Black River and Western Railroad
No. 60 at the station in Hunterdon County, New Jersey | |
Overview | |
---|---|
Parent company | Chesapeake and Delaware, LLC |
Headquarters | Ringoes, New Jersey, U.S. |
Reporting mark | BRW |
Locale | Hunterdon County, New Jersey, U.S. |
Dates of operation | 1961–1962 1965–present |
Predecessor | Pennsylvania Railroad Central Railroad of New Jersey |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Length | 16 miles (26 kilometres) |
Other | |
Website | www www |
The Black River and Western Railroad (reporting mark BRW) is a freight and heritage railroad operating in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, between Flemington, Lambertville and Ringoes. The railroad operates vintage steam and diesel powered locomotives.[1][2] The railroad also owns and operates the Belvidere and Delaware River Railway in Phillipsburg, New Jersey.[3]
History
The Black River & Western Railroad was started by William Whitehead in Oldwick, New Jersey, in the late 1950s.[4] A portion of the defunct Rockaway Valley Railroad went through his back yard. He and his sons started collecting rolling stock and an engine (Lackawanna #565).[4] They started laying tracks but then the expansion of I-78 halted their dream of building a railroad at that location. They moved their equipment to the Chester Branch of the Central Railroad of New Jersey with the hope of starting a railroad there.[4]
BR&W was officially incorporated in 1961.[4] The railroad's name is derived from the Black River, a river near Chester and the original name of the borough. The "and Western" is standard railroad nomenclature. Following a brief stint of test operations on CNJ's Chester Branch, equipment was moved to Flemington, New Jersey in 1963 and the search for a place to start their tourist train was continued. A leasing arrangement was created with the Pennsylvania Railroad that allowed a tourist train to operate from Flemington to Lambertville on the original Belvidere-Delaware Railroad (PRR Belvidere Division) Flemington Branch (originally the Flemington Railroad & Transportation Company) in 1964. BR&W paid $5,000 a year and rehabilitated the railroad (PRR operated freight service on the line during this period).[4] Steam engine No. 60 operated its first passenger test run on April 25, 1965 and pulled the first trip out of Flemington on May 16, 1965.[5][4] Weekend and holiday schedules were devised.[4]
BR&W assumed ownership and operations of the Flemington Branch from the CNJ connection in Flemington to Flemington Branch Junction in Lambertville on March 16, 1970, purchasing it from PRR successor Penn Central.[4] With the acquisition of the rail line and its freight operations, on top of the existing tourist passenger service, a true shortline railroad was born. Base operations were established in Ringoes, New Jersey, and remain so today. Freight interchange after the 1970 purchase was made with PC at Lambertville and CNJ in Flemington. PC filed for bankruptcy that June.[4]
PC continued to operate freight under bankruptcy protection until April 1, 1976 when Conrail assumed operations (the last PC freight train to operate on the Belvidere Division was on March 31, 1976).[4] BR&W then purchased three miles of trackage in the Lambertville area that was part of the Belvidere Division mainline on March 31, 1976 before Conrail took over.[4] BR&W also purchased the Flemington-Three Bridges portion from the bankrupt CNJ. Although coal, iron ore and general freights were rerouted to other lines such as the North Penn Branch, CR continued operating smaller interchange freight trains to Lambertville. In March 1977, a new interchange was built at Three Bridges, New Jersey with the former Lehigh Valley Railroad mainline.[4]
Freight service to Lambertville ended by 1995 with tourist operations ceasing by the end of 1998, when the Federal Railroad Administration prohibited operations south of Ringoes due to poor track conditions. There was talk in 1999 of Trap Rock Industries quarry using the stub-ended section north of Lambertville for unit stone trains, resulting in a frenzy of track repairs taking place on the Ringoes-Lambertville segment to accommodate the anticipated traffic. The quarry ultimately backed out with the final work train operating in June 2002 to retrieve all remaining rolling stock.
