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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Hudson County, New Jersey

 
Clickable Map of Hudson County, New Jersey and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Hudson County, NJ (71) Bergen County, NJ (397) Essex County, NJ (146) Union County, NJ (111) Kings County, NY (169) New York County, NY (1305) Richmond County, NY (113)  HudsonCounty(71) Hudson County (71)  BergenCounty(397) Bergen County (397)  EssexCounty(146) Essex County (146)  UnionCounty(111) Union County (111)  KingsCountyNew York(169) Kings County (169)  NewYorkCounty(1305) New York County (1305)  RichmondCounty(113) Richmond County (113)
Adjacent to Hudson County, New Jersey
    Bergen County (397)
    Essex County (146)
    Union County (111)
    Kings County, New York (169)
    New York County, New York (1305)
    Richmond County, New York (113)
 
Touch name on list to highlight map location.
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Bayonne Terrorist Victims
On Port Terminal Blvd..
. . . — Map (db m53037) HM
2New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Bergen Neck Fort
On Avenue B, on the right when traveling north.
Built by Americans, 1776, at the site of Bayonne. Occupied 1777 – 82 by Loyalist forces, who named it Fort Delancey. — Map (db m7698) HM
3New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — First Federated Church
On W 33rd Street at Avenue C, on the right when traveling west on W 33rd Street.
First Refd. Dutch Church Orgend. 1828 Erecd. 1866 First Federated Church Bayonne’s Oldest Church – 1866 and its oldest Congregation: Dutch Reformed Church (1828) Merged in 1952 with Third Reformed Church and Christ Presbyterian Forming . . . — Map (db m54634) HM
4New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Mercer Park
On Kennedy Blvd. south of W 63rd Street, on the right when traveling north.
Named to memorialize the presence of the Patriot Army under General Hugh Mercer in 1776 in this vicinity. •     •     • Presented by The Bayonne Historical Society 1953 — Map (db m63614) HM
5New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Monument to the Struggle Against World Terrorism
On Port Terminal Blvd..
Gift From the people of Russia President Vladimir Putin Artist Zurab Tsereteli — Map (db m53039) HM
6New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Port Jersey Peninsula Preserve
On Port Jersey Blvd., on the left when traveling east.
The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey has established preserved areas within the Port Jersey Peninsula to protect and maintain fragile wetlands and wildlife, and provide a waterfront which can be enjoyed by all. From here you can see some of . . . — Map (db m53043) HM
7New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Stephen R. Gregg / Bayonne Park
On JF Kennedy Blvd. at W 43rd Street, on the right when traveling south on JF Kennedy Blvd..
Lt. Stephen R. Gregg U. S. Army – 143rd Infantry, 36th Infantry Division Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient For his role in Action on August 27, 1944 Near Montelimar, France — Map (db m54637) HM
8New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Tear of Grief
On Port Terminal Blvd..
Gift from the people of Russia President Vladimir Putin This site will be a home for the monument to the struggle against world terrorism Artist Zurab Tsereteli — Map (db m53040) HM
9New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — U.S.S. Maine Memorial
On JF Kennedy Blvd. north of W 39th Street, on the right when traveling north.
In Memoriam U.S.S. Maine Destroyed in Havana Harbor February 15th 1898 This tablet is cast from metal recovered from the U.S.S. Maine — Map (db m54632) HM
10New Jersey (Hudson County), Bayonne — Volunteers of the Army and Navy
On JF Kennedy Blvd. north of W 39th Street, on the right when traveling north.
To the Volunteers of the Army and Navy of the United States whose heroic patriotism has helped to make our Republic what it is to-day. Erected MCMXIV — Map (db m54636) HM
11New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — 77 River Street
On River Street at Hudson Place, on the right when traveling north on River Street.
This site was once close to the geological edge of the Hudson River. This building, CIRCA 1889, close to major transportation was once Hoboken's largest commercial structure. Built as the Second National Bank, it housed a variety of uses, most . . . — Map (db m6881) HM
12New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Baseball
On Washington Street at 11th Street on Washington Street.
