Neha Patil (Editor)

Mount Olive station

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Tracks
  
1

Opened
  
1854

Parking
  
23 parking spaces

Rebuilt
  
1994

Mount Olive station

Location
  
Waterloo Valley Road, Mount Olive, New Jersey

Owned by
  
New Jersey Transit (station) Norfolk Southern (trackage)

Line(s)
  
Morristown Line   Montclair-Boonton Line

Platforms
  
1 low-level side platform

Address
  
Mt Olive Township, NJ 07828, United States

Owners
  
NJ Transit, Norfolk Southern Railway

Similar
  
Lake Hopatcong station, Mountain Avenue Station, Benson Street station, Annandale station, Fairmount Avenue station

Mount Olive is a New Jersey Transit station in Mount Olive, New Jersey, located in the International Trade Center. The station, located on the side of Waterloo Village Road, services trains for both the Montclair-Boonton Line and the Morristown Line along trackage owned by Norfolk Southern. The line is not electrified from Hackettstown to Dover, where passengers can transfer to an electric Morristown Line train via Summit or a diesel Montclair-Boonton train via Wayne and Montclair. Trains along both lines head to Hoboken Terminal in Hoboken, New Jersey or New York Pennsylvania Station at 34th Street in New York City, although Montclair-Boonton trains require a transfer at Montclair State University Station or Newark Broad Street for electrified service to New York.

After the termination of Boonton Line passenger service to Washington in 1966, service terminated at Netcong Station in Netcong. In 1994, stations were constructed along Norfolk Southern's Washington Secondary (to Washington) at Mount Olive and Hackettstown, extending the line into Warren County and providing rail service to the International Trade Center (ITC) along with tourist attraction, Waterloo Village. Service took effect on November 5, 1994 from Netcong to Hackettstown. The Washington Secondary was the original alignment of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad's Main Line via Washington and Portland, Pennsylvania. Near Mount Olive station was once the Waterloo station, named after local Waterloo, New Jersey. Waterloo station was first built in 1854 and remained in service until being torn down in the 1920s. It continued to receive passengers, and was the only regular stop with neither a building nor even a roof.

References

Mount Olive station Wikipedia