In 2004, the railroad leased 10 miles of trackage to their sister short line, the Belvidere and Delaware River Railway in Phillipsburg, New Jersey.[3] In 2017, the railroad began running freight service for its parent company, Chesapeake and Delaware, LLC.[6][7]
Black River Railroad Historic Trust formed
In 2001, a separate non-profit entity known as the Black River Railroad Historic Trust (BRRHT),[8][9] was formed to take over the tourist trains on the line. BRRHT does not own most of the passenger cars and until 2011, fees had to be paid to the BR&W for their use. BRRHT owns one diesel locomotive switcher, an SW9 numbered 438. It currently leases some coaches from the railroad and has use of several locomotives.[10]
In 2014, the BRRHT started to clear the line between Ringoes and Lambertville for passenger trains. In 2016 the first passenger train went down the first mile of the newly restored line in almost 20 years. In 2017, the BRRHT restored the first 2.5 miles of the line which is where Bowne Road Station is and Black River have been doing special events. In 2019, the BRRHT opened a further 1 mile towards Mount Airy Road.
Recent history
In 2014, BRRHT announced that it was looking to reinstate service along the dormant Ringoes-Lambertville section now called the Alexauken Division.[11] In May 2017, the first two and a half miles was re-introduced to passenger service. The in-service track reached Bowne Station, just over 4 miles north of Lambertville. Bowne Station included a picnic grove co-constructed with Woodsedge Farm and the railroad. Special picnic and farm trains were scheduled year for this new portion of the line, along with an evening departure from Ringoes every Saturday and Sunday that special events did not operate.[12] Sadly, in 2021, the remains of Hurricane Ida caused disastrous flooding that washed out portions of the restored trackage. In addition, an entre section of embankment was destroyed near Lambertville.[13]
Stations
Station | Status | Image | History |
---|---|---|---|
Three Bridges | Freight only station | Three Bridges was a former station on the Central Railroad of New Jersey's South Branch. The South Branch ran from a wye at Somerville, NJ station to Flemington. While there is no actual station and passenger service does not go this far, Three Bridges is where the BR&W interchanges with Norfolk Southern. Today a small shed stands across the track from where the station did. Last BRW passenger train to Three Bridges ran in 2016. | |
Flemington (Main Street) | Station building utilized by local bank | Flemington was the former terminus station of the Central Railroad of New Jersey's South Branch in Flemington, New Jersey. Service at the station began on July 1, 1864 and passenger service was discontinued on April 25, 1953. | |
Flemington (PRR) | Station building currently used for retail space | Originally used by the Pennsylvania Railroad, then when the BR&W came, they put a small shack not too far from the PRR Station. Then in the 1970s, the shack was removed and replaced by wooden car #101; and was used until it was burned in 1991. The station on the line marked the terminus to the Flemington Branch. | |
Flemington (Liberty Village) | Served by BRW | When nearby Liberty Village was being remodeled, Black River & Western sold off the original PRR station and per agreement, Liberty Village built them a new station closer to Route 12. Historically, the Pennsylvania Railroad interchanged with the Central Railroad of New Jersey just north of this station. | |
Copper Hill | Originally small station. Only siding remains. | Copper Hill was a small combination freight and passenger station, with a siding for loading produce from local farms. The area was named Copper Hill due to copper ore deposits found nearby, although the name is also thought to come from copperhead snakes that were found in the area. Siding is going to be used to allow trains to pass each other starting june 2022. | |
Hog Town | Abandoned | Hog Town is a small shack and was built around 1970 by the BR&W as part of their Great Train Robberies. In the off-season, the station was occupied by "The Mayor of Hogtown", who used to persuade passengers to vote for him as mayor (as part of a gag). The area got its name due to the nearby, and now demolished, home that raised hogs. The station is located next to the abandoned Hunterdon Concrete facility. | |
Five Birds Farm (formerly Muirhead) | Originally flagstop | Once part of the village of Muirhead (now gone), Muirhead was an early station for the Pennsylvania Railroad. The station closed in the 1920s. The station was moved a few hundred yards east and has been converted to event space, it is now owned by Five Birds Farm. The original site is used as a stop for the farm which works with the railroad to host modern events curated by nature, and has been renamed "Five Birds Farm". | |