On June 19, 1846, the first match game of baseball was played here on the Elysian Fields between the Knickerbockers and the New Yorks. It is generally conceded that until this time, the game was not seriously regarded. — Map (db m6878) HM
13New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Civil War MonumentHoboken
On Hudson Street at 4th Street on Hudson Street.
Dedicated May 30th - 1888 – Committee – E.A. Stevens – G.A. Seide James A. Greyer – Theophilus Butts James Benson – B.F. Hart F.W. Schroeder – John Eckstein Erected By the citizens of Hoboken . . . — Map (db m6791) HM
14New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Elysian FieldsNew York’s First Central Park
Near Frank Sinatra Drive.
Fast, reliable ferry service run by the Stevens family brought New Yorkers to Hoboken in droves. To attract riders, the Stevens' turned the waterfront into a semi-public park. They opened paths, pavilions, and breath-taking views, and named it . . . — Map (db m6883) HM
15New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Francis Albert Sinatra BirthplaceThe Voice
On 415 Monroe Street.
Francis Albert Sinatra The Voice Born here At 415 Monroe Street December 12, 1915 — Map (db m6788) HM
16New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Hudson River Bridge Cornerstone
The North River Bridge Co. Ground broken June 8th, 1895 First foundation masonry laid June 18th, 1895 — Map (db m6945) HM
17New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Maxwell House Coffee PlantFrom Field to Factory in Hoboken
On 11th Street at Hudson Street, in the median on 11th Street.
The Maxwell House Coffee Plant stretched along Hoboken's waterfront from Tenth to Twelfth Streets. It was a marvel of its time, the largest coffee processing plant in the world, and a local landmark. Before the plant was built in 1938-39, part of . . . — Map (db m6880) HM
18New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — New York Yacht ClubHome of the America’s Cup
On Maxwell Place at Frank Sinatra Drive on Maxwell Place.
John Cox Stevens, an outgoing member of Hoboken's founding family and avid boater, organized the New York Yacht Club (NYYC) on July 30, 1844, and served as its first Commodore. He built the first clubhouse on this site at the foot of Tenth Street. . . . — Map (db m6882) HM
19New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Sergeant William Fesken Memorial Field
On River Street at 5th Street on River Street.
In memory of SGT William Fesken Killed in action, Vietnam May 2, 1967 And dedicated to all Those who sacrificed their lives In the Vietnam Conflict so that Our country might live — Map (db m6790) HM
20New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Stephen Foster House
On Bloomfield Street at 6th Street on Bloomfield Street.
Stephen Collins Foster composer of “Old Folks at Home” and other immortal songs lived in this house during the year 1854. It was while living here that “Jeanie With the Light Brown Hair” was . . . — Map (db m7252) HM
21New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — Stevens Institute of Technology
Near River Street at 6th Street.
This land was a part of the Island of Hoboken which was deeded on Feb. 15, 1663 by Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of Nieuw Amsterdam, for the benefit of his sister Anna, Widow of Samuel Bayard of Amsterdam. In 1784, these 564 acres belonging to . . . — Map (db m6860) HM
22New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — The Hudson School
On 6th Street at Park Ave. on 6th Street.
On this site stood the Martha Institute from 1866-1999. Built on land donated by Hoboken philanthropist Martha Bayard Stevens and named in her honor, the Martha Institute served as home to Hoboken's first German-American school, the Manual Trade . . . — Map (db m6879) HM
23New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — World War I Embarkation Memorial
On Sinatra Drive at First Street, on the right when traveling north on Sinatra Drive.
Dedicated to the Valiant American Expeditionary Forces who embarked from this point to participate in the World War 1917-1918. Erected by Hoboken Assembly Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus May 30, 1925. On the other side of the boulder . . . — Map (db m88729) WM
24New Jersey (Hudson County), Hoboken — World War II MemorialIn Honor of the Hoboken Residents Who Gave Their Lives for Freedom
On Frank Sinatra Drive at 4th Street on Frank Sinatra Drive.
Dedicated to those 153 Hoboken residents Who made the ultimate sacrifice through Seflfess acts of bravery, courage, And loyalty to our great country And the principles of democracy. Mayor David Roberts James J Farina, City Clerk . . . — Map (db m81101) HM
25New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — An Gorta Mor
On Lincoln Park Road, on the right when traveling west.
