Beachwood Historical Alliance

Welcome Home. Write us at beachwoodhistoricalalliance@gmail.com

Rail Trail Celebration on Tap for Saturday

Posted by beachwoodhistoricalalliance on June 3, 2010

This article originally appeared in the Riverside Signal on June 2nd, 2010. It has been reprinted below. The Riverside Signal can be found at www.RiversideSignal.com

An Official Ocean County Press Release

Train at Beachwood Depot, 1915.

Events Slated for Ocean County’s Barnegat Branch Trail


OCEAN COUNTY – With just more than 3 miles completed, Ocean County’s Barnegat Branch Trail is already providing residents and visitors with a unique view of the natural side of Ocean County.

The trail, which winds through wooded areas and natural lands starting in Barnegat Township and traveling through Waretown so far will be highlighted on National Trails Day, June 5.

“We are encouraging our residents from throughout Ocean County to visit us at the southern start of the Barnegat Branch trail on Saturday, June 5,” said Freeholder Director James F. Lacey, who serves as liaison to the trail. “Wear your sneakers, ride your bike, just take a break and enjoy what nature has to offer right here in your own backyard.”

Since 1993, National Trails Day has inspired thousands of individuals and community groups to take part in activities that promote healthy living and mental well being, protect green space, educate youth and adults on the importance of trails and instill excitement for the outdoors, according to the American Hiking Society, the founder of National Trails Day.

The theme for this year is “Find Your Happy Place.”

Representatives from Ocean County’s Department of Parks and Recreation, the designers of the Barnegat Branch Rail Trail and the Board of Chosen Freeholders will be on hand from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Burr Street parking area in Barnegat Township to offer information about the trail and other related county programs and services.

“I want to encourage everyone to join us and not only learn about our trail but experience it,” Mr. Lacey said.

The Beachwood Historical Alliance has been collecting photographs of that borough's train depot, shown here shortly before its demolition in the early 1960s, in an effort to bring it back to life as a comfort station on the trail to potentially aid the borough's ailing downtown district.

The Ocean County Board of Chosen Freeholders has been constructing the Barnegat Branch trail in phases with the first two sections completed.

Construction is expected to start in early summer on the third phase of the trail and be completed by the fall.

“This section will travel through a beautiful area of the Pinelands in Ocean County with Cedar Creek being a centerpiece,” the freeholder director added.

The trail, when completed will be a 15.6-mile linear park that runs from Barnegat Township to Toms River Township.

“This park is unique to Ocean County and features areas that residents and visitors may not have been able to experience since they are deep in our natural woods. Each time we add to it, the park grows in popularity, ” he continued.

The Barnegat Branch trail follows the existing right of way of the former Barnegat Branch Division of the Central Railroad of New Jersey.

Over the last 20 years, abandoned railroad lines like the Barnegat Branch Division of the Central Railroad of New Jersey that once ran through a portion of Ocean County have been transformed into trail parks in nearly every state in the country.

“Under the county’s plan, this abandoned rail line is being improved to link Barnegat Township to Toms River Township, and in the process will offer residents and visitors a new type of recreational trail experience,” stated Mr. Lacey.

Upon completion, the Barnegat Branch Trail will join the list of 43 existing and proposed rail trail projects across New Jersey.

The rail right of way, today a bike path, that runs along Railroad Avenue in Beachwood Borough.

To get the trail under way, in October 2002, Ocean County purchased 8.8 miles of the old railroad in three towns – Berkeley, Ocean and Barnegat townships. This purchase was supplemented in 2004 when Lacey Township granted to Ocean County an easement over its 4.8-mile trail segment. Coupled with the existing bike path in Beachwood and the incorporation of a dedicated bike lane along Flint Road in South Toms River, the completed trail will span 15.6 miles from Barnegat Township to Toms River Township.

“The design of the Barnegat Branch Trail is sensitive to the changing landscape of central Ocean County,” the freeholder continued. “Trail visitors will experience wooded areas in Barnegat and Waretown’s southern reach before transitioning into an active-use corridor that parallels Route 9 north of Waretown.

“Residential and commercial neighbors border much of the trail through Lacey Township before it returns to forest and then sand mining in Berkeley Township,” he added.

The primary surface finish of the trail is a stone dust surface. As work progresses, the trail will feature a number of trail facilities including community centers, comfort stations, trail signage and historical exhibits.

The facilities are being built in a style reminiscent of passenger and freight stations that once served Barnegat Township, the Forked River section of Lacey Township, the Pinewald section of Berkeley Township and Toms River.

Freeholder John C. Bartlett Jr., who serves as liaison to the Ocean County Department of Parks and Recreation, noted that several Ocean County parks and county natural land areas are located within walking or bicycling distance of the Barnegat Branch Trail including Lochiel Creek in Barnegat Township, Berkeley Island County Park, Wells Mills County Park in Waretown and Enos Pond County Park in Lacey Township.

“This trail not only offers the user the opportunity to see nature at it’s best in Ocean County, it offers access to Ocean County’s premiere park sites,” Mr. Bartlett said. “It’s a perfect combination.”

From archival photo caption: "The Jersey Central's Barnegat Branch left the Southern Division at Lakehurst and extended 22.1 miles to its namesake community. On May 1, 1967, the westbound Barnegat local freight rolls through Beachwood about one mile south of Toms River, the seat of Ocean County."

For more information on the Barnegat Branch rail trail, please visit:

http://www.planning.co.ocean.nj.us/transp-railtrail.htm

For more information on the Beachwood aspect of the rail trail, how rail trails boost local economy and the borough in general, please visit:

http://beachwoodhistoricalalliance.wordpress.com/2009/04/22/rail-trails-provide-local-economic-engine/

About these ads

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

%d bloggers like this: