Map of the Lehigh Valley Terminal Railway.

Map

Map of the Jersey City waterfront, circa 1900.
Map of the Jersey City terminal, circa 1910.
Gold Bond of the Lehigh Valley Terminal Railway, issued 1. October 1891

The Lehigh Valley Terminal Railway was a Lehigh Valley Railroad company organized in 1891 through the consolidation of the companies that formed the Lehigh Valley's route from South Plainfield through Newark to Jersey City via its bridge across Newark Bay. Until 1895, when the Greenville and Hudson Railway was constructed, the Lehigh Valley depended on the National Docks Railway to reach the Hudson River terminal.

In 1903, all the Lehigh Valley's lines in New Jersey were consolidated under the name of Lehigh Valley Railroad Company of New Jersey.

Timeline of the Lehigh Valley Terminal Railway

See also: Timeline of Jersey City area railroads

Roselle and South Plainfield Railway
Newark and Roselle Railway
Newark and Passaic Railway
Newark Railway
Jersey City, Newark and Western Railway
Jersey City Terminal Railway
Edgewater Railway

References

  1. ^ "CONSOLIDATION OF SEVERAL ROADS Lehigh Valley Terminal Railway Completes Arrangement giving the Lehigh an Outlet to the Hudson" (PDF). New York Times. August 27, 1891.
  2. ^ "LEHIGH VALLEY'S TERMINAL New Freight Facilities-No Fight with New Jersey Central" (PDF). New York Times. January 16, 1900.
  3. ^ "LEHIGH VALLEY MERGER Railway System's Subsidiary Lines Consolidated" (PDF). New York Times. July 30, 1900. Retrieved 2010-11-20.