- Greenville, Jersey City
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For other places with the same name, see Greenville (disambiguation).
Greenville is the southernmost section of Jersey City, New Jersey.[1][2]
In its broadest definition Greenville encompasses the area south of the West Side Branch of Hudson-Bergen Light Rail and north of the city line with Bayonne, between the Upper New York Bay and the Newark Bay, and corresponds to the postal area zip code 07305. The Claremont Section straddles Greenville and Bergen-Lafayette.
The central core of Greenville (between Garfield Avenue and West Side Avenue) is primarily residential, the housing stock mostly one and two family homes and lowrise apartment buildings. Principal corridors include MLK Drive, Old Bergen Road and Danforth Avenue. This part of Greenville is home to the Afro-American Historical and Cultural Society Museum at the Miller Branch of the Jersey City Public Library,[3] Greenville Hospital, Jewish Hospital, Henry Snyder High School, and New Jersey City University all located on the district's main thoroughfare, Kennedy Boulevard. The Bayview - New York Bay Cemetery is a prominent landmark. The part of Greenville at the city line is known as Curries Woods.
East of New Jersey Turnpike Newark Bay Extension (Interstate 78) lie the Greenville Yards, an intermodal facility,[4] Port Jersey, Port Liberté, (a gated residential community), and the Caven Point Section of Liberty State Park. Slightly further inland and parallel to the route of the Turnpike, was that of the Morris Canal until abandoned in the 1920s. A small (filled-in) portion of the canal still exists in Country Village,[5] a neighborhood near Droyer's Point and the West Side.
Besides nearby Liberty State other parks include Mercer Park, Bayside, Columbia, and Fricchione. Cochrane Athletic Field is located near the Hudson Waterfront. Audubon Park is a city square.
Contents
Public transportation
The Richard Street and Danforth Avenue stations of the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail are located on the district's east side east of Garfield Avenue, while West Side Branch Hudson-Bergen Light Rail stations (including the MLK Station) are on its northern perimeter, which overlaps Bergen-Lafayette. There is bus service along its north south-streets avenues: Ocean Avenue, Old Bergen Road, Kennedy Boulevard, and West Side Avenue operated by New Jersey Transit buses to Journal Square, Exchange Place, and Bayonne, the Red & Tan buses 99s and 4. The Greenville Bus Garage on Old Bergen Road is one of the largest in Hudson, housing more than 120 buses for Routes: 6, 43, 80, 81, 87, 120, 126, 99.
History
Minkakwa, Kewan, and Pamrapo
What became Greenville was the territory of the Hackensack and Raritan Indians at the time of European contact in the 17th century. They called the area on Bergen Neck Minkakwa (alternatively spelled Minelque and Minackqua) meaning a place of good crossing. This is likely so because it was the most convenient pass between the two bays on either side of the neck. Interpreted as place where the coves meet, in this case where they are closest to each, it describes a spot advantageous for portage.[6] First settled by New Netherlanders in 1647.[7] the Caven Point settlement on the west shore of the Upper New York Bay between Pamrapo and Communipaw was part of Pavonia, which, upon receiving its municipal charter in 1661 was renamed Bergen. The name Caven is a anglicisation of the Dutch word Kewan,[8] which in turn was a "Batavianized" [9] derivative of an Algonquian word meaning peninsula.[10]
Bergen, Greenville, Jersey
During the British and early American colonial era the area was part of Bergen Township. The 19th century Jersey City and Bergen Point Plank Road (today's Garfield Avenue) ran through Greenville (from Paulus Hook to Bergen Point). Greenville became part of the newly formed Hudson County in 1840. The town grew as a fashionable suburb of New York.[11]Greenville Township was incorporated as a township by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 14, 1863, from portions of Bergen Town.[12] It was absorbed into Jersey City on February 4, 1873, ending its life as an independent municipality.[12][13]
Greenville Yard
Further information: Port JerseyCrime and Gentrification
In 2005, due to a huge surge in murders and crime the city enacted a curfew for business owners on some of Greenville's most crime-ridden streets, including Martin Luther King Drive and Ocean Avenue.[14] Most of the 39 murders in 2005 occurred within the borders of this Jersey City neighborhood. Many drug gangs and street gangs have staked out their territories along this neighborhood's most blighted street, and in 2005 the FBI targeted a group of drug dealers that were entrenched on the corner of Lexington and Bergen Avenues, the base of operations for cocaine distribution and an area where numerous drug- and gang-related murders and shootings had taken place between 1993 and 2002.
As prices soar in other neighborhoods in New York City and New Jersey, Greenville has become a destination for those who are seeking the next hot neighborhood.[15]
- Bergen Neck
- Black Tom
- Canal Crossing
- Curries Woods
- Kennedy Boulevard
- Cross-Harbor Rail Tunnel
- Hackensack RiverWalk
- Hudson River Waterfront Walkway
- Greenville and Hudson Railway
- Liberty National Golf Club
- Liberty State Park
- List of neighborhoods in Jersey City, New Jersey
- Morris Canal
- New Jersey City University
- New Jersey Route 185
- Red & Tan in Hudson County
- Roosevelt Stadium
- Route 440 (New Jersey)
References
- ^ Jersey City's Districts
- ^ Hudson County New Jersey Street Map. Hagstrom Map Company, Inc. 2008. ISBN 0-8809-7763-9.
- ^ Afro-American Historical Society Museum
- ^ NY Harbor Intermodal Facilities
- ^ Morris Canal in Jersey City
- ^ http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=moa&cc=moa&sid=95e3f6e828e116b80d4cccd93c806bc1&view=text&rgn=main&idno=AFJ8379.0001.001 page 50
- ^ www.nj.gov/state/darm/links/pdf/pasevensettledtowns.pdf
- ^ Ferretti, Fred (June 10, 1979), "Jersey City Hopes to Save Caven Point", New York Times
- ^ Shorto, Russell (2004). The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony that Shaped America. Random House. ISBN 1-4000-7867-9.
- ^ Winfield, Charles (1874). HISTORY OF THE COUNTY OF HUDSON, NEW JERSEY: From its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time. New York: Kennaud & Hay Stationary M'fg and Printing Company. p. 51.
- ^ "High Fares In Jersey.; Steps Taken By The Residents Of Greenville To Remedy Them". The New York Times. May 13, 1881. http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9800E6D9133CEE3ABC4B52DFB366838A699FDE.
- ^ a b "The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606-1968", John P. Snyder, Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey; 1969. p. 146.
- ^ "Municipal Incorporations of the State of New Jersey (according to Counties)" prepared by the Division of Local Government, Department of the Treasury (New Jersey); December 1, 1958, p. 78 - Extinct List.
- ^ Jersey City Curfew Tackles Crime, but May Hit Profits, Too, The New York Times, March 25, 2005
- ^ If You Lived Here, You’d Be Cool by Now, New York Magazine, December 4, 2006
External links
- Garfield+Danforth
- Bayonne Master Plan in relation to adjacent communities
- Van Buskirk family at Minkakwa and Pamrapo
Neighborhoods in Jersey City, New Jersey Bergen-Lafayette Downtown Exchange Place · Hamilton Park · Harsimus · Holland Tunnel · Pavonia Newport · Paulus Hook · Van Vorst Park · The Village · WALDO/PowerhouseGreenville The Heights Journal Square Meadowlands Upper New York Bay West Side Categories:- Former townships in New Jersey
- Unincorporated communities in New Jersey
- Neighborhoods in Jersey City, New Jersey
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