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History of Newark, New Jersey

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Map of Newark 1666-1916 compiled to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the city's founding
The landing of the Puritans in 1666, from the Settlers' Monument, Fairmount Cemetery
First Landing Party of the Founders of Newark, by Gutzon Borglum, 1916

Newark has long been the largest city in New Jersey. Founded in 1666, it greatly expanded during the Industrial Revolution, becoming the commercial and cultural hub of the region. Its population grew with various waves of migration in the mid 19th century, peaking in 1950. It suffered greatly during the era of urban decline and suburbanization in the late 20th century. Since the millennium it has benefited from interest and re-investment in America's cities, recording population growth in the 2010 and 2020 censuses.

Founding and 18th century

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Newark was founded in 1666 by Connecticut Puritans led by Robert Treat from the New Haven Colony to avoid losing political power to others not of their own church after the union of the Connecticut and New Haven colonies.[1][2][3] It was the third settlement founded in New Jersey, after Bergen, New Netherland (later dissolved into Hudson County, then incorporated into Jersey City) and Elizabethtown (modern-day Elizabeth).[4]

They sought to establish a colony with strict church rules similar to the one they had established in Milford, Connecticut. Treat wanted to name the community "Milford." Another settler, Abraham Pierson, had previously been a preacher in England's Newark-on-Trent, and adopted the name;[5] he is also quoted as saying that the community reflecting the new task at hand should be named "New Ark" for "New Ark of the Covenant." The name was shortened to Newark.[6][7] References to the name "New Ark" are found in preserved letters written by historical figures such as James McHenry dated as late as 1787.[8]

Treat and the party bought the property on the Passaic River from the Hackensack Indians by exchanging gunpowder, 100 bars of lead, 20 axes, 20 coats, guns, pistols, swords, kettles, blankets, knives, beer, and ten pairs of breeches.[9]

The first four settlers built houses at what is now the intersection of Broad Street and Market Street, also known as "Four Corners."[10]

The total control of the community by the Puritan Church continued until 1733 when Josiah Ogden harvested wheat on a Sunday following a lengthy rainstorm and was disciplined by the Church for Sabbath breaking.[11] He left the church and corresponded with Episcopalian missionaries, who arrived to build a church in 1746 and broke up the Puritan theocracy.[12]

It took 70 years to eliminate the last vestiges of theocracy from Newark, when the right to hold office was finally granted to non-Protestants.[13]

First Landing Party of the Founders of Newark (1916) and Indian and the Puritan (1916) are two of four public art works created by Gutzon Borglum that are located in Newark commemorating the city's founding.[14][15] They were added to the New Jersey Register of Historic Places on September 13, 1994,[16] and the National Register of Historic Places on October 28, 1994 as part of a Multiple Property Submission, "The Public Sculpture of John de la Mothe Gutzon Borglum, 1911–1926".[16][14]

Washington makes his headquarters at Eagle Tavern on Broad Street (November 22 to 28, 1776).[17][18][19]

Industrial era to 1900

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1874 bird's-eye view of Newark

Newark's rapid growth began in the early 19th century, much of it due to a Massachusetts transplant named Seth Boyden. Boyden came to Newark in 1815, and immediately began a torrent of improvements to leather manufacture, culminating in the process for making patent leather. Boyden's genius led to Newark's manufacturing nearly 90% of the nation's leather by 1870, bringing in $8.6 million in revenue to the city in that year alone. In 1824, Boyden, bored with leather, found a way to produce malleable iron. Newark also prospered by the construction of the Morris Canal in 1831. The canal connected Newark with the New Jersey hinterland, at that time a major iron and farm area.[20]

Railroads arrived in 1834 and 1835. A flourishing shipping business resulted, and Newark became the area's industrial center. By 1826, Newark's population stood at 8,017, ten times the 1776 number.[21]

Balbach Smelting and Refining Company ca. 1870. Now the location of baseball fields at Riverbank Park.

