Beaufort station (New Jersey) explained

Beaufort
Address:10 Eisenhower Parkway (CR 609)
Roseland, Essex County, New Jersey 07068
Opened:November 21, 1904[1]
Closed:April 29, 1928[2]

Beaufort was a railway station on the Morristown and Erie Railway in Roseland, New Jersey in the United States.[3] The same name is also rarely used for the neighborhood of southwestern Roseland near the former railway station. The station building currently houses the Orange-Alden Fuel Company. That address is 10 Eisenhower Parkway in Roseland and is near the Livingston border. The Beaufort station was located not far from what is today Beaufort Avenue in Livingston. Before the Eisenhower Parkway was built Beaufort Avenue continued from Livingston to Eagle Rock Avenue in Roseland.

The station was started in 1904 when residents of the neighborhood constructed a wooden shed to serve as a station along the M&E, whose passengers were familiar with multiple flag stop stations along the line but wanted regularly scheduled service to their neighborhood. Eventually the Morristown and Erie Railway company constructed the station building that stands today. Passenger service along the line stopped in 1928.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: New Road Open to Morristown . December 16, 2020 . The Montclair Times . November 26, 1904 . 5. Newspapers.com.
  2. News: Hatala . Greg . Glimpse of History: It's a Bus, It's a Train. Wait, What is It? . November 21, 2020 . . November 28, 2012.
  3. Book: Hepler, Steven P.. Rails Through the Hanover Hills: The Morristown & Erie Railroad. 1 February 1999. Arcadia Publishing. 9780738597027. 9 November 2016. Google Books.