Uptown Hudson Tubes
Junction in Jersey City at tubes' west end from a 1909 illustration | |
Overview | |
---|---|
Location | Hudson River |
Coordinates | 40°43′48″N 74°01′14″W / 40.7301°N 74.0205°W |
System | PATH |
Start | Christopher Street |
End |
Hoboken Terminal Newport |
Operation | |
Constructed | 1874-1906 |
Opened | February 26, 1908 |
Traffic | Railroad |
Character | Rapid transit |
Technical | |
Design engineer | Charles M. Jacobs |
Length | 5,500 ft (1,676 m)[1] |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Electrified | 600 V DC Third rail |
Tunnel clearance | (?) diameter |
Depth of tunnel below water level | 101 ft (30.78 m) below river level |
Depth of shipping channel above | (?) |
Uptown Hudson Tubes |
The Uptown Hudson Tubes are a pair of tunnels that carry PATH trains under the Hudson River between Greenwich Village in New York City, New York and Jersey City, New Jersey. The tubes do not actually enter Uptown Manhattan.
On the Manhattan side, the tunnels follow Morton Street and Christopher Street, and the first PATH stop in New York is Christopher Street. The service in New York continues uptown to the 33rd Street terminal. On the Jersey City side, the tunnels leave the riverbank approximately parallel to 15th Street and enter a flying junction where trains can proceed to either Hoboken or Newport.
History
Initial construction attempts
In 1873 a wealthy Californian Dewitt Clinton Haskin formed the Hudson Tunnel Company to construct a tunnel under the Hudson River from Jersey City to Manhattan.[2][3] At the time constructing a tunnel under the mile-wide river was considered less expensive than trying to build a bridge over it. An initial attempt to construct the tunnels began in November 1874 from the Jersey City side.[3] Work continued only until December 15, 1874, when progress was stopped by a court injunction brought about by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. Due to the lawsuit work on the tunnels was not resumed until September 1879.[4]
The construction method in use at the time omitted the use of a tunneling shield but did use air compressors to maintain pressure against the water laden silt that was being tunneled through. Unfortunately, the pressure needed to hold back the water pressure at the bottom of the tube was much greater than the pressure needed to hold back the water at the top of the tube. In July 1880 an overpressure blowout at the tube top caused an accident that resulted in an air lock jam that trapped several workers. Twenty people died as a result of the accident.[2][5] The liabilities incurred as a result of the accident meant that tunnel work was again stopped on November 5, 1882, since the company had run out of money. At that time water was allowed to fill the unfinished tunnel. On March 20, 1883 the air and compressors were turned back on and the tunnel was drained for a resumption of work. Work continued for the next four months when on July 20, 1883 it was stopped once more due to lack of funds.[6]
In 1888 a British company that employed James Henry Greathead as a consulting engineer attempted to resume work on the Hudson tubes, but they too were unsuccessful in completing them and were also out of funds by 1891.[7]
Completion of construction
In 1902 a newly formed New York and Jersey Tunnel Company was organized under the leadership of a Tennessean named William Gibbs McAdoo. The new effort, led by chief engineer Charles M. Jacobs, employed a different method of tunneling using tubular cast iron plating and a tunneling shield at the excavation workface. The large mechanically jacked shield was pushed through the silt at the bottom of the river. The excavated mud would be carted away to the surface using battery-operated electric locomotives. In some cases, the silt would be baked with kerosene torches to facilitate easier removal of the mud. The southernmost tunnel of the uptown pair, as well as the downtown tunnels, were all constructed using the tubular cast iron and tunneling shield method.
In 1906, after almost 33 years of intermittent effort, the Hudson Tubes were completed and were celebrated as the first non-waterborne link between Manhattan and New Jersey.[8] Work continued on construction of the downtown tubes and finishing off the interior of the uptown tubes. The finish work included the completion of a concrete lining as well as laying rail tracks and electric power service, and took an additional two years to complete.
The tunnels are separate for each track, which enables better ventilation by the so-called piston effect. When a train passes through the tunnel it pushes out the air in front of it toward the closest ventilation shaft, and also pulls air into the rail tunnel from the closest ventilation shaft behind it. Test runs of trains without passengers started through the tunnels in 1907.
Service begins
The Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Company was formed to run passenger service through the tunnel pair. Service in the uptown pair started between Hoboken and 19th Street in Manhattan at midnight on February 26, 1908. On July 19, 1909, service began between Lower Manhattan and Jersey City, through the downtown tubes, located about 1 1⁄4 miles (2.0 km) south of the first pair. After the completion of the uptown Manhattan extension to 33rd Street and the westward extension to Newark and the now-defunct Manhattan Transfer in 1911, the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad was considered to be complete. The cost of the entire project was estimated at between $55 and $60 million, equal to more than $1 billion in 2008 dollars.[9][10]
Awards
The uptown and downtown Hudson tubes were declared National Historic Civil Engineering Landmarks in 1978 by the American Society of Civil Engineers.[11] The coal-fired Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Powerhouse was built 1906—1908 and generated electricity to run the Hudson tube trains. The powerhouse stopped generating in 1929. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 23, 2001.[12][13]
See also
- Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Powerhouse
- List of bridges, tunnels, and cuts in Hudson County, New Jersey
- North River Tunnels (Pennsylvania Railroad)
- Timeline of Jersey City area railroads
Notes
- ↑ Burr 1885, p.11.
- 1 2 Jacobs and Neville 1968, p.107.
- 1 2 Burr 1885, p.14.
- ↑ Burr 1885, pp.14-15.
- ↑ Fitzherbert, Anthony (June 1964). ""The Public Be Pleased": William G. McAdoo and the Hudson Tubes". nycsubway.org. Electric Railroaders Association. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
- ↑ Burr 1885, p.67.
- ↑ Jacobs and Neville 1968, pp.107-108.
- ↑ Jacobs and Neville 1968, p.132.
- ↑ Shar, Robert Associate Professor. "Consumer Price Index (CPI) Conversion Factors 1774 to estimated 2018 to Convert to Dollars of 2008" (PDF). Oregon State University.
- ↑ "Calculate CPI from 1665-2012".
- ↑ "History and Heritage of Civil Engineering: Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Tunnel". American Society of Civil Engineers. Retrieved 2009-03-13.
- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places Listings November 30, 2001". Retrieved 2009-03-19.
- ↑ Karnoutsos, Carmela (2002). "Hudson & Manhattan Railroad Powerhouse". New Jersey City University. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
References
- Burr, S.D.V. (1885). Tunneling Under The Hudson River: Being a description of the obstacles encountered, the experience gained, the success achieved, and the plans finally adopted for rapid and economical prosecution of the work. New York: John Wiley and Sons. Retrieved 2009-08-24.
- Fitzherbert, Anthony (June 1964). ""The Public Be Pleased": William G. McAdoo and the Hudson Tubes". Electric Railroaders Association, nycsubway.org. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
- Jacobs, David; Anthony E. Neville (1968). Bridges, Canals & Tunnels: The engineering conquest of America. New York: American Heritage Publishing Co. Inc. with the Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 0-442-04040-7.
- Walker, James Blaine (1918). "XX. The Hudson and Manhattan Tunnels Under the Hudson River". Fifty Years of Rapid Transit, 1864 to 1917. New York: Law Printing Co. Retrieved 2009-08-24.
External links
- Progress of the Great Railway Tunnels Under the Hudson River between New York and New Jersey City Scientific American, November 1, 1890