In Memoriam of the Irish Famine An Gorta Mor   1845 – 1852 For those lives claimed by it and the Irish Immigrants that survived and relocated to the United States. Erected By The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick Hudson County, N.J. [ Back . . . — Map (db m42404) HM
26New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Black Tom ExplosionLiberty State Park
Near Morris Pesin Drive.
You are standing on a site which saw one of the worse acts of sabotage in American history! Prior to the U.S. entering WWI, the shoreline on which you now stand was occupied by an extensive munitions depot operated by the Lehigh Valley . . . — Map (db m126349) HM
27New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Blakeslee Route
On Broadway at Lincoln Highway (U.S. 9), on the left when traveling east on Broadway.
In honor of George E. Blakeslee Pioneer of the modern highway [ Rear Marker : ] Blakeslee rededicated September 2005 by The Friends of the Marion Section Patrick J. O’Melia Hassan Abubakr • Tessie Brady • Sam C. Difeo • Mary Donnelly . . . — Map (db m51534) HM
28New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Central Railroad of NJ Employees
On Audrey Zapp Drive, on the right when traveling east.
New Jersey Central Jersey Central Lines Honoring the employees of the Central Railroad of New Jersey 1849 – 1976 Dedicated by the Central Railroad of New Jersey Veteran Employees Association — Map (db m51512) HM
29New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Changes in the LandLiberty State Park
On Audrey Zapp Drive at Phillip Street, on the right when traveling east on Audrey Zapp Drive.
Prior to 1860, the area surrounding you was mostly brackish waters, salt marshes and mudflats of a tidal estuary. Known to the native Lenape as Communipaw Cove, these wetlands were a rich source of fish, waterfowl and shellfish. Early Dutch and . . . — Map (db m49794) HM
30New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Changes in the Land
On Liberty Walk, on the left when traveling north.
The land we know as Liberty State Park has undergone many changes. Known to the Lenape Indians as Communipaw Cove, it was a place of saltmarshes and oysters. Later Dutch and English settlers harvested salt hay for their livestock. To native people . . . — Map (db m69423) HM
31New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Communipaw and Lafayette
On Phillip Street, on the right when traveling west.
Henry Hudson’s “Half Moon” anchored off Communipaw in 1609. In 1633 the Dutch West India Company built the first house occupied by “John the Laugher.” A small colony of Dutch houses and farms developed along the shore where . . . — Map (db m42415) HM
32New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Empty Sky: New JerseySeptember 11th Memorial
On Audrey Zapp Drive, on the left when traveling east.
On the morning of September 11, 2001, with the skies so clear that the Twin Towers across the river appeared to be within reach, the very essence of what our country stands for - freedom, tolerance, and the pursuit of happiness – was attacked. . . . — Map (db m49789) HM
33New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Explosion at Liberty!
On Morris Pesin Drive, on the right when traveling east. Reported missing.
On July 30, 1916, the Black Tom munitions depot exploded, rocking New York Harbor and sending sleeping residents tumbling from their beds. The noise of the explosion was heard as far away as Maryland and Connecticut. On Ellis Island, terrified . . . — Map (db m126348) HM
34New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Farrier Memorial
On Lincoln Park Road, on the right when traveling west.
to the Volunteer Fireman of Jersey City Erected through the bequest of Capt. Frederick T. Farrier as a token of the friendship and esteem in which he held his former associates in the Volunteer Fire Department. Edwin M. Farrier 1931                 . . . — Map (db m42413) HM
35New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Jack Roosevelt Robinson
On Path Plaza.
“A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives.” Jack Roosevelt Robinson 1919–1972 Jack Roosevelt Robinson, the first African-American to break the color barrier in Major League Baseball, . . . — Map (db m6101) HM
36New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Jane Tuers
On Bergen Avenue at Mercer Street, on the right when traveling north on Bergen Avenue.
This marks the site of the home of Jane Tuers a heroine of the American Revolution Presented by Jane Tuers Cociety C.A.R. 1925 — Map (db m63612) HM
37New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Jersey City Civil War Memorial
On Lincoln Park Road., on the left when traveling west.
