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Englewood Township, the city's predecessor, is believed to have been named in 1859 for the Engle family. The community had been called the "English Neighborhood", as the first primarily English-speaking settlement on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River after New Netherland was annexed by England in 1664, though other sources mention the Engle family and the heavily forested areas of the ...
Spring Valley Road, South Street Route 124 in Morristown: CR 602: 0.51 0.82 CR 631 in Roxbury: Lakeside Boulevard CR 607 at the Sussex County line in Roxbury: CR 603: 3.77 6.07 Broadway / Lakespur Drive in Denville: Diamond Spring Road, River Road, Bush Road, Boonton Road, Old Denville Road CR 618 in Boonton Township: CR 604: 4.02 6.47 CR 638 ...
Nordhoff station circa 1900-1910. Rail service in Englewood began in 1859 when the region was still known as the English Neighborhood. [9] By 1887 Erie Railroad's Northern Branch had three stops in the city: the southernmost at Nordhoff (#1919) (later Sheffield Avenue), the central depot at Englewood (#1921), and the northernmost at Highwood (#1923) (later Hudson Avenue).
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Englewood, New Jersey) Sugar Hill Records (hip-hop label) V. Van Horn–Newcomb House
The Dwight-Englewood School (D-E) is an independent coeducational college-preparatory day school, located in Englewood in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The school teaches students from pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade in three functionally separate schools. The Lower School, formerly known as the Bede School, serves ...
Located on a 37-acre (15 ha) park-like campus and constructed at a cost of $750,000 (equivalent to $8.2 million in 2023) from a design by architect Lawrence C. Licht, the school was opened to students in January 1933 with a capacity of 1,200 students, helping to ease overcrowding at the existing high school and junior high facilities.
The Englewood Public School District is a comprehensive community public school district that serves students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade from Englewood, in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [3] The district's offices are in the Administration Building at the Russell C. Major Liberty School. [4]
Sylvia Pressler (1934–2010), Chief Judge of the Appellate Division the New Jersey Superior Court for five years, officially retiring from the bench in 2004 [132] Bill Rosendahl (1945–2016), politician who served on the Los Angeles City Council [133] Steve Rothman (born 1952), former congressmen who served as the mayor of Englewood 1983 ...