JOHNSONBURG | |
Style: | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad |
Coordinates: | 40.9704°N -74.8774°W |
Tracks: | 2 |
Opened: | December 24, 1911[1] [2] |
Closed: | 1941 September 28, 1952 (as flag stop)[3] [4] |
Code: | 61[5] |
Owned: | State of New Jersey[6] |
Johnsonburg was a railroad station and was one of the three original stations on the Lackawanna Cut-Off in northwestern New Jersey. Built by contractor Hyde, McFarlan & Burke, the station opened in 1911. Located on the western end of Ramsey Fill in rural Frelinghuysen Township, the station generated only modest passenger and freight business for the railroad. As a result, it was closed in 1940. The station was temporarily reopened in 1941 to serve as a command post for the clearing of the landslide that took place within nearby Armstrong Cut. After the closing of the station building, Johnsonburg continued to be a flag stop on the Cut-Off until the 1960s. A creamery was built by the railroad at the station site and operated for a number of years.
In the early 1990s, the station building was rehabilitated by Jerry Turco, who owned the Cut-Off from 1985 - 2001, after the line had been abandoned by Conrail. But the isolated building was subject to vandalism, and in 2007, Johnsonburg station was demolished by the state of New Jersey.