Friday, November 9, 2018

Reading Railroad 'Crusader' 1937, art


Artist's signature not legible. "The Crusader was a five car stainless steel streamlined express train pulled by a stainless steel shrouded streamlined Pacific class (4-6-2) steam locomotive. The train consisted of two coaches, two observation cars, and a tavern-dining car. It ran on a 90.3-mile (145.3 km) route from Philadelphia's Reading Terminal to Jersey City's Communipaw Terminal, with a ferry connection to Lower Manhattan at Liberty Street. The Reading Railroad provided this service in partnership with the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ), in which it was the majority owner of capital stock.

"Trains including the Crusader ran on Reading Railroad tracks from Reading Terminal in Philadelphia to Bound Brook, NJ, where they continued on CNJ tracks to Communipaw Terminal in Jersey City. Passengers then left the train and walked aboard the ferry or boarded busses that loaded onto the ferry. Introduced in 1937, the Crusader service declined during the 1960s. The southern part of the route was cut in 1981, followed by the northern part in 1982."

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