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See also: Essex county, New See also: Jersey, U.S.A., in the See also: north-eastern See also: part of the See also: state, adjoining the city of Newark, and about 12 M
.
W. of New See also: York city
.
Pop
.
(1890) 13,282; (1900) 21,506, of whom 3950 were See also: foreign-See also: born and 1420 were negroes; (1910 census) 34,371
.
It is served by the See also: Morris & Essex division of the See also: Delaware, Lackawanna & Western railway and by the Orange branch of the See also: Erie (the former having four stations—Ampere, See also: Grove Street,
See also: East Orange and Brick See also: Church), and is connected with Newark, Orange and West Orange by electric
See also: line
.
The city covers an See also: area of about 4 sq. m., and has broad, well-paved streets, bordered with See also: fine shade trees (under the jurisdiction of a " Shade See also: Tree Commission ")
.
It is primarily a residential suburb of New York and Newark, and has many beautiful homes; with Orange, West Orange and See also: South Orange it forms virtually one community, popularly known as " the Oranges." The public school See also: system is excellent, and the city has a See also: Carnegie library (1903), with more than 22,000 volumes in 1907
.
Among the See also: principal buildings are several attractive churches, the city See also: hall, and the
See also: club-See also: house of the Woman's Club of Orange
.
The principal manufactures of East Orange are electrical machinery, apparatus, and supplies (the factory of the Crocker-Wheeler Co. being here—in a part of the city known as " Ampere ") and pharmaceutical materials
.
The See also: total value of the city's factory products in 1905 was $2,326,552
.
East Orange has a fine See also: water-See also: works system, which it owns and operates; the water supply is obtained from artesian See also: wells at See also: White Oaks
See also: Ridge, in the township of Milburn (about 10 m. from the city hall) ; thence the water is pumped to a See also: steel reinforced See also: reservoir (capacity 5,000,000 gallons) on the See also: mountain back of South Orange
.
In 1863 the township of East Orange was separated from the township of Orange, which, in turn, had been separated from the township of Newark in 1806
.
An See also: act of the New Jersey legislature in 1895 created the office of See also: town-See also: ship president, with power of See also: appointment and See also: veto
.
Four years later East Orange was chartered as a city
.
See H
.
Whittemore, The Founders and Builders of the Oranges (Newark, 1896)
.
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