Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The club was opened in August 1978 by Steve Fallon. [4] When the Fallon family bought the corner building in uptown Hoboken with its street-level tavern, Steve Fallon's sisters Kathryn Jackson Fallon and Anne Fallon Mazzolla along with brother-in-law Mario Mazzola were interested in turning the factory workers' tavern (General Foods' Maxwell House Coffee factory was a block away on the Hudson ...
One of Hoboken's best known landmarks, it was first excavated around 1832 by Hoboken's founder, Col. John Stevens III, and adorned with a gothic-style stone arch. Named after the ancient Greco-Roman prophetesses, it was originally Hoboken's biggest tourist attraction, for the magnesium-laced water that flows from the spring. [25]
The Journal, along with other sister newspapers, operates NJ.com, which includes the blog Hoboken Now. [294] The Hoboken Reporter was the first local weekly published by The Hudson Reporter group of papers, [295] which was based in Hoboken from 1983 - 2016. It then moved its headquarters to Bayonne, [296] before closing in January 2023.
The Brass Rail is a two-story restaurant located in historic downtown Hoboken, [1] at 135 Washington Street. Originally built and opened around the turn of the 20th century, it has for many years been known for its raspberry beer , [ 2 ] as well as its French cuisine. [ 3 ]
In January 2012, as a result of the attention brought to the city of Hoboken by the shop and the TV series, the Hudson Reporter named Buddy Valastro Jr. as an honorable mention in its list of Hudson County's 50 most influential people. [14] [13] On March 20, 2014, Carlo's opened a location in Morristown, New Jersey.
While the city of Hoboken boasts that the Elysian grounds were the "birthplace" of baseball in 1846, this is a myth. There were countless baseball clubs and games played during the 1830s, if not earlier—in Hoboken, New York City, Brooklyn, and elsewhere—and the first rules were drawn up by the Gotham Club of New York in 1837.
The Hoboken Historical Museum, founded in 1986, [1] is located in Hoboken, New Jersey and presents rotating exhibitions and activities related to the history, culture, architecture and historic landmarks of the city. In 2001, the museum moved to 1301 Hudson Street into the last standing building of the former Bethlehem Steel Hoboken Shipyard ...
West Hoboken was a municipality that existed in Hudson County, New Jersey, from 1861 to 1925. It merged with Union Hill to form Union City on June 1, 1925. The town is notable for being the first city in which Mallomars were sold.