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Home > Newark, New Jersey


 

Skyline of downtown Newark, seen from the Newark Bay Bridge. The Watchungs are in the background.

Newark is located in Essex County, New Jersey, USA. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 273,546. It is an industrial city ten miles (16 km) west of New York City, with convenient access to New York by road and rail. Its location on the Atlantic coast, at the mouth of the Passaic River, has helped make its port facility, Port Newark, the major container shipping port for New York Harbor. It is the home of Newark Liberty International Airport (formerly Newark Airport), the first airport to serve the New York metropolitan area.

Newark is frequently known as the "Brick City" because many of its buildings have brick facades.

The City of Newark is presently governed under the Faulkner Act (Mayor-Council) system of municipal government.

1 History

1.1 Early history

Newark was founded in 1666 by ConnecticutConnecticut is a state of the United States, part of the New England region. Connecticut was one of the thirteen colonies that revolted against British rule in the American Revolution. USS Connecticut was named in honor of this state. History Main article PuritanThe Puritans were members of a group of radical Protestants which developed in England after the Reformation. Terminology The word puritan is now applied unevenly to a number of Protestant churches from the late sixteenth century to the early eighteenth cs led by Robert Treat, making it the third-oldest major city in the United States, though not the third oldest settlement. Newark is the city's third name; previously, it was called Pasaic Town and New Milford. The name comes from Newark-on-TrentNewark (also Newark-on-Trent is a town in Nottinghamshire, located on the River Trent. The River Devon also runs through the town. It is a historic market town, with a castle. King John of England died there. During the English Civil War, Newark survived, a village in England from where some of the original settlers arrived.

Newark was a relatively large town in the colonial era, known for its good beers, ciders, and tanned leather goods. In religion, it stayed loyal to old Puritan ways longer than the communities of New England, and was very receptive to the Great AwakeningGreat Awakenings are commonly said to be periods of religious revival in U. religious history. A perhaps more accurate way to describe them are as periodic revolutions in American religious thought. The Great Awakenings appear to form a cycle, with a peri. When the seminaries at Yale and Harvard showed disdain for Great Awakening evangelicalism, several Newark ministers led by Aaron Burr (father of US vice-president Aaron BurrAlternate meaning: Rev. Aaron Burr, Sr. Aaron Burr, Jr. February 6, 1756 September 14, 1836) was an American politician and adventurer. He was a major formative member of the Democratic-Republican party in New York and a strong supporter of Governor Georg) founded the College of New Jersey, later to be known as Princeton, in neighboring Elizabeth.



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