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See also: York, U.S.A., on the See also: Delaware See also: river, at its junction with the Neversink, 88 m
.
N.W. of New York city by See also: rail, and at the intersection of the boundary lines of the states of New York, New See also: Jersey and Pennsylvania
.
Pop
.
(1900), 9385, of whom 895 were See also: foreign-See also: born; (19'o census), 9564
.
It is served by the See also: Erie and the New York, See also: Ontario & Western See also: railways
.
The beauty of the scenery in its vicinity has made the city a summer resort
.
At See also: Port Jervis are situated the extensive shops of the Erie railway
.
Among the manufactures are wearing apparel, See also: silk, See also: glass, and See also: silver See also: ware
.
The value of the factory products increased from $1,009,081 in 1900 to $1,635,215 in 1905, or 62 %
.
Port Jervis was laid out in '826, soon after See also: work began on the Delaware & Hudson Canal; it owes its origin to that waterway (now abandoned), and was named in honour of See also: John Bloomfield Jervis (1795-1885), the engineer who constructed the canal, who, in 1836, was in
See also: charge of the construction of the Croton Aqueduct, and wrote Railway See also: Property (1859) and The Construction and Management of Railways (186')
.
Port Jervis was incorporated as a See also: village in 1853, and was chartered as a city in 1907
.
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