In memory of the Soldiers of Jersey City who fought in the War of the Rebellion. [ Back of Monument: ] This monument is erected by the executor of the estate of the late Edward J. Donnelly, Sergt. Co. C, 5th N.J. Volunteers and a . . . — Map (db m42406) HM
38New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Liberation
On Morris Pesin Drive, on the right when traveling east.
Dedicated to America’s role of preserving freedom and rescuing the oppressed, this monument, by Natan Rapoport, of an American soldier carrying a World War II concentration camp survivor was gifted to the State of New Jersey through the generosity . . . — Map (db m13295) WM
39New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Lincoln Park
On Belmont Avenue at West Side Avenue, on the left when traveling west on Belmont Avenue.
Hudson County’s great public work of the 1890’s was Hudson (now Kennedy) Boulevard, a 20-mile landscaped roadway running through the county. Construction caused the demolition or relocation of many buildings and was completed in 1895. The road . . . — Map (db m42419) HM
40New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Morris Pesin’s Legendary Canoe Trip Which Launched Liberty State Park
Near Morris Pesin Drive, on the right when traveling east. Reported missing.
On the foggy, drizzly morning of June 13, 1958, Morris Pesin (1911-1992) made his historic 8 minute canoe trip to the Statue of Liberty with a Jersey Journal reporter to dramatize the close proximity of the Jersey City shoreline to Ms. . . . — Map (db m126346) HM
41New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Mystic Lincoln
On Lincoln Park Road, in the median.
Sculptor   James Earle Frazer Erected in 1930 by the Lincoln Association of Jersey City with contributions from the school children of Jersey City. Rededicated February 12, 2005 75th Anniversary [ Pedestal Inscription: ] Lincoln . . . — Map (db m42408) HM
42New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Newkirk House
On Summit Avenue (County Route 617) south of Magnolia Avenue, on the right when traveling north. Reported permanently removed.
Jersey City’s oldest building, the Newkirk House was erected circa 1690 a few blocks northeast of the nearby Dutch settlement of Bergen Square (1660). Occupied for two centuries by the Newkirk family, the sandstone structure was sold by . . . — Map (db m156027) HM
43New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — NewportJersey City
On Washington Blvd. at Town Square Place, on the right when traveling north on Washington Blvd..
. . . — Map (db m35586) HM
44New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Old Bergen Church
On Bergen Avenue at Highland Avenue on Bergen Avenue.
The Old Bergen Church, a Dutch Reformed Church, is a classic blending of Greek Revival details and form, with New Jersey Dutch influences. Originally founded in 1662 at Bergen Avenue and Vroom Street, the church has undergone two rebuildings on this . . . — Map (db m6137) HM
45New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Paulus Hook
On Grand Street at Washington Street, on the right when traveling east on Grand Street.
Washington’s “Flying Camp” here in 1776. Later fort held by British during entire war despite American attacks. — Map (db m7697) HM
46New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Peter StuyvesantC. 1612 – 1672
On Sip Avenue at Newkirk Street, on the right when traveling east on Sip Avenue.
In 1660, as the last Dutch Director-General of the colony of New Netherland, Stuyvesant was instrumental in the establishment of the Village of Bergen, which was near this site. The Scottish-American sculptor J. Massey Rhind was commissioned to . . . — Map (db m100143) HM
47New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Rt. Rev. Msgr. Roger A. McGinleyPriest and Patriot
On Montgomery Street at Bergen Avenue, on the left when traveling east on Montgomery Street.
In grateful memory of Right Reverend Monsignor Roger A. McGinley Priest and Patriot who by teaching and example raised the level of citizenship in our city, and by founding Saint Aedan’s Parish in 1912, serving as its pastor for twenty-four . . . — Map (db m35589) HM
48New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Bridge of Nations
On Freedom Way, on the right when traveling north.
. . . — Map (db m51513) HM
49New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Central Railroad of New Jersey (CRRNJ) TerminalFerry Houses: Connecting People, Boats and Trains
Near Audrey Zapp Drive, on the right when traveling east.
