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Dead end in Cape May Point: Sunset Boulevard CR 626 in West Cape May: CR 607: 2.04 3.28 CR 606 in West Cape May: Bayshore Road Dead end along the Cape May Canal in Lower Township: CR 608: 3.35 5.39 Route 83 in Dennis Township: Kings Highway CR 550 in Dennis Township: CR 609: 1.08 1.74 US 9 in Cape May Court House: Crest Haven Road Dead end in ...
National Register of Historic Places listings in Cape May County, New Jersey; New Asbury Methodist Episcopal Meeting House; North Cape May, New Jersey; North Wildwood, New Jersey; North Wildwood School District; Ocean City, New Jersey; Ocean City 34th Street Station; Ocean City City Hall; Ocean City High School; Ocean City School District
Module:Location map/data/USA New Jersey Cape May County; Module:Location map/data/USA New Jersey Cape May County/doc; Usage on tr.wikipedia.org Modül:Konum haritası/veri/ABD New Jersey Cape May County; Modül:Konum haritası/veri/ABD New Jersey Cape May County/belge; Usage on war.wikipedia.org Batakan:Location map USA New Jersey Cape May County
0–9. County Route 548 (New Jersey) County Route 550 (New Jersey) County Route 550 Spur (New Jersey) County Route 557 (New Jersey) County Route 601 (Cape May County, New Jersey)
English: Map of the state routes and a few other major roads near Cape May, New Jersey. State-maintained roads are red; authority-maintained roads are green. Gray shields are old designations (S4C was likely never signed). See also NJ 162 old bridge.jpg.
A 1777 map depicting Cape May County, the scene of the Battle of Turtle Gut Inlet on June 29, 1776, in the American Revolutionary War. Before Cape May County was settled by Europeans, the indigenous Kechemeche tribe of the Lenape people inhabited South Jersey, and traveled to the barrier islands during the summer to hunt and fish.
Cape May (sometimes Cape May City) is a city and seaside resort located at the southern tip of Cape May Peninsula in Cape May County in the U.S. state of New Jersey.Located on the Atlantic Ocean near the mouth of the Delaware Bay, it is one of the country's oldest vacation resort destinations. [19]
New Jersey's county names derive from several sources, though most of its counties are named after place names in England and prominent leaders in the colonial and revolutionary periods. Bergen County is the most populous county—as of the 2010 Census—with 905,116 people, while Salem County is the least populous with 66,083 people.