1920 Historic Little Falls PDF Little Falls New Jersey Little Falls New Jersey January 2006 Archived from the original PDF on June 9 2011 Retrieved December 21 2009 Grant H Roger 1994 Erie Lackawanna The Death of an American Railroad 1938 1992 Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804723572 OCLC 246668407 Old Caldwell Branch at End of the Line The New York Times June 10 1979 pp NJ25 Retrieved October 10 2009 Introducing The Midtown Direct Montclair PDF Trenton New Jersey New Jersey Transit September 2002 Retrieved October 11 2009 permanent dead link Montclair State University Station and 1 500 Spot Parking Deck Officially Opens See More Spots marketing campaign begins New Jersey Transit October 20 2004 Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved October 10 2009 New Wayne Route 23 Transit Center Opens January 12 2008 New Jersey Transit January 2008 Retrieved October 10 2009 Letter To The Editor The Record January 20 2008 Save Great Notch Little Falls New Jersey Little Falls Transportation Committee August 25 2008 Retrieved October 10 2009 Public Hearing Notice Proposed Closing of Great Notch Rail Station New Jersey Transit August 25 2008 Retrieved October 10 2009 Cunningham Jennifer H April 1 2009 Great Notch Riders Get Wish More Trains The Herald News Retrieved October 10 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great Notch NJT station Overhead view of the station via Bing Maps permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Notch station amp oldid 1182914949, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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