Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following is a list of neighborhoods in Newark, New Jersey, United States within its five political wards. [1] ... James Street Commons Historic District; East Ward
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ferry_Street_(Newark)&oldid=887235614"
The eastern portion of the road acts as the westbound member of a one-way pair; eastbound traffic uses Market Street and Ferry Street. Raymond Boulevard carries eastbound and westbound traffic west of Market Street, passing through Newark Penn Station and intersecting with McCarter Highway ( New Jersey Route 21 ), Broad Street, Halsey Street ...
East of Newark Penn Station at 80-84 Ferry Street in the Ironbound; complex with two 26 and two 30 story towers with "town square" pedestrian plaza. [163] [164] [165] 56 Park Place 285 ft (87 m) 27 Across from Military Park, a 235 unit residential high rise tower. [166] [167] NJIT Oak Tower 210 ft (64 m) 17
The Ironbound was an industrial neighborhood in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The neighborhood was home to Hensler's Beer Brewery, P. Ballantine and Sons Brewing Company (in 1954 Newark's largest employer) and the Feigenspan Brewery. [7]
As early as July 1764 [1] a ferry began operating from Paulus Hook to the foot of Courtland Street (where Cortland Street Ferry Depot would be built). [2] The first steam ferry service in the world began between Paulus Hook and Manhattan in 1812, [3] and the New Jersey Rail Road and Transportation Company opened a rail line from Newark to Paulus Hook, then part of the newly incorporated City ...
The Newark Times is an online news media platform dedicated to Newark lifestyle, events, and culture. [259] The Newark Metro covers metropolitan life from Newark to North Jersey to New York City and is a journalism project at Rutgers Newark. [260] RLS Media covers breaking news from Newark and surrounding municipalities. [261]
Upon crossing the Passaic River, it entered the Ironbound Section of Newark at Ferry and St. Francis Streets, traveling parallel to and south of Market Street until it crossed Ferry Street again between Union and Prospect Streets. From there, the line crossed over the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) tracks and terminated at Broad Street. [10]