

#Lincoln tunnel toll driver#
The driver sped off into the tunnel, firing at the police. A patrolman, Nicholas Falabella, noticed the car just as it passed the toll booth at the Lincoln Tunnel and ordered the driver to stop the vehicle.
#Lincoln tunnel toll license#
The men were driven off by the residents, one of whom reported the license plate on their car to the police, who posted an alert. Shortly after noon on September 8, 1953, two armed men, Peter Simon and John Metcalf, attempted to rob a home in South Orange, New Jersey. The Lincoln Tunnel carries approximately 120,000 vehicles per day. The XBL carries more trans-Hudson commuter trips into midtown Manhattan each day than any other mode, including commuter rail into Penn Station. The lane operates weekday mornings between 6:15 and 10:00 a.m., accommodating approximately 1,700 buses and 62,000 commuters, mainly to the Port Authority Bus Terminal. The XBL is by far the busiest and most productive bus lane in the United States.
#Lincoln tunnel toll full#
The New Jersey approach roadway, locally known as the Helix or "the Corkscrew," spirals in a full circle before arriving at the toll booths in front of the tunnel portals. During the morning rush-hour, one traffic lane, known as the XBL, is used exclusively by buses. The three tubes within the tunnel carry six traffic lanes in total. The Lincoln Tunnel runs under the Hudson River to join New Jersey to New York City at Thirty-ninth Street. New York City Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and powerful political leader Robert Moses supported the project both as part of a forward-thinking, regional-development plan and as a much-needed, depression-era source of employment. The Lincoln Tunnel established a key linkage for the mid-twentieth-century expansion of the inter-state metropolitan region centered in New York City. With a traffic flow of approximately 21 million vehicles annually, it is the busiest vehicular tunnel in the world. The Lincoln Tunnel is a 1.5-mile long tunnel under the Hudson River, connecting Weehawken, New Jersey and the borough of Manhattan at West Thirty-Ninth Street in New York City. Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth.Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA.Street map from Google Maps or Yahoo! Maps.Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
