Hudson River (NJ side)
```mediawiki The Hudson River on the New Jersey side stretches roughly 40 to 50 miles along the state's eastern border, forming a natural boundary between New Jersey and New York from the state line in Bergen County south to Upper New York Bay near Bayonne. The river itself runs approximately 315 miles total from its source in the Adirondack Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean, but New Jersey's share of its western bank encompasses some of the most historically dense, geologically striking, and economically significant shoreline along its entire length. From the sheer basalt columns of the Palisades to the rebuilt waterfronts of Hoboken and Jersey City, the New Jersey side of the Hudson has been shaped by centuries of commerce, conflict, industrial growth, environmental damage, and deliberate recovery. This article covers the river's history, geography, environment, transportation infrastructure, culture, and economy as they relate specifically to New Jersey's Hudson River shoreline.
History
The Hudson River has played a central role in New Jersey's history since the early 17th century, when Dutch settlers established trading posts along its banks. The Dutch West India Company founded New Amsterdam — modern-day New York City — in 1624, and soon established ferry crossings and outposts in what is now Bergen County, New Jersey. The river's western bank saw early European settlement at Pavonia, near present-day Jersey City, where Dutch trader Michael Pauw received a patroonship grant in 1630. Relations between Dutch colonists and the Lenape people who had long inhabited the region were frequently violent, particularly during Governor Willem Kieft's war of the early 1640s, when Pavonia was the site of a massacre of Lenape refugees that set back Dutch settlement for years.[1]
The river's strategic importance became impossible to ignore during the American Revolution. In November 1776, General George Washington retreated across the Hudson after British forces overran Fort Lee — located at the top of the Palisades in present-day Bergen County — forcing a desperate withdrawal through New Jersey that Washington himself described as a crisis. The fort had guarded the river alongside Fort Washington on the Manhattan shore, and the pair of installations, connected by a chain boom, had attempted to block British naval passage. Their fall opened New Jersey to British advance. Washington's crossing back across the Delaware River at Trenton ten days later, on December 26, 1776, reversed the momentum, but the loss of the Hudson forts had nearly ended the Revolution.[2]
The river also served as a crossing point for enslaved individuals seeking freedom. New Jersey's proximity to free states — and, before abolition, the moral divisions within New Jersey itself, which didn't fully abolish slavery until 1846 — made the Hudson both a goal and an obstacle. Crossing the river into New York and then northward was one documented route, though specific crossing points in New Jersey are less thoroughly recorded than those in other states. Bergen County's free Black communities, some dating to Dutch manumissