Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An 1841 map shows the area as being part of Bergen and still very rural. By 1947, one estimate put the population of North Hudson at 175,000. [34]According to the United States Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program, as of July 2022, Hudson County had a population of 703,366, [35] of which 206,243 were in North Hudson: Guttenberg (11,446), North Bergen (60,235), Union City (65,366 ...
Palisades Medical Center (PMC) is a 186-bed [1] hospital located in North Bergen, New Jersey, United States, that serves a population of 400,000 in Hudson County and in Southern Bergen County. The non-profit medical center is part of the Hackensack Meridian Health Network.
Hackensack map c. 1896. The earliest known inhabitants of the area were the Lenni Lenape, an Algonquian people who became known to settlers as 'the Delaware Indians.' They lived along a river they called Achinigeu-hach, or "Ackingsah-sack", which translates to stony ground—today this river is more commonly known by the name 'the Hackensack River.' [29] A representation of Chief Oratam of the ...
The new bridge will replace the 114-year old Portal Bridge, a swing bridge across the Hackensack River that often gets stuck. After 30-hour trip on the Hudson, the first arch for NJ Transit's rail ...
North Jersey traffic Closures on I-80, I-287; Routes 46, 3, 94; Devils at Prudential Hawthorne flooding At least four sections of road were cordoned off to motorists in a low-lying portion of ...
Hudson County constitutes Vicinage 6 of the New Jersey Superior Court and is seated at the Administration Building, with additional facilities at the Hudson County Courthouse; the Assignment Judge for Vicinage 6 is the Honorable Peter F. Bariso Jr. [142] The Hudson County court system consists of several municipal courts, including the busy ...
The Hackensack Water Company Complex is a set of historic buildings in Weehawken, New Jersey, registered in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.The Hackensack Water Company, a predecessor of Suez North America, developed water supply and storage in northeastern New Jersey from the 1870s to the 1970s, initially to provide service to the city of Hackensack and the towns of North Hudson ...
The Hackensack has only been channelized to Milepoint 3.5 at the Riverbend in Hudson County. [10] [13] The accumulation of silt has diminished the depth, and thus navigability, of the Lower Hackensack. [14] which at one time was a major waterway for towboats and river barges in the Port of New York and New Jersey. [15]