28 October 2008

1923 Hillsborough Commuter Train

In the 1920s, the Lehigh Valley Railroad still had regularly scheduled passenger service between Easton, PA and New York City - including their signature "Black Diamond Express" whose only intermediate stop was at South Plainfield.

Hillsborough commuters had a choice of two station stops for boarding - Flagtown or South Somerville (previously named Royce Valley) - and you had to be on time because there was only one train each morning that stopped at these stations.

The train left Flagtown at 7:00 AM and South Somerville at 7:06, and arrived in New York at 8:43. The return trip in the evening was 3 minutes faster as the 5:22 PM train got into Flagtown at 7:02 PM.

Check out this schedule from 1923!



2 comments:

  1. It takes 75 to 85 minutes today to get from Somerville to NY Penn. At least in 80 some years we’ve make the trip quicker. If building a train station in Hillsborough is going to be successful I think they should make a goal of getting to NYPenn in under an hour! That means no transfer in Newark, less congestion on the lines, and fewer stops.

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  2. Mike - I like your idea, but that would really take some doing!

    A better bet would be to somehow have Newark become a commuter destination again - the way Jersey City is for a lot of people in the financial area. If Newark were a place that people wanted to go to work and shop and entertain themselves - like they do in New York - then the West Trenton Line AND the Flemington Branch would both be instantly viable, with Newark reachable in less than an hour! Imagine two stations in Hillsborough, just like a century ago.

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