Port Jervis Line

Port Jervis Line

Infobox rail line
name = rail color box|system=MNRR|line=Port Jervis



image_width = 250px
caption = Train #75, a combined Bergen County/Port Jervis Line train, makes a stop at njt-sta|Ridgewood.
type = Commuter rail line
system = New Jersey Transit and Metro-North Railroad
status =
locale = North Jersey, Hudson Valley
start = Hoboken Terminal
end = Port Jervis
stations = 26
routes =
ridership =
open =
close =
owner = New Jersey Transit
(Hoboken Terminal to Suffern)
Norfolk Southern Railway
(Suffern to Port Jervis, Southern Tier Line leased to and maintained by MTA Metro-North R.R.)
operator = New Jersey Transit
(under contract to MTA Metro-North R.R.)
character =
stock = F40PH-2CAT/GP40PH-2/GP40FH-2/PL42AC locomotives
Comet coaches
linelength =
tracklength = 152.9 km (95.0 miles)
notrack =
gauge = RailGauge|sg
el =
speed =
elevation =

{| Railway line header

The Metro-North Railroad Port Jervis Line is a predominately single-track commuter rail line running from Suffern, New York to Port Jervis. At Suffern, the line continues south into New Jersey as NJ Transit's Main Line.

NJ Transit provides service on the sections of the lines in New York State via a working agreement with Metro-North. This includes trains along the Port Jervis extension of the line with 13 New York-bound and 14 Port Jervis-bound trains on weekdays, and nine trains in each direction on weekends. Norfolk Southern Railway (NS) shares use of this track for local freight operations between Suffern and Port Jervis. The New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway operates over the line between Hudson Junction (east of Campbell Hall) and Port Jervis, and onward to Binghamton over the former Erie's Delaware Division. The tracks have been owned by NS since the 1999 split of Conrail. Metro-North leased the entire line from NS in 2003, with the possibility of outright purchase after 2006. MNR immediately began a substantial track and signal improvement program, in order to provide more reliable and comfortable service.

The Port Jervis line runs through some of the most remote and rural country found on the Metro-North system, and includes both its longest bridge and tunnel.

History

The line was built as the main line of the New York and Erie Rail Road, opening to Port Jervis in 1848. The rails south of Suffern are newer (connected for through service in 1853); the original main line ran east from Suffern to Piermont. The main line originally ran through the villages of Harriman, Monroe and Chester, then through Goshen and Middletown, onward to Otisville and the current end of the line, Port Jervis.

On November 14, 1973 the MTA agreed to subsidize the service to Port Jervis, at the time provided by the Erie Lackawanna Railway, which later became part of Conrail following the latter's formation in 1976. [http://www.prrths.com/Hagley/PRR1973%20Jun%2005.pdf]

In 1983 the Metro-North Railroad was formed to take over the commuter operations of Conrail in the state of New York. [http://www.mta.info/mnr/html/aboutmnr.htm] This included service west of the Hudson River, where rail lines do not connect directly with New York City. These lines pass through New Jersey, stopping at Secaucus Junction, where NJ Transit trains provide service to New York Penn Station multiple times per hour, and terminating at Hoboken Terminal.

Long considered the neglected stepchild of the Metro-North system, initially the MTA had equipped the lines with second-hand equipment. Station facilities were bare minimum. In 1984 the Main Line between Harriman and Middletown was abandoned, and service was moved to the longer (by 6 miles) Graham Line, the Erie's freight cutoff. At the time this was a very unpopular move with commuters, who were used to having their trains stop right in the center of their towns - often within walking distance of home. The Graham Line passed though no populated areas, and driving to the new stations added significant time to their commutes. However, others wanted trains out of the center of the towns, and so the switch was made.

As Orange County started to become a popular moving place for commuters in the mid-1990s political pressure started to bear on the MTA to start improving service, building a new station in njt-sta|Middletown-Town of Wallkill|type=MNRR, expanding parking at Harriman, and other improvements. After the events of 9/11, growth in Orange County exploded, and the MTA added more service, and started to expand the other parking lots on the system. However, with the expanded parking lots, the MTA brought the PJL in line with the rest of the Metro-North system, and introduced paid parking, exacerbating the complaints about the service. Recently, the line has been plagued by regular break downs of the aging locomotive fleet servicing the line. The MTA brought in leased equipment from the Morristown and Erie Railroad, but ran into even more problems, when it was discovered that the M&E engines would have to be significantly modified to comply with NJT's cab signalling system.Fact|date=July 2008

One oddity that results from the unusual arrangement between the MTA and NJ Transit, is that although the MTA subsidizes the service and maintains all of the facilities (except for the Suffern station), the actual operation of the line is almost totally under the control of NJ Transit- the trains are operated by NJT personnel, the trains are dispatched from Hoboken, and the fare system is also under NJT control but with a mixture of NJT and Metro-North rules. Thus, the ticket vending machines on station platforms are NJT machines, not Metro-North's. This also means New York passengers on the Port Jervis Line only pay the maximum in-state fare NJT charges for its non-NYC in-state destinations.

Line description

The Main Line starts at Hoboken and then stops at Secaucus Junction. Many of the Port Jervis Line trains travel non-stop from Secaucus to Suffern, some of them stopping at Ramsey Route 17 station. Some of the Port Jervis locals run via the Main Line between Secaucus and Ridgewood and the others run via the parallel Bergen County Line; the expresses may be routed either way at the discretion of the dispatchers. From Suffern northwards the line follows the same narrow valley as the New York State Thruway and NY 17. The Sloatsburg station is not very far from 17, Tuxedo is right on 17 and Harriman has its entrance on 17 but its actual platform adjacent to the Thruway. Harriman is the busiest station on the line. One peak hour train in each direction runs express from Harriman, with the next (or previous) stop being Secaucus Junction.

After crossing under the on ramp from 17 to the Thruway and passing Woodbury Commons the line gradually moves away from the Thruway, crossing NY 32 and running along the shoulder of Schunemunk Mountain, where it twice is crossed by hiking trails. At Schunemunk's north end it curves along to the Moodna Viaduct, the highest and longest railroad trestle east of the Mississippi River. Immediately afterwards it crosses NY 94 and arrives at Salisbury Mills-Cornwall in the Town of Cornwall.

The westward curve accelerates afterwards and the line begins to run almost east-west across central Orange County. Campbell Hall is the apex of this curve and the northernmost Metro-North station west of the Hudson River. This station services the towns of Goshen, Montgomery and Walden.

The southward side begins shortly afterwards, as the track crosses the Wallkill River, then Interstate 84, to run parallel to NY 211 near Highland Lakes State Park for a while. Shortly after leaving the highway's side, trains arrive at Middletown near the popular Galleria at Crystal Run shopping mall.

Almost unnoticed from the highway, the line crosses under the Route 17 expressway (the future Interstate 86) after leaving Middletown. A second track begins at Howells, to accommodate trains waiting for others to clear the Otisville Tunnel. The siding rejoins the main line just after the Otisville station as trains enter a mile-long (1.6 km) tunnel under the Shawangunk Ridge, the longest on Metro-North and one of only two on the system outside of New York City.

Once on the western end, in some of the most undeveloped countryside Metro-North passes through, trains follow the Neversink River valley southwards to Port Jervis and the yard beyond.

Rolling stock

Since equipment is pooled with NJ Transit, quite a selection can be seen on the line. Most locomotives are NJT, ranging from EMD GP40PH2-CATs and F40PH2-CATs A total of eleven locomotives are in Metro-North colors (#4184-#4189 GP40FH2-CAT), (#4190 GP40-PH2), and (#4191-#4194 F40PH2-CAT) The entire group of Metro North locomotives are in the process of being rebuilt, one at a time, and will return re-numbered in the 4900-4910 series.

To equip the line, Metro-North has always used an 'add on' clause in their agreements with NJT. This allows MN the option to add onto any NJT rolling stock purchases. MN has also 'imported' from its Hudson Line Bombardier-built coaches which were made compatible with similar NJT equipment. Up until recent years, passenger coaches would be a mixture of both agencies' equipment. It was not uncommon to see an MNRR locomotive hauling NJT cars or vice versa. With the 2003 purchase of 65 Comet V coaches, Metro-North included a provision for keeping the Metro-North labeled cars on the New York-based lines as much as possible, and the East-of-Hudson Bombardier coaches were returned to East of Hudson service. Currently, all of the peak services are composed of MTA labeled equipment, but some off peaks trains carry the NJT logo.

Operation is push-pull, with locomotives always facing west or north.

External links

* [http://piercehaviland.com/rail/pj.html The Port Jervis Line] at piercehaviland.org
* [http://www.stationreporter.net/njt_port_jervis_line.htm NJT Port Jervis Line] by Peggy Darlington
* [http://portjervisny.com PortJervisNY.com]
* [http://youtube.com/watch?v=FGOww8G4qDQ Happy 100th Birthday Moodna Viaduct] Video taken August 2007, showing the span. Commuters from the Port Jervis station to the Salisbury Mills/Cornwall station, pass over the Moodna Viaduct on the way to the city.


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