Brick Church station explained

Brick Church
Style:NJ Transit
Style2:NJ Transit BOF
Platform:1 side platform and 1 island platform
Tracks:3
Passengers:2,041 (average weekday)[1] [2]
Pass Year:2017
Opened:November 19, 1836
Rebuilt:December 1880[3]
April 21, 1921 - December 18, 1922[4]
Electrified:September 22, 1930[5]
Zone:4
Other Services Header:Former services
Other Services Collapsible:yes
Nrhp:
Embed:yes
Brick Church Station
Location:Brick Church Plaza, East Orange, New Jersey
Coordinates:40.7656°N -74.2194°W
Built:1921
Architect:Nies, F.J.
Architecture:Tudor Revival, Jacobethan Revival
Added:June 22, 1984
Area:2acres
Refnum:84002636
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail
Marker-Color:
  1. 000
Zoom:14

Brick Church is an active commuter railroad station in the city of East Orange, Essex County, New Jersey. The station, one of two in East Orange, is located a block away from the former site of the Brick Presbyterian Church (later, Temple for Unified Christians Brick Church), for which the neighborhood takes its name, designed with brick romanesque architecture.[6] The other station, located 0.6miles to the east, is the namesake East Orange stop. Trains from the station head east on New Jersey Transit's Morristown Line and Gladstone Branch to New York Penn Station and Hoboken Terminal while westbound trains service stops out to Gladstone and Hackettstown. Like its sister station, Brick Church contains three tracks and two platforms (a side platform and an island platform). However, it is not accessible for the handicapped.

Railroad service through East Orange began with the opening of the Morris and Essex Railroad on November 19, 1836 to Orange. The railroad stopped at the residence of local attorney Matthias Ogden Halsted each day for him to commute. He soon provided a station for commuters to use as well as himself, and hired a family to operate it, without charging the railroad. Locals helped fund and build a new depot in 1880. The current station opened on December 18, 1922 when the railroad tracks through the city were elevated by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. The brick headhouse at Brick Church station were added to the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places in 1984 as part of the Operating Passenger Railroad Stations Thematic Resource.[7]

History

The line that currently runs through East Orange began in 1835 with the charter of the Morris and Essex Railroad, being approved by the New Jersey State Legislature on January 29. Service through the city of East Orange began on November 19, 1836 from Newark to The Oranges. With the construction of the railroad, Matthias Ogden Halsted (1792 - 1866), a local property developer took advantage of the one train a day that went to Newark. The railroad dropped Halsted off at his house and picked him up at his house rather making a trip to a station. Halsted offered at no cost to build a proper station at the site of the Brick Church station, and did so for the railroad.

In May 2024, the Federal Transit Administration awarded NJT $83 million to reconstruct the station for accessibility.[8] [9]

Station layout

The station has two low-level platforms serving all three tracks.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: QUARTERLY RIDERSHIP TRENDS ANALYSIS . New Jersey Transit . January 4, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130419042253/http://media.nj.com/bergen_impact/other/1Q2013.pdf . April 19, 2013 . dead .
  2. News: Kiefer. Eric. February 21, 2018. How Many Riders Use NJ Transit's Hoboken Train Station?. Hoboken Patch. 2018-07-18. en.
  3. News: A new depot has been erected... . February 18, 2020 . The Montclair Times . December 4, 1880 . 3. Newspapers.com.
  4. News: D., L. & W. Opens New Elevated Line . March 5, 2019 . The Paterson Evening News . December 18, 1922 . 1. Newspapers.com.
  5. News: Edison Pilots First Electric Train Over Orange-Hoboken Route . January 31, 2021 . The Passaic Daily News . September 22, 1930 . 5. Newspapers.com.
  6. Web site: Carter . Barry . 2013-08-19 . An East Orange church in need of a miracle . 2024-06-04 . nj . en.
  7. http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/NJ/Monmouth/state.html Monmouth County Listings
  8. Web site: All Stations Accessibility Program FY24 Projects . May 28, 2024 . Federal Transit Administration.
  9. Biden-Harris Administration Announces $343 Million to Modernize Transit Stations, Improve Accessibility Across the Country . May 28, 2024 . Federal Transit Administration.