Liberty Street Ferry Terminal or Liberty Street Terminal was the Central Railroad of New Jersey 's passenger ferry slip in lower Manhattan , New York City and the point of departure and embarkation for passengers travelling on the Central Railroad of New Jersey, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad , Reading Railroad and the Lehigh Valley Railroad from the Communipaw Terminal across the Hudson River in Jersey City .
4-709: Service by the Communipaw ferry dated back to 1661, from the village of Communipaw during the Dutch colonial period . The terminal opened in 1865 following the completion of the Central Railroad of New Jersey's Communipaw Terminal. By the late 1960s the Jersey Central opted to close its station at Communipaw and the last ferry departed the terminal for Jersey City on April 26, 1967, bringing to an end 306 years of Communipaw ferry operations. The terminal
8-479: Was a major ferry service that operated between the village of Communipaw (in what would become Jersey City, New Jersey ) and Lower Manhattan , New York . The ferry began operations in 1661 after the Colonial Dutch administrators of New Amsterdam granted a charter to operate the ferry. soon after the establishment of Bergen atop Bergen Hill . It was the first reported ferry service established across
12-774: Was located one block west of the Ninth Avenue Elevated 's Cortland Street Station which operated from 1874 until 1940. During the 1980s, ferry service across the Hudson was restored by NY Waterway and it has subsequently been expanded. Today the Battery Park City Ferry Terminal is located a few blocks north of where Liberty Street Ferry Terminal and Cortland Street Ferry Depot once stood. 40°42′41″N 74°00′54″W / 40.7113°N 74.0149°W / 40.7113; -74.0149 Communipaw ferry The Communipaw Ferry
16-634: Was subsequently demolished and the waterfront was filled in to create Battery Park City in the early 1970s. The Cortland Street Ferry Depot , operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad and the West Shore Railroad , was located directly next to the terminal and also provided ferry service across the North River from lower Manhattan to their railroad terminals at Exchange Place and Weehawken , respectively. The terminal
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