Pumpkin Junction | Served by BRW | Pumpkin Junction is a farm station along the line constructed in 2008. The stop is used in October as part of the railroad's Pumpkin Trains. | |
Ringoes | Served by BRW | Ringoes was a former Pennsylvania Railroad station on their Flemington branch. Ringoes is the main yard and headquarters of the Black River and Western Railroad. | |
Boss Rd. | Originally flagstop | A flagstop during the PRR era of the branch line. Closed 1931, gone. | |
Bowne | Served by BRW | The original Bowne station was located south of the Bowne Station Rd. bridge. It was moved in the early 1930s north of the bridge near a home and has been converted into a shed. Today, the Black River Railroad Historical Trust has created a picnic grove where the station originally sat south of the bridge. This station can only be accessed by rail. | |
Mount Airy | Originally flagstop | A flagstop during the PRR era of the branch line. Closed 1931, gone. In the area where current active track ends. | |
Alexauken | Originally flagstop | A flagstop during the PRR era of the branch line. Closed 1931, gone. | |
Lambertville | Out-Of-Service. Building currently Lambertville Station Inn & Restaurant. | Just south of the junction between the Bel-Del mainline and the Flemington Branch, Lambertville serves as the southernmost station along the BR&W. The last train to depart the station was in December 1998. Black River & Western had plans to be back in Lambertville sometime in the early 2020s, as part of their Alexauken Division project. |
Equipment
Locomotives
Number | Images | Type | Class | Builder | Built | Heritage | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mack Truck | 33-ton switcher | Mack | 1927 | Crucible Steel | Display | |
60 | Steam | 2-8-0 | American Locomotive Company | 1937 | Great Western Railway of Colorado | Undergoing 1,472-day inspection and overhaul | |
438 | Diesel | SW9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1952 | Erie Railroad | Operational | |
752 | Diesel | GP9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1956 | Northern Pacific Railway | Operational | |
780 | Diesel | SD7 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1950 | Amtrak | Operational | |
811 | Diesel | GP9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1959 | Nickel Plate Road | Operational | |
908 | Diesel | SW900 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1951 | Lehigh Valley Railroad | Out of service | |
909 | Diesel | SW9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | Unknown | Portland Power Plant | Operational | |
915 | Diesel | SW900 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1956 | Winchester and Western Railroad | Out of service | |
1202 | Diesel | SW1200 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1956 | New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad | Operational | |
1206 | Diesel | SW1200RS | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1957 | Canadian National Railway | Operational | |
1259 | Diesel | SW1200RS | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1960 | Canadian Pacific Railway | Operational | |
1539 | Diesel | SW1500 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1960 | Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad | Operational | |
1567 | Diesel | SW1500 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1973 | Penn Central | Out of service | |
1596 | Diesel | SW1500 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1972 | Conrail | Operational | |
1823 | Diesel | GP10 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1955 | New York Central Railroad | Operational | |
1848 | Diesel | GP9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1954 | Northern Pacific Railway | Out of service | |
1849 | Diesel | GP9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1955 | Northern Pacific Railway | Operational | |
1850 | Diesel | GP9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1956 | Chesapeake & Ohio Railway | Operational | |
1853 | Diesel | GP9 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1958 | Texas Mexican Railway | Out of service | |
1854 | Diesel | GP8 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1953 | Pennsylvania Railroad | Operational | |
1856 | Diesel | GP10 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1955 | New York Central Railroad | Stored | |
1888 | Diesel | GP9u | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1959 | Canadian Pacific Railway | Operational | |
1889 | Diesel | GP9u | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1954 | Canadian Pacific Railway | Operational | |
2005 | Diesel | GP38-2 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1970 | Dover and Rockaway River Railroad | Operational | |