From 1864 until 1967: the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CRRNJ) Terminal provided a vital link between the New Jersey and New York City shores. At its busiest, more than 200 ferry sailings transported tens of thousands of commuters and thousands of . . . — Map (db m13300) HM
50New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Central Railroad of New Jersey (CRRNJ) TerminalEmigrant (Immigrant) Waiting Room
Near Audrey Zapp Road, on the right when traveling east.
After passing the Statue of Liberty and being processed at Ellis Island, where did the new Americans go? Once declared “clearly and beyond a doubt, entitled to land” almost two-thirds of the immigrants processed at Ellis Island . . . — Map (db m49339) HM
51New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal
Near Audrey Zapp Drive, on the right when traveling east.
This terminal was completed in June, 1889 and became fully operational on October 6, 1889. For almost 80 years it served as the main passenger terminal for the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey at this strategic Jersey City waterfront location. . . . — Map (db m13290) HM
52New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Historic Trilogy
Near Audrey Zapp Road, on the right when traveling east.
The term “Historic Trilogy” is used to represent the role the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CRRNJ) Terminal, Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty played in American history. It was these three historic structures that greeted most . . . — Map (db m49344) HM
53New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Historic Trilogy
On Liberty Walk, on the right when traveling north.
The term “Historic Trilogy” is used to represent the role the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CRRNJ) Terminal, Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty played in American history. It was these three historic structures that greeted most . . . — Map (db m69419) HM
54New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — The Salt Marsh
On Liberty Walk, on the left when traveling north.
Salt marshes like the one you are looking at, once lined the entire coast of New York Harbor. Most were filled as the Harbor became an industrial port. However, this remnant marsh teems with the life that results when brackish (salty) water meets . . . — Map (db m69424) HM
55New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — Tribute to the Soldiers of New Jersey
Near Newark Avenue at Palisade Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
A Tribute to the Soldiers of New Jersey who encamped on this hill during the War of 1812 Placed by The United States Daughters 1812 State of New Jersey 1915 — Map (db m156026) WM
56New Jersey (Hudson County), Jersey City — U.S.S. Maine Memorial
On Bergen Avenue at Montgomery Street, on the left when traveling south on Bergen Avenue.
In Memoriam U.S.S. Maine Destroyed in Havana Harbor February 15, 1898 This tablet is cast from metal recovered from the U.S.S. Maine Presented to the People of Jersey City, N.J. By General Joseph Wheeler Post No. 4 A.V.F.S. . . . — Map (db m6102) WM
57New Jersey (Hudson County), Kearny — LCpl Osbrany Montes de Oca Bridge
On Belleville Turnpike (New Jersey Route 7) at River Road / Passaic Ave., on the left when traveling west on Belleville Turnpike.
Osbrany Montes de Oca LCpl KIA – 2/10/12 – Afghanistan Operation Enduring Freedom Memorial Bridge — Map (db m68677) HM
58New Jersey (Hudson County), Kearny — Major General Philip Kearny
On Pasassaic Ave at Linden Ave, on the right when traveling south on Pasassaic Ave.
Erected by the town of Kearny Tercentenary Committee in memory of Major General Philip Kearny during the New Jersey Tercentenary year 1664 – 1964. — Map (db m6744) HM
59New Jersey (Hudson County), Kearny — Route 7 BridgeBuilt 1915
On Belleville Turnpike (New Jersey Route 7) at Passaic Ave., on the right when traveling east on Belleville Turnpike.
This bridge was a heel-trunnion bascule built by the Strauss Bascule Bridge Co. of Chicago, Illinois. It was a popular and economic design in the early 1900’s. The first Strauss Bascule Bridge was built in 1905. The 1915 Route 7 bridge was deemed . . . — Map (db m68681) HM
60New Jersey (Hudson County), Kearny — Scottish American Monument
On Passaic Avenue (County Route 299), on the right when traveling south.
This monument is erected in recognition of the contributions made by all people of Scottish heritage to the development of the United States of America. God Bless America “Every line of strength in our history is a line coloured by . . . — Map (db m90105) HM
61New Jersey (Hudson County), Kearny — Wallace Glen
On Passaic Avenue (County Route 699), on the right when traveling south.
Dedicated to the memory of Sir William Wallace The Great Scottish Patriot and Hero who fought for freedom for his countrymen and gave his life in this noble cause. David A. Wallace A Scottish immigrant who had served his community and . . . — Map (db m90104) HM
62New Jersey (Hudson County), Secaucus — Secaucus War Memorial
On Paterson Plank Road (County Route 681) at John Street, on the left when traveling west on Paterson Plank Road.
For God and Country in memory of Joseph Hassenforder, who made the supreme sacrifice and in honor of the boys of Secaucus who served their country in the World War 1917 ––– 1918 Erected by the citizens of . . . — Map (db m25515) HM
63New Jersey (Hudson County), Secaucus — Secaucus World War II Memorial
On Paterson Plank Road (County Route 681) at John Street, on the left when traveling west on Paterson Plank Road.
In loving memory of our war dead These members of the United States Armed Forces gave their lives in World War II to preserve us a free nation Franklin D. Roosevelt President of the United States Armondo A. Alvino • Thomas G. . . . — Map (db m25519) HM
64New Jersey (Hudson County), Union City — Pietro di Donato“Acclaimed American Author” — April 3, 1911 – January 19, 1992 —
On Bergenline Avenue at 31st Street, on the right when traveling south on Bergenline Avenue.
      Born in the tenement and raised on these streets of West Hoboken – (Union City), Pietro di Donato would later go on to pen the classic novel CHRIST IN CONCRETE in 1939.       On Good Friday, 1923, di Donato’s bricklayer father was . . . — Map (db m96975) HM
65New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — Death Rock of Alexander Hamilton
On Hamilton Avenue, on the left when traveling south.
Upon this stone rested the head of the patriot, soldier, statesman, and jurist Alexander Hamilton, after the duel with Aaron Burr. — Map (db m7332) HM
66New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — Eldorado Amusement Park
On JFK Blvd. East at Liberty Place, on the right when traveling north on JFK Blvd. East.
From 1891-1894, the Eldorado Amusement Park, set atop the Weehawken Palisades thrilled thousands of visitors from New York City and surrounding New Jersey locales. Conceived by Hungarian entrepreneur Bolossy Kiralfy, the 15-acre site encompassed the . . . — Map (db m88923) HM
67New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — Highwood
On Hamilton Avenue, on the left when traveling south.
In 1832, James Gore King (1791-1853), a New York banking magnate and son of statesman Rufus King, moved his family here to Weehawken, overlooking the Hudson. King was an early president of the Erie Railroad and served in the US Congress from . . . — Map (db m66642) HM
68New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — The Hamilton-Burr DuelJuly 11, 1804
On Hamilton Avenue, on the left when traveling south.
The most famous duel in American History took place on this date at the dueling grounds in Weehakken, between political rivals, General Alexander Hamilton and sitting Vice President of the United States, Colonel Aaron Burr. Hamilton fell mortally . . . — Map (db m7333) HM
69New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — Weehawken Dueling Grounds1700's – 1840's
On Hamilton Avenue, on the left when traveling south.
Somewhere below this site, on a wooded ledge twenty feet above the Hudson River, lay the dueling grounds. Among the many known and unknown duelists who fought here were Governor of New York, DeWitt Clinton (1769-1828), Secretary of the Treasury, . . . — Map (db m7334) HM
70New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — Weehawken Korea and Vietnam MemorialFrom the People of Weehawken
On JFK Blvd. East at Hudson Place, on the right when traveling north on JFK Blvd. East.
1950 Korea 1953 1958 Vietnam 1975 Salvatore P. Cemelli Lawrence Mahurter Peter Progopio — Map (db m88924) WM
71New Jersey (Hudson County), Weehawken — Weehawken: Gateway to New York
On Port Imperial Blvd at Baldwin Avenue, on the right when traveling north on Port Imperial Blvd.
Access to the Global Marketplace Weehawken's history was influenced by two geographic features: the Hudson River and the Palisades. The town's location along the river provided a tremendous economic trade opportunity as it facilitated access . . . — Map (db m88426) HM
 
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Nov. 25, 2020