Online Encyclopedia

PORT RICHMOND

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 130 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PORT RICHMOND  , a
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part of the borough of Richmond in the city of New York, U.S.A., on the N.
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shore of Staten Island and on the Kill
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van Kull Channel . Before 1898 it was a
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separate
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village of Richmond county, New York, containing 6290 inhabitants in 1890 . It is served by the Staten Island Rapid Transit railway, and by a ferry to
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Bergen Point, New Jersey, and has steam and electric railway connexions with the municipal ferry at St George, which furnishes easy access to the business districts on Manhattan Island . Among its places of historic
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interest are the Dutch Reformed Church, which is the
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direct successor of the church established on Staten Island in 1664 or 1665 by Waldenses and
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Huguenots; and the Danner Hotel, built soon after the War of Independence on the site of a temporary fort that had been erected by
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British troops, and used as a private dwelling until 1820 . In this house
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Aaron Burr spent the last years of his
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life, dying there on the 14th of September 1836 . Among the
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industrial establishments are a shipyard, dry
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dock and manufactories of
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flour,
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lumber, lead paint and builders' supplies . On the first of
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January 1898, when the act creating Greater New York came into effect, the village became a part of the third ward of Richmond borough .

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