2006 | Diesel | GP38-2 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1967 | Dover and Rockaway River Railroad | Operational | |
8142 | Diesel | SW1200RS | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1959 | Canadian Pacific Railway | Operational | |
8159 | Diesel | SW1200RS | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1960 | Canadian Pacific Railway | Operational | |
9581 | Diesel | SD9m | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1955 | Norfolk Southern Railway | Operational |
Visiting units
Number | Images | Type | Class | Builder | Built | Heritage | Status | Current owner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
112 | Diesel | SW1 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1952 | Lehigh Valley Railroad | Operational | Lehigh Valley Railroad | |
9206 | Diesel | SW1 | Electro-Motive Diesel | Unknown | Pennsylvania Railroad | Operational | Lehigh Valley Railroad |
Former units
Number | Images | Type | Class | Builder | Built | Heritage | Current owner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
M-55 | Railcar | Doodlebug | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1930 | Arizona Eastern Railroad | Nevada Northern Railway | |
14 | Steam | 0-6-0T | H.K. Porter, Inc. | 1920 | Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal | Ulster & Delaware Historical Society | |
41 | Diesel | CF7 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1950 | Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | Unknown (scrapped) | |
42 | Diesel | CF7 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1951 | Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | Maryland and Delaware Railroad | |
50 | Diesel | Unknown | Davenport | Unknown | Unknown | Trap Rock Inc. | |
56 | Diesel | T-6 | American Locomotive Company | 1958 | Conrail | West Jersey Shortline | |
57 | Diesel | RS-1 | American Locomotive Company | 1948 | Washington Terminal | Private owner | |
58 | Diesel | RS-1 | American Locomotive Company | 1951 | Unknown | None (scrapped) | |
148 | Steam | 4-6-2 | American Locomotive Company | 1920 | Florida East Coast | United States Sugar Corporation | |
204 | Diesel | RS-1 | Alco-GE | 1947 | Devco Railway | None (scrapped) | |
211 | Diesel | RS-1 | Alco-GE | 1951 | Devco Railway | None (scrapped) | |
400 | Diesel | SW-1 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1943 | Broward County Port Authority | None (scrapped) | |
400 | Diesel | 44-ton switcher | General-Electric Diesel | 1940s | Long Island Rail Road | Connecticut Eastern Railroad Museum | |
565 | Steam | 2-6-0 | American Locomotive Company | 1908 | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | Steamtown National Historic Site | |
782 | Diesel | GP7 | Electro-Motive Diesel | 1950 | Amtrak | Owned by Vintage Locomotives Inc., scrapped (2021) | |
1554 |
|
Diesel | RS-3 | American Locomotive Company | 1953 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Anthracite Railroads Historical Society |
4666 | Railcar | Doodlebug | J. G. Brill Company | 1930 | Pennsylvania Railroad | Privately owned, Allentown and Auburn Railroad | |
7079 | Diesel | 65-ton switcher | General-Electric Diesel | 1940s | U.S. Army | Privately owned, New Castle, DE |
Former leased units
Number | Images | Type | Class | Heritage | Built | Builder | Current owner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
475 | Diesel | GP9 | Unknown | 1955 | Electro-Motive Diesel | Winchester and Western Railroad | |
732 | Diesel | GP9 | Unknown | 1955 | Electro-Motive Diesel | Winchester and Western Railroad | |
1523 | Diesel | GP7 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | 1952 | Electro-Motive Diesel | United Railroad Historical Society |
Rolling stock
Number | Images | Heritage | Type | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
297 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Combine car | Operational | |
322 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Passenger car | Operational | |
605 | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | Passenger car | Operational | |
1009 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Passenger car | Operational | |
5 | Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad | Business car | Out of service | |
585 | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | Passenger car | Under restoration | |
302 | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | Passenger car | Out of service | |
303 | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | Passenger car | Out of service | |
304 | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad | Passenger car | Out of service | |
319 | New Jersey Transit, ex Great Northern Railway | Passenger car | Out of service | |