The middle 19th century saw continued growth and diversification of Newark's industrial base. The first commercially successful plasticCelluloid — was produced in a factory on Mechanic Street by John Wesley Hyatt. Hyatt's Celluloid found its way into Newark-made carriages, billiard balls, and dentures. Dr. Edward Weston perfected a process for zinc electroplating, as well as a superior arc lamp in Newark. Newark's Military Park had the first public electric lamps anywhere in the United States. Before moving to Menlo Park, Thomas Edison himself made Newark home in the early 1870s. He invented the stock ticker in the Brick City.[22]

In the late 19th century, Newark's industry was further developed, especially through the efforts of such men as J. W. Hyatt. From the mid-century on, numerous Irish and German immigrants moved to the city. The Germans were primarily refugees from the revolutions of 1848,[23] and, as other groups later did, established their own ethnic enterprises, such as newspapers and breweries. However, tensions existed between the "native stock" and the newer groups.

Mary Nimmo Moran, Newark, N.J., from the Passaic, 1879, National Gallery of Art

In the middle 19th century, Newark added insurance to its repertoire of businesses; Mutual Benefit was founded in the city in 1845 and Prudential in 1873. Prudential, or "the Pru" as generations knew it, was founded by another transplanted New Englander, John Fairfield Dryden. He found a niche catering to the middle and lower classes. In the late 1880s, companies based in Newark sold more insurance than those in any city except Hartford, Connecticut.[24]

In 1880, Newark's population stood at 136,500 in 1890 at 181,830; in 1900 at 246,070; and in 1910 at 347,000, a jump of 200,000 in three decades.[25] As Newark's population approached a half million in the 1920s, the city's potential seemed limitless. It was said in 1927: "Great is Newark's vitality. It is the red blood in its veins – this basic strength that is going to carry it over whatever hurdles it may encounter, enable it to recover from whatever losses it may suffer and battle its way to still higher achievement industrially and financially, making it eventually perhaps the greatest industrial center in the world".[26]

Sanitary conditions were bad throughout urban America in the 19th century, but Newark had an especially bad reputation. City leaders allowed the business elite to formulate civic policy and run public agencies. This lead to multiple issues such as a lack of any urban planning, the accumulation of human and horse waste built up on the city streets, the over reliance on cesspools and wells followed by the city's inadequate, poorly designed and haphazardly constructed sewage system, and the unreliability and dubious quality of its water supply. By 1890, Newark had the highest rate of death for cities of over one thousand people, led the nation in deaths by scarlet fever and had the highest rate of infant mortality in the United States. Newark also ranked in the top ten of cities for diseases such as diphtheria, malaria, tuberculosis and typhoid fever. As a result, that year the United States Census Bureau declared Newark "the nation's unhealthiest city".[27][28]

1900-1945

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Newark's old Penn station, ca. 1911
1910-era map of ethnic enclaves in Newark, New Jersey

Newark was bustling in the early-to-mid-20th century. Market and Broad Streets served as a center of retail commerce for the region, anchored by four flourishing department stores: Hahne & Company, Bambergers and Company, S. Klein and Kresge-Newark. "Broad Street today is the Mecca of visitors as it has been through all its long history," Newark merchants boasted, "they come in hundreds of thousands now when once they came in hundreds."[29]

Map of Newark in 1920

In 1922, Newark had 63 live theaters, 46 movie theaters, and an active nightlife. Dutch Schultz was killed in 1935 at the local Palace Bar. Billie Holiday frequently stayed at the Coleman Hotel. By some measures, the intersection of Broad and Market Streets — known as the "Four Corners" — was the busiest intersection in the United States. In 1915, Public Service counted over 280,000 pedestrian crossings in one 13-hour period. Eleven years later, on October 26, 1926, a State Motor Vehicle Department check at the Four Corners counted 2,644 trolleys, 4,098 buses, 2657 taxis, 3474 commercial vehicles, and 23,571 automobiles. Traffic in Newark was so heavy that the city converted the old bed of the Morris Canal into the Newark City Subway, making Newark one of the few cities in the country to have an underground system. Essex County was the first county park system in the country. New skyscrapers were being built every year, the two tallest in the city being the Art Deco National Newark Building and the Lefcourt-Newark Building. In 1948, just after World War II, Newark hit its peak population of just under 450,000. The population also grew as immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe settled there. Newark was the center of distinctive neighborhoods, including a large Eastern European Jewish community concentrated along Prince Street.[30] In 1959 German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed an apartment complex across from Branchbrook Park.

Post-World War II era

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Children's Playground at Prudential Apartments, c.1940

Problems existed underneath the industrial hum. In 1930, a city commissioner told the Optimists, a local booster club:

Newark is not like the city of old. The old, quiet residential community is a thing of the past, and in its place has come a city teeming with activity. With the change has come something unfortunate—the large number of outstanding citizens who used to live within the community's boundaries has dwindled. Many of them have moved to the suburbs and their home interests are there.[31]

While many observers attributed Newark's decline to post-World War II phenomena, others point to an earlier decline in the city budget as an indicator of problems. It fell from $58 million in 1938 to only $45 million in 1944. This was a slow recovery from the Great Depression. The buildup to World War II was causing an increase in the nation's economy. The city increased its tax rate from $4.61 to $5.30.

Some attribute Newark's downfall to its propensity for building large housing projects. Newark's housing had long been a matter of concern, as much of it was older. A 1944 city-commissioned study showed that 31 percent of all Newark dwelling units were below standards of health, and only 17 percent of Newark's units were owner-occupied. Vast sections of Newark consisted of wooden tenements, and at least 5,000 units failed to meet thresholds of being a decent place to live. Bad housing was the cause of demands that government intervene in the housing market to improve conditions.[32]

Historian Kenneth T. Jackson and others theorized that Newark, with a poor center surrounded by middle-class outlying areas, only did well when it was able to annex middle-class suburbs. When municipal annexation broke down, urban problems were exacerbated as the middle-class ring became divorced from the poor center. In 1900, Newark's mayor had confidently speculated, "East Orange, Vailsburg, Harrison, Kearny, and Belleville would be desirable acquisitions. By an exercise of discretion we can enlarge the city from decade to decade without unnecessarily taxing the property within our limits, which has already paid the cost of public improvements." Only Vailsburg would ever be added.[31]

Although numerous problems predated World War II, Newark was more hamstrung by a number of trends in the post-WWII era. The Federal Housing Administration redlined virtually all of Newark, preferring to back up mortgages in the white suburbs. This made it impossible for people to get mortgages for purchase or loans for improvements. Manufacturers set up in lower wage environments outside the city and received larger tax deductions for building new factories in outlying areas than for rehabilitating old factories in the city. The federal tax structure essentially subsidized such inequities.

Billed as transportation improvements, construction of new highways: Interstate 280, the New Jersey Turnpike, and Interstate 78 harmed Newark. They directly hurt the city by dividing the fabric of neighborhoods and displacing many residents. The highways indirectly hurt the city because the new infrastructure made it easier for middle-class workers to live in the suburbs and commute into the city.

Despite its problems, Newark tried to remain vital in the postwar era. The city successfully persuaded Prudential and Mutual Benefit to stay and build new offices. Rutgers University-Newark, New Jersey Institute of Technology, and Seton Hall University expanded their Newark presences, with the former building a brand-new campus on a 23-acre (9 hectare) urban renewal site. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey made Port Newark the first container port in the nation. South of the city, during the postwar era, it took over operations at Newark Liberty International Airport, now the thirteenth busiest airport in the United States.

The tallest buildings in downtown Newark: 1180 Raymond, 740 Broad St., and Prudential Insurance Headquarters.

The city made serious mistakes with public housing and urban renewal, although these were not the sole causes of Newark's tragedy. Across several administrations, the city leaders of Newark considered the federal government's offer to pay for 100% of the costs of housing projects as a blessing. The decline in industrial jobs meant that more poor people needed housing, whereas in prewar years, public housing was for working-class families. While other cities were skeptical about putting so many poor families together and were cautious in building housing projects, Newark pursued federal funds. Eventually, Newark had a higher percentage of its residents in public housing than any other American city.

The largely Italian-American First Ward was one of the hardest hit by urban renewal. A 46-acre (19 hectare) housing tract, labeled a slum because it had dense older housing, was torn down for multi-story, multi-racial Le Corbusier-style high rises, named the Christopher Columbus Homes. The tract had contained 8th Avenue, the commercial heart of the neighborhood. Fifteen small-scale blocks were combined into three "superblocks". The Columbus Homes, never in harmony with the rest of the neighborhood, were vacated in the 1980s. They were finally torn down in 1994.[33] The Pavilion and Colonnade Apartments, built for middle-class families remain.

From 1950 to 1960, while Newark's overall population dropped from 438,000 to 408,000, it gained 65,000 non-whites. By 1966, Newark had a black majority, a faster turnover than most other northern cities had experienced. Evaluating the riots of 1967, Newark educator Nathan Wright, Jr. said, "No typical American city has as yet experienced such a precipitous change from a white to a black majority." The misfortune of the Great Migration and Puerto Rican migration was that Southern blacks and Puerto Ricans were moving to Newark to be industrial workers just as the industrial jobs were decreasing sharply. Many suffered the culture shock of leaving a rural area for an urban industrial job base and environment. The latest migrants to Newark left poverty in the South to find poverty in the North.

During the 1950s alone, Newark's white population decreased by more than 25 percent from 363,000 to 266,000. From 1960 to 1967, its white population fell further to 46,000. Although in-migration of new ethnic groups combined with white flight markedly affected the demographics of Newark, the racial composition of city workers did not change as rapidly. In addition, the political and economic power in the city remained based in the white population.

In 1967, out of a police force of 1,400, only 150 members were black, mostly in subordinate positions. Racial tensions arose because of the disproportion between residents and police demographics. Since Newark's blacks lived in neighborhoods that had been white only two decades earlier, nearly all of their apartments and stores were white-owned as well. The loss of jobs affected overall income in the city, and many owners cut back on maintenance of buildings, contributing to a cycle of deterioration in housing stock.

Without consulting any residents of the neighborhood to be affected, Mayor Addonizio offered to condemn and raze 150 acres (61 hectares) of a densely populated black neighborhood in the central ward for the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ). UMDNJ had wanted to settle in suburban Madison, NJ.

1967 Newark riots

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Street scene during the 1967 riots

On July 12, 1967, a taxi driver named John Smith was violently injured while respectfully accepting arrest. A crowd gathered outside the police station where Smith was detained. Due to miscommunication, the crowd believed Smith had died in custody, although he had been transported to a hospital via a back entrance to the station. This sparked scuffles between African Americans and police in the Fourth Ward, although the damage toll was only $2,500.

Subsequent to television news broadcasts on July 13 however, new and larger riots took place. Twenty-six people were killed; 1,500 wounded; 1,600 arrested; and $10 million in property was destroyed. More than a thousand businesses were torched or looted, including 167 groceries (most of which would never reopen). Newark's reputation suffered dramatically. It was said, "wherever American cities are going, Newark will get there first."[34]

The long and short term causes of the riots are explored in depth in the documentary film Revolution '67.

After the riots

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Semi-abandoned buildings in the riot area, mid-1990s

The 1970s and 1980s brought continued decline. Middle class residents of all races continued to flee the city. Certain pockets of the city developed as domains of poverty and social isolation. Some say that whenever the media of New York needed to find some example of urban despair, they traveled to Newark.

The documentary Newark: It's My Home, profiling three families living in the city, was released in 1980.[35][36][37]

In American Pastoral, the 1997 novel by Newark-born author Philip Roth, the protagonist Swede Levov says:

Newark used to be the city where they manufactured everything, now it's the car theft capital of the world ... there was a factory where somebody was making something on every side street. Now there's a liquor store on every street — a liquor store, a pizza stand, and a seedy storefront church. Everything else is in ruins or boarded up.

In January 1975, an article in Harper's Magazine ranked the 50 largest American cities in 24 categories, ranging from park space to crime. Newark was one of the five worst in 19 out of 24 categories, and the very worst in nine. According to the article, only 70 percent of residents owned a telephone. St. Louis, the city ranked second worst, was much farther from Newark than the cities in the top five were from each other. The article concluded:

The city of Newark stands without serious challenge as the worst city of all. It ranked among the worst cities in no fewer than nineteen of twenty-four categories, and it was dead last in nine of them... Newark is a city that desperately needs help.[38]

Newark has had several achievements in the two and a half decades since the riots. In 1968, the New Community Corporation was founded. It has become one of the most successful community development corporations in the nation. By 1987, the NCC owned and managed 2,265 low-income housing units.

Broad Street from the Prudential Financial Building.

Newark's downtown began to redevelop in the post-riot decades. Less than two weeks after the riots, Prudential announced plans to underwrite a $24 million office complex near Penn Station, dubbed "Gateway." While Gateway provided desperately needed tax revenue for Newark, it hurt the city by isolating office workers and their economic activity from the city. The complex's fortress like design allows workers to commute to their offices by car or rail without having to set foot on the city streets. Gateway also set the tone for other office buildings in the area, which also lack a real connection with their surroundings. Today, Gateway houses thousands of white-collar workers, though few live in Newark.[39][40]

Before the riots, the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey was considering building in the suburbs. The riots and Newark's undeniable desperation kept the medical school in the city. However, instead of being built on 167 acres (676,000 m²), the medical school was built on just 60 acres (240,000 m2), part of which was already city owned. Students at the medical school soon started the "Student Family Health Clinic" to provide free health care for the underserved population, along with other community service projects. It continues to operate today as one of the nation's oldest student-run free health clinics.

In 1970, Kenneth A. Gibson was the first African-American to be elected mayor of Newark, as well as to be elected mayor of a major northeastern city. The 1970s were a time of battles between Gibson and the shrinking white population. Gibson admitted that "Newark may be the most decayed and financially crippled city in the nation." He and the city council raised taxes to try to improve services such as schools and sanitation, but they did nothing for Newark's economic base. The CEO of Ballantine's Brewery asserted that Newark's $1 million annual tax bill was the cause of the company's bankruptcy.[41]

In 1996, Money magazine ranked Newark "The Most Dangerous City in the Nation". The magazine cited that Newark had the nation's highest violent crime rate at six times the United States average with roughly 1 in 25 residents being a victim of violent crime. Additionally, the city's auto theft rate was also at six times the national average.[42]

Prior to the election of former mayor Cory Booker in 2006, Newark did not have a formal city planning department. As a result, Julia Vitullo-Martin, an urban planner and a fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, concluded:

“Newark is a living laboratory for nearly every bad planning idea of the 20th century. Urban renewal destroyed whole neighborhoods, replacing low-rise, vernacular residences with public housing projects. Built on superblocks, the projects wiped out the original grid as well as commercial and retail activity. Interstate highways cut the city into pieces, dividing and isolating neighborhoods. And crime, of course, made sport of the general civic unraveling. Corporations, most prominently Prudential Insurance, tried to help. But to protect employees from the deteriorating environment, they built fortress-like towers, connected to the train station and to one another by skywalks, bypassing the streets below and walling off the waterfront with parking garages and hostile architecture. Meanwhile, surface roads were widened to facilitate traffic, making escape to the suburbs more efficient.”[43][44]

Newark's Renaissance

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Downtown

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The New Jersey Performing Arts Center

The New Jersey Performing Arts Center, which opened in the downtown area in 1997 at a cost of $180 million, was seen by many as the first step in the city's road to revival, and brought in people to Newark who otherwise might never have visited. NJPAC is known for its acoustics, and features the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra as its resident orchestra. NJPAC also presents a diverse group of visiting artists such as Itzhak Perlman, Sarah Brightman, Sting, 'N Sync, Lauryn Hill, the Vienna Boys' Choir, Yo Yo Ma, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.[45]

Since then, the city built a now demolished baseball stadium (Riverfront Stadium) for the Newark Bears, the city's former minor league team. In 2007, the Prudential Center (nicknamed, "The Rock") opened for the New Jersey Devils. The Newark Public Library is planning a major renovation and expansion. The Port Authority constructed a rail connection to the airport (AirTrain Newark). Numerous commercial developments have arisen in the downtown area. Two public spaces have opened, Mulberry Commons and Newark Riverfront Park, the latter along Passaic River waterfront is being refurbished through downtown to provide citizens with access to the river.

While much of the city's revitalization efforts have been focused in the downtown area, adjoining neighborhoods have in recent years begun to see some signs of development, particularly in the Central Ward. Since 2000, Newark has gained population, its first increase since the 1940s. Nevertheless, the "Renaissance" has been unevenly felt across the city and some districts continue to have below-average household incomes and higher-than-average rates of poverty.

By the mid-first decade of the 21st century, the rate of crime had fallen by 58% from historic highs associated with severe drug problems in the mid-1990s, however homicides remained at record highs for a city of its size with a per capita homicide rate three times that of nearby New York City.[46] In the first two months of 2008, the murder rate dropped dramatically, with no murders recorded for 43 days.[47] However, even with progress made to reduce crime, in 2012 Newark was ranked as the 6th most dangerous city in the United States.[48]

Newark's nicknames reflect the efforts to revitalize downtown. In the 1950s the term New Newark was given to the city by then-Mayor Leo Carlin to help convince major corporations to remain in Newark. In the 1960s Newark was nicknamed the Gateway City after the redeveloped Gateway Center area downtown, which shares its name with the tourism region of which Newark is a part, the Gateway Region. It has more recently been called the Renaissance City by the media and the public to gain recognition for its revitalization efforts.[49]

Tech hub

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Extensive fiber optic networks in Newark started in the 1990's when telecommunication companies installed fiber optic network to put Newark as a strategic location for data transfer between Manhattan and the rest of the country during the dot-com boom. At the same time, the city encouraged those companies to install more than they needed.[50] A vacant department store was converted into a telecommunication center called 165 Halsey Street.[51] It became one of the world's largest carrier hotels.[52] As a result after the dot-com bust, there were a surplus of dark fiber (unused fiber optic cables). Twenty years later, the city and other private companies started utilizing the dark fiber to create high performance networks within the city.[50]

Since 2007, several technology oriented companies have moved to Newark: Audible (global headquarters, 2007),[53] Panasonic (North America headquarters, 2013),[54] AeroFarms (global headquarters, 2015),[55] Broadridge Financial Solutions (1,000 jobs, 2017),[56] WebMD (700 jobs, 2021),[57] Ørsted (North American digital operations headquarters, 2021),[58] and HAX Accelerator (US headquarters, 2021).[59]

See also

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References

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Notes

  1. ^ Edward Paul Rindler, "The Migration from the New Haven Colony to Newark, East New Jersey: A Study of Puritan Values and Behavior, 1630-1720" PhD dissertation U of Pennsylvania; Dissertation Abstracts International (1978), 38#11 pp 6792-6792 online
  2. ^ Royal R. Hinman. A Catalogue of the Names of the Early Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut Press of Case, Tiffany, & Co., Hartford, 1852, p. 476
  3. ^ Joseph Atkinson, The history of Newark, New Jersey (William B. Guild, Newark, N. J., 1878), pp. 8-9
  4. ^ Urquhart, Frank John (1904). Newark, the story of its early days. Newark, NJ: Baker Printing Co. p. 9.
  5. ^ William B. Helmreich (1999). The Enduring Community: The Jews of Newark and MetroWest. New York/London: Transaction. p. 8.
  6. ^ "Origins of Thanksgiving"http://curiousnewyork.blogspot.com/2010/11/origins-of-thanksgiving-american.html?m=1
  7. ^ The city's name is frequently said to come from Newark-on-Trent, a town in England, but that is incorrect.
  8. ^ Bernard C. Steiner and James McHenry, The life and correspondence of James McHenry(Cleveland: Burrows Brothers Co., 1907)
  9. ^ "content". Millburn.lib.nj.us. Archived from the original on 2013-08-05. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  10. ^ Helmreich
  11. ^ ""The New Jersey Historical Society", "Manuscript Group 905, Ogden Family (Newark and Elizabeth, NJ)"". Jerseyhistory.org. Archived from the original on 2008-05-05. Retrieved 2009-08-08.
  12. ^ "History of Newark", A Walk Through Newark, Thirteen/WNET. Retrieved January 13, 2006.
  13. ^ Helmreich, p. 9
  14. ^ a b ""The Public Sculpture of John de la Mothe Gutzon Borglum, 1911–1926." The National Register of Historic Places, April 27, 1994" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  15. ^ Columnist, Linda Stamato Star-Ledger Guest (3 August 2014). "The sculpture of a city: Newark and its storied past". NJ.com. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  16. ^ a b "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places - Essex County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection - Historic Preservation Office. January 10, 2010. p. 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 27, 2009. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
  17. ^ Barber, John Warner; Howe, Henry (1844). Historical Collections of the State of New Jersey: Containing a General Collection of the Most Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes, Etc. Relating to Its History and Antiquities, with Geographical Descriptions of Every Township in the State. NYPL.
  18. ^ "George Washington slept here: NJ homes where our founding father spent time". The Star-Ledger. February 13, 2014. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
  19. ^ Tuttle, Brad R. (2009). How Newark Became Newark: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of an American City. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813546568.
  20. ^ Urquhart, Frank J. (Frank John) (August 31, 1913). "A history of the city of Newark, New Jersey : embracing practically two and a half centuries, 1666-1913". New York : Lewis Historical Publishing Co. – via Internet Archive.
  21. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., Chapters 11 and 18.
  22. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., p.181.
  23. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Newark (New Jersey)" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  24. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., p.186.
  25. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., p.201.
  26. ^ Jackson, Kenneth T. (1985). Crabgrass frontier: The suburbanization of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504983-7. OCLC 11785435., p.275
  27. ^ Stuart Galishoff, Newark: the nation's unhealthiest city, 1832-1895 (1988).
  28. ^ "Newark: The Nation's Unhealthiest City, 1832-1895". thefreelibrary.com. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  29. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., p.195
  30. ^ Levinson, Jay (17 April 2019). "Demise of Newark Jewry: Social Evolution". (UK) Jewish Tribune: 58.
  31. ^ a b Jackson, Kenneth T. (1985). Crabgrass frontier: The suburbanization of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504983-7. OCLC 11785435., p.277
  32. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., Chapter 27.
  33. ^ Immerso, Michael (1999). Newark's Little Italy: The Vanished First Ward. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2757-0.
  34. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., p.330.
  35. ^ "Newark It's My Home" – via IMDb.
  36. ^ "Collection: Newark It's My Home Film Collection | Welcome to the Newark Public Library". newarkpubliclibrary.libraryhost.com.
  37. ^ "Newark It's My Home". August 31, 1981 – via Internet Archive.
  38. ^ Harper's, January 1975
  39. ^ "New Complex Highlights The 2 Worlds of Newark". The New York Times. August 15, 1971. Retrieved February 16, 2024.
  40. ^ "Fortress-like office complex in Newark opens a new door to the city". NJ.com. February 16, 2023. Retrieved February 16, 2024.
  41. ^ Cunningham, John T. (1989). Newark. New Jersey Historical Society. ISBN 0-911020-18-7., p.339.
  42. ^ "AMERICA'S SAFEST CITY: AMHERST, N.Y.; THE MOST DANGEROUS: NEWARK, N.J." Money. November 27, 1996. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  43. ^ "From the Archives: 'Confidence Man,' Next City's 2009 Profile of Cory Booker". nextcity.org. August 14, 2013. Retrieved April 15, 2020.
  44. ^ "Gateway Newark". The New York Times. October 22, 2006. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  45. ^ History of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center Archived 2009-03-24 at the Wayback Machine, accessed, March 23, 2007
  46. ^ "With 101 Homicides, Newark Nears a Record". The New York Times. December 17, 2006. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  47. ^ "Newark's fresh path". The New York Post. April 3, 2010. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  48. ^ "Most Dangerous U.S. Cities - Newark, N.J." CNN Money. January 23, 2013. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  49. ^ Revitalization Efforts Archived 2009-01-13 at the Wayback Machine, accessed, March 23, 2007
  50. ^ a b Burd, Joshua (27 July 2015). "The story behind the infrastructure Newark's transformation to a fertile fiber optic hub was decades in the making". NJBIZ. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  51. ^ Barnes, Tom (18 June 2004). "Retrofitted Newark store is a model for Lazarus makeover". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
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Further reading

  • Directory of Newark, for 1835-6, Newark, N.J: The Office of the Newark Daily Advertiser, 1835, OL 23673568M
  • Directory of the city of Newark, for 1838-9, Newark, N.J: Pierson, 1838, OL 23295513M
  • B. T. Pierson (1851), Directory of the City of Newark, for 1851-52, Newark, N.J: Holbrook's Steam Press, OL 7137264M
  • Marshall Curry (July 2015), Newark: A Brief History, POV, archived from the original on 2015-11-17, retrieved 2017-08-29
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