Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Newport is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) [5] located within Downe Township in Cumberland County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [6] [7] The area is served as United States Postal Service ZIP Code 08345. As of the 2000 United States Census, the population for ZIP Code Tabulation Area 08345 was 834. [8]
Neas Farm: March 10, 2004 : 3301 Sable Rd. ... 4.5 miles south of Newport off Hartford Rd. Newport: 15: Yett-Ellison House: April 16, 1975 ...
Of the 582 households, 55.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 29.7% were married couples living together, 41.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 22.5% were non-families. 19.8% of households were one person, and 8.4% were one person aged 65 or older.
In 1842 Richard Salter Hartshorne, Jr. purchased the farm and in 1850 he added the Italianate porch to the front of the house. [9] The farmstead remained successful under the ownership of the Hartshornes during the Gilded Age, in 1911 it was sold for $32,000.00 to the last family of ownership, the Oakley family. Charles Oakley Jr. made some ...
Contents: Counties and communities in New Jersey Atlantic – Bergen ( Closter , Franklin Lakes , Ridgewood , Saddle River , Wyckoff ) – Burlington – Camden – Cape May – Cumberland – Essex – Gloucester – Hudson – Hunterdon – Mercer – Middlesex – Monmouth – Morris – Ocean – Passaic – Salem – Somerset – Sussex ...
Contents: Counties and communities in New Jersey; Atlantic – Bergen (Closter, Franklin Lakes, Ridgewood, Saddle River, Wyckoff) – Burlington – Camden – Cape May – Cumberland – Essex – Gloucester – Hudson – Hunterdon – Mercer – Middlesex – Monmouth – Morris – Ocean – Passaic – Salem – Somerset – Sussex ...
The Great Indian Warpath passed through what is now Newport en route to the ancient Cherokee hunting grounds of northeastern Tennessee. [13] The Warpath crossed the Pigeon River at a point approximately 0.2 miles (0.3 km) east of the McSween Memorial Bridge (US-321), in an area where the river is normally low enough to walk across. [14]
In direct response to the Wanaque outbreak, on June 6, 2019, a New Jersey health department report called for a new law requiring long-term care facilities to develop disease outbreak plans. [10] [21] [22] [23] A new bill based on the report was signed by the governor in August 2019, [14] after passing both houses of state legislature late June ...