320 | New Jersey Transit, ex Great Northern Railway | Passenger car | Out of service | |
491 | Canadian National Railway | Passenger car | Out of service | |
1318 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Passenger car | Out of service | |
1362 | USAT | Passenger car | Out of service | |
1369 | USAT | Passenger car | Out of service | |
420 | Central Railroad of New Jersey | Baggage car | Out of service | |
494 | Canadian National Railway | Passenger car | Out of service | |
17112 | USAT | Passenger car | Display | |
8424 | New York Central Railroad | Passenger car | Out of service | |
"Chenango" | Pennsylvania Railroad | Passenger car | Out of service | |
103 | Southern Railway | Boxcar | Stored | |
111 | Conrail | Boxcar | Stored | |
304 | Conrail | Ballast hopper | Stored | |
308 | Conrail | Ballast hopper | Operational | |
309 | Conrail | Ballast hopper | Operational | |
310 | Conrail | Ballast hopper | Operational | |
601 | Lehigh Valley Railroad | Boxcar | Stored | |
15555 | Conrail | Ore car | Stored | |
16002 | Long Island Railroad | Crane car | Stored | |
16003 | Amtrak | Flatcar | Stored | |
475532 | ? | Flatcar | Stored | |
487052 | Conrail | Hopper | Scrapped | |
497310 | Pennsylvania Railroad | Boxcar | Operational | |
770506 | Conrail | Flatcar | Stored | |
133 | Chesapeake and Ohio Railway | Caboose | Operational | |
385 | Southern Railway | Caboose | Operational | |
596 | Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway | Caboose | Operational | |
645 | Maine Central Railroad | Caboose | Operational | |
2727 | Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | Caboose | Operational | |
477375 | Pennsylvania Railroad | Caboose | Out of service | |
C-140 | Erie Railroad | Caboose | Operational | |
200 | Reading Company | Caboose | Out of service | |
595 | Norfolk and Western Railway | Caboose | Out of service | |
1417 | Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad | Caboose | Out of service | |
24531 | New York Central Railroad | Caboose | Display | |
95106 | Lehigh Valley Railroad | Caboose | Display |
References
- ^ "Belvidere & Delaware River". Archived from the original on 25 June 2010. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
- ^ "Black River and Western Railroad". New Jersey's Great Northwestern Skylands.
- ^ a b "Rail News - Belvidere & Delaware River Railway to lease track from sister short line. For Railroad Career Professionals". Retrieved 29 November 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "History of the Black River & Western Railroad". 2002. Retrieved January 15, 2025.
- ^ Cotey, Angela (May 12, 2015). "Black River & Western to mark 50 years". Retrieved January 14, 2025.
- ^ "About". Chesapeake & Delaware, LLC. Retrieved February 1, 2025.
- ^ "Our Railroads". Chesapeake & Delaware, LLC. Retrieved February 1, 2025.
- ^ "BLACK RIVER RAILROAD HISTORICAL TRUST INC | Open990". www.open990.org. Archived from the original on 14 August 2021. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
- ^ "Black River Railroad Historic Trust". HUNTERDON COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
- ^ a b c "Equipment Roster". Black River and Western Railroad.
- ^ "Black River & Western opening more track for Tourist Trains". www.rypn.org. Railway Preservation News. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
- ^ "Lambertville Service". BR&W Railroad. Retrieved 2017-07-31.
- ^ "Lambertville Service". Black River and Western Railroad.
- ^ a b "Locomoives". www.brwrr.com.
- ^ a b c "The Official Black River & Western RR Pages". 1999-11-09. Archived from the original on November 9, 1999. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- ^ "148 History". Sugar Express. US Sugar. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
- ^ "The Story Behind The John L Bishop". sites.google.com. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- ^ "Black River & Western Railroad | Flemington, NJ". Black River & Western Railroad | Flemington, NJ. Retrieved 2018-11-01.
- ^ American Experience | The Great War: Part 1 | Season 29 | Episode 8, retrieved 2020-12-06
- ^ "Coach 1009". Black River & Western Railroad. Archived from the original on 2016-01-12. Retrieved 2016-01-25.
- ^ "Great Northern Archive - Streamlined roster". gnarchive.com. Retrieved 2017-11-02.
- ^ "Great Northern Empire - Then and Now". www.greatnorthernempire.net. Retrieved 2017-11-02.
Further reading
- Jagger, Jerry J. (2016). Black River & Western Railroad. Images of Rails (1st ed.). Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4671-2412-6.
- Ziel, Ron (1990). Mainline Steam Revival (1st ed.). Amereon House. ISBN 0-8488-0863-0.
- Jagger, Jerry J. (2016). Black River & Western Railroad. Images of Rails (1st ed.). Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4671-2412-6.