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See also: Jersey, U.S.A., on a peninsula between the Hudson and See also: Hackensack See also: rivers at the N. and between New See also: York and Newark bays at the S., opposite See also: lower Manhattan See also: Island
.
Pop
.
(1890), 163,003; (1900), 206,433, of whom 58,424 were See also: foreign-See also: born (19.314 Irish, 17,375 See also: German, 4642 See also: English, 3832 See also: Italian, 1694 See also: Russian, 1690 Scottish, 1643 Russian Poles, 1445 See also: Austrian) and 3704 were negroes; (1910 census) 267,779
.
It is the eastern See also: terminus of the Pennsylvania, the Lehigh Valley, the West See also: Shore, the Central of New Jersey, the Baltimore & See also: Ohio, the See also: Northern of New Jersey (operated by the See also: Erie), the Erie, the New York, Susquehanna & Western, and the New Jersey & New York (controlled by the Erie) See also: railways, the first three using the Pennsylvania station; and of the little-used See also: Morris canal
.
Jersey City is served by several inter-See also: urban electric railways and by the tunnels of the Hudson & Manhattan railroad See also: company to Dey St. and to 33rd St. and 6th See also: Ave., New York City, and it also has docks of several lines of Transatlantic and See also: coast steamers
.
The city occupies a See also: land See also: area of 14.3 sq. m. and has a See also: water-front of about 12 M
.
See also: Bergen See also: Hill, a southerly extension of the Palisades, extends longitudinally through it from
See also: north to See also: south
.
At the north end this hill rises on the See also: east See also: side precipitously to a height of nearly 200 ft.; on the west and south sides the slope is gradual
.
On the crest of the hill is the See also: fine Hudson County See also: Boulevard, about 19 m. long and too ft. wide, extending through the city and county from north to south and passing through West Side See also: Park, a splendid county park containing lakes and a 7o-See also: acre playground
.
Thewater-front, especially on the east side, is given up to manufacturing and See also: shipping establishments
.
In the hill section are the better residences, most of which are wooden and detached
.
The See also: principal buildings are the city See also: hall and the
See also: court See also: house
.
There are nine small city parks with an aggregate area of 39.1 acres . The city has a public library containing (1907) 107,600 volumes and an See also: historical museum
.
At the corner of Bergen Ave. and Forrest St. is the See also: People's Palace, given in 1904 by See also: Joseph Milbank to the First Congregational See also: church and containing a library and
See also: reading-See also: room, a gymnasium, bowling alleys, a billiard-room, a See also: rifle-range, a roof-garden, and an auditorium and theatre; See also: kindergarten classes are held and an employment bureau is maintained
.
Among the educational institutions are the German See also: American school, Hasbrouck institute, St Aloysius See also: academy (See also: Roman Catholic) and St See also: Peter's See also: college (Roman Catholic) ; and there are See also: good public See also: schools
.
Grain is shipped to and from Jersey City in large quantities, and in general the city is an important shipping See also: port; being included, however, in the port of New York, no See also: separate See also: statistics are avail-able
.
There are large slaughtering establishments, and factories for the refining of See also: sugar and for the manufacture of See also: tobacco goods, See also: soap and perfumery, See also: lead pencils, iron and See also: steel, railway cars, chemicals, See also: rubber goods, See also: silk goods, dressed See also: lumber, and malt liquors
.
The value of the city's manufactured products increased from $37,376,322 in 1890 to $77,225,116 in 1900, or 106.6%; in 1905 the factory product alone was valued at $75,740,934, an increase of only 3.9 % over the factory product in 1900, this small See also: rate of increase being due very largely to a decline in the value of the products of the sugar and See also: molasses refining industry
.
The value of the wholesale slaughtering and See also: meat-packing product decreased from $18,551,783 in 188o and $11,356,511 in 1890 to $6,243,217 in 19oo—of this $5,708,763 represented wholesale slaughtering alone; in 1905 the wholesale slaughtering product was valued at $7,568,739
.
In 1908 the assessed valuation of the city was $267,039,754, The city is governed by a See also: board of aldermen and a mayor (elected biennially), who appoints most of the officials, the street and water board being the principal exception
.
Jersey City when first incorporated was a small sandy peninsula (an island at high See also: tide) known as Paulus See also: Hook, directly opposite the lower end of Manhattan Island
.
It had been a See also: part of the Dutch patroonship of Pavonia granted to Michael Pauw in 1630
.
In 1633 the first buildings were erected, and for more than a century the Hook was occupied by a small agricultural and trading community
.
In 1764 a new See also: post route between New York and See also: Philadelphia passed through what is now the city, and See also: direct See also: ferry communication began with New York
.
Early in the War of Independence Paulus Hook was fortified by the Americans, but soon after the See also: battle of Long Island they abandoned it, and on the 23rd of See also: September 1776 it was occupied by the See also: British
.
On the See also: morning of the 19th of See also: August 1779 the British garrison was surprised by Major See also: Henry
See also: Lee ("
See also: Light See also: Horse Harry "), who with about 500 men took 159 prisoners and lost only 2 killed and 3 wounded, one of the most brilliant exploits during the War of Independence
.
In 1804 Paulus Hook, containing 117 acres and having about 15 inhabitants, passed into the possession of three enterprising New York lawyers, who laid it out as a See also: town and formed an association for its See also: government, which was incorporated as the " associates of the Jersey company." In 1820 the town was incorporated as the City of Jersey, but it remained a part of the township of Bergen until 1838, when it was reincorporated as a distinct See also: municipality
.
In 1851 the township of See also: Van Vorst, founded in 1804 between Paulus Hook and See also: Hoboken, was annexed
.
In 187o there were two annexations: to the south, the town of Bergen, the county-seat, which was founded in 1660; to the north-west, Hudson City, which had been separated from the township of North Bergen in 1852 and incorporated as a city in 1855
.
The town of See also: Greenville, to the south, was annexed in 1873
.
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