The final stop before High Bridge, it has one low-level side platform, with a shelter, 77 parking spaces and bicycle racks.
Known as Clinton, the railroad had four locals move westward from White House to help build the new village in the area.
Boeman, a local tavern keeper, and railroad employees James Kenna and Thomas Kinney, Frech helped move and settle the area around Clinton Station.
Jacob Young constructed a local trading store around Clinton Station and soon added a grain house to the area.
In 1873, John T. Johnston, the president of the Central Railroad of New Jersey, requested the name of Clinton Station be changed to Annandale when prodded about the name.
During the 1800s, the lime and limestones were mined through the railroad, along with nearby lumber yards that prospered due to their locations near the rail line.