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Native Americans were the first settlers of Sayreville. Tribes of the Navesink lived along the South River where Jernee Mill Road is located today. This was noted on a 1656 New Netherland map by Adriaen van der Donck, a Dutch surveyor and map maker.
The Navesink, or Navisink, (or Nave Sinck) [1] were a group of Lenape who inhabited the Raritan Bayshore near Sandy Hook and Mount Mitchill in eastern New Jersey in the United States. Their territory included the peninsula, as well as the highlands south of it, where they lived along its cliffs and creeks.
The original village of Sayreville has been known as Sayre's Village, Upper Sayreville, and Sayreville Proper. Sayre and Fisher Reading Room. Sayreville was originally settled by Europeans in the colonial era and was part the South Amboy Township formed in 1684. It seceded and incorporated as a township on April 6, 1876. The newly formed ...
Petty Officer 2nd Class Joshua Cote, a native of Sayreville, serves the U.S. Navy aboard one of the world’s largest warships.
Preservation New Jersey estimated that about $1 to $1.5 million would be needed to revitalize the entire building, ... Sayreville NJ Old Fire House may have new life. Show comments. Advertisement.
Pages in category "Native American tribes in New Jersey" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Chef Joe Rocchi, a Native foods educator in Pennsauken, New Jersey, and a member of the Pamunkey tribe, puts it this way: “Natives aren’t discriminated against because they're Natives.
Sanhickan, native name for the falls of the Delaware River at Trenton Shabakunk Creek , West Branch Shabakunk Creek , and Little Shabakunk Creek Shannoc Brook (tributary of Toms River in Ocean County )