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Pennsauken Township was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on February 18, 1892, from portions of the now-defunct Stockton Township. [22]The exact origin of the name Pennsauken is unclear, but it probably derives from the language of the Lenni Lenape Native Americans, who once occupied the area from "Pindasenauken", the Lenape language term for tobacco pouch. [23]
Constructed at a planned cost of $3.5 million (equivalent to $38 million in 2023) [3] the school opened in September 1959 with students in ninth and tenth grades. [4] Prior to the completion of the high school, Pennsauken students had been sent to schools outside the township at Merchantville High School.
The Pennsauken Public Schools is a comprehensive community public school district serving students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade from Pennsauken Township, in Camden County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.
Pennsauken Transit Center (signed as Pennsauken on the Atlantic City Line platforms) is a New Jersey Transit train station in Pennsauken Township, in Camden County, New Jersey, United States.
Absecon Inlet; Absecon Island; Alexauken Creek (tributary of the Delaware River in Hunterdon County) (Lenape: Alàxhakink [1]); Assunpink Creek (Lenape: Ahsën'pink [1]); Assiscunk Creek
Pennsauken Creek flowing into the Delaware (2020) Pennsauken Creek is a 3.8-mile-long (6.1 km) [1] tributary of the Delaware River in Burlington and Camden counties, New Jersey in the United States.
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Merchantville is a borough in Camden County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 3,820, [9] a decrease of one person from the 2010 census count of 3,821, [18] [19] which in turn reflected an increase of 20 (+0.5%) from the 3,801 counted in the 2000 census.