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Manhattan Transfer (PRR station)
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Manhattan Transfer (PRR station) : ウィキペディア英語版
Manhattan Transfer (PRR station)

Manhattan Transfer was a passenger transfer station in Harrison, New Jersey, east of Newark, west of New York Penn Station on the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) main line, now Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. It operated from 1910 to 1937 and consisted of two car-floor-level platforms, one on each side of the PRR line. It was also served by the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad. The only access to the station was by train; no local access was provided.〔 〕
==History==

Until 1910 none of the railroads that crossed New Jersey to reach New York City crossed the Hudson River, but had terminals on the Hudson Waterfront, where passengers boarded ferries. The dominant Pennsylvania Railroad was no exception; its passenger trains ran to Exchange Place in Jersey City.
On November 27, 1910 PRR opened a new line, the New York Tunnel Extension, that branched off the original line two miles east of Newark. The line ran northeast across the Jersey Meadows to a pair of tunnels under the Hudson River to New York Penn Station. Along with the new line, they built Manhattan Transfer just west of the junction. Passenger trains bound for New York Penn changed at Manhattan Transfer from steam locomotives to electric locomotives to run through the tunnel under the river.
After the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad (H&M), now known as PATH, was extended to Park Place in Newark on October 1, 1911, the H&M trains to Hudson Terminal in downtown Manhattan stopped on the tracks outside the two Manhattan Transfer platforms, allowing passengers to transfer from Penn-Station-bound intercity trains. Some PRR trains continued to run to Exchange Place until 1961, but didn't need to change engines and didn't stop at Manhattan Transfer.
In 1933 PRR completed its electrification of its main line between New York and Philadelphia/Wilmington/Paoli, so most trains to New York Penn no longer needed to change engines at Manhattan Transfer. They all continued to stop there for the H&M connection until 1937. On June 20, 1937 the H&M moved its terminus from Park Place, Newark to the new Newark Penn Station a quarter mile south of Park Place. (On the same day, the Newark City Subway was extended to Newark Penn Station). Since then PATH (former H&M) passengers have transferred at Newark Penn Station, and Manhattan Transfer was no longer needed.
The term Manhattan Transfer gained considerable public familiarity in its time so that the name became used in other contexts, starting with a 1925 novel by John Dos Passos.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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