The name is taken from the company that produced Babbitt's Best Soap, named after its founder, Benjamin T. Babbitt. In 1904 the company purchased a tract of 87 acres (35 ha) between Granton and Fairview,[5] and in 1907 relocated from its former premises, a 22,000 square feet (2,000 m2) facility on West Street in Lower Manhattan.[6] to what was then one of the largest soap manufacturing plants in the world.[7]
Granton Junction and Babbitt station
The West Shore Railroad, the Erie Railroad's Northern Branch, and the New York, Susquehanna, and Western (NYSW) all passed through the area running parallel to each other.[8] Both Erie and NYSW maintained minor stations[9] nearby 83rd Street, which crossed under the right-of-way of the West Shore. Granton Junction was located just south of the stations and was where NYSW and Erie converged after the latter had also passed under the West Shore.[10][11] For a time Granton was busy railroad junction used by both the Erie and NYSW, which shared track and stations, including the Susquehanna Transfer. The name Granton comes from a former quarry that later was the site of an important fossil find of a phytosaur.[12] Joint operations between the Erie and NYSW were controlled by GR Tower, which in 1959 was destroyed by fire, ending the relationship.[13] Originally the soap works were outfitted with rail spurs by the NYSW, but the soap company shifted more and more of its traffic to trucks, and in 1909 (apparently in retaliation for the loss of business), anonymous agents of the railroad removed the spur after temporarily imprisoning the factory's workers in a boxcar to prevent any interference.[14] In August 1922, a full Sunday evening Erie train heading south to Pavonia Terminal was struck by bombs thrown at it in what was considered an act of sabotage and an attempt to cause a collision.[15][16]
^Sheppard, Bill (October 1977). "Granton Junction"(PDF). The Block Line. V (VIII). National Railway Historical Society (Tri-State Chapter). Archived from the original(PDF) on October 4, 2013. Retrieved October 2, 2013.
^Colbertz, Edwin (September 10, 1965). "A Phytosaur from North Bergen, New Jersey"(PDF). American Museum Novitates (2230). American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved September 30, 2013.