Pemberton and Hightstown Railroad


The Pemberton and Hightstown Railroad was a railroad in the U.S. state of New Jersey.

History

The Pemberton and Hightstown Railroad was chartered in 1864 and completed in 1868; it linked the towns of Pemberton and Hightstown, a total of. The first President of the Pemberton and Hightstown Railroad was Nathaniel Scudder Rue, Jr., who lived in Cream Ridge, NJ. Most of the stock was purchased by the Camden and Amboy Railroad, and as such they were the owners of the line. The line was first leased to the Camden and Amboy in 1868, then the PRR through its acquisitions. In 1888 the Union Transportation Company was created to run the line, and the lease was terminated with the PRR, although they still owned the line. In 1915, the PRR merged the Pemberton and Hightstown Railroad into the Pennsylvania and Atlantic Railroad, a holdings company which included other local lines. By 1942, the UT was unable to operate the line, and contracted with the PRR to run the daily operations again. Eventually the PennCentral ran the line until 1976, until the PC merged into Conrail. The Pemberton and Hightstown Railroad, and the Union Transportation Company as operator, was not to be included in Conrail, and thus was independent and on their own. The line lasted until 1977, when due to financial problems, they ceased to exist. The Monmouth County Park System opened a section of the Union Transportation Trail with a gravel surface on the right-of-way on September 25, 2010. A 2.0 miles extension to Davis Station Road was completed in 2011. In February 2015, the section between County Route 526 and Herbert Road/Sharon Station Road had been completed, with a new parking lot and trailhead at Herbert Road and Sharon Station Road. Construction commenced in 2015 on the fourth segment between County Route 526 and Davis Station Road, and was completed in September 2016. The fifth segment between Herbert Road/Sharon Station Road and County Route 539 was completed in late January 2017 and passes through the Assunpink Wildlife Management Area.

Towns, stations, and facilities

The line started in Pemberton, New Jersey, in 1868 where it had a connection with the Burlington and Camden County Railroad. This gave them a connection to Mt. Holly and Camden.
The next stop it passed through was Shreve, which had a passenger shelter measuring, as well as a smaller milk shelter and platform.
Then Lewistown, where a wye and crossover allowed interchange with the Columbus, Kinkora, Springfield RR. This would become the Kinkora Branch of the PRR many years later. There was a large freight house here, measuring, as well as Cattle Pen, and storage tracks just south of the wye.
Continuing on, the line ran through Wrightstown, which exploded during World War I when Fort Dix was built. This location had a big wire fence around the station grounds, with two milk platforms, large coal trestle, and a cattle pen. The Wrightstown freight station measured, while the passenger station measured.
The line would continue through Cookstown, which included a milk platform and cattle pen, and a passenger station, and a freight house.
In New Egypt the Union Transportation Company would set up its offices in 1888. New Egypt would house the shops, turntable, and water tower for the UT. The passenger station was the largest on the line, measuring, while the freight house measured. The UT's office building measured. The location had a cattle pen, the Engine house at, including a large coal trestle and a coal shed, with a locomotive coaling platform, engine pit, and a turntable.
Hornerstown would be next, which would also include a turntable. The passenger station was, as the freight house was. The complementary cattle pen and milk platform would be included.
Cream Ridge had a wire fence around the property, with a passenger station and freight house. The complementary cattle pen and milk platform would be included.
Davis also had the cattle pen and milk platform, but only a passenger station, although larger at. This was considered a combination freight passenger station.
Imlaystown had a slightly smaller passenger station of, and a freight house of. Cattle pen included, but no milk platform listed.
Shrewsbury was listed as a stop, which only included a milk platform.
Sharon had the standard passenger station and freight station, with cattle pen and milk platform.
The last stop before Hightstown, Allens would only include a milk platform.
Hightstown was the final terminus, where they shared the station with the C&A.

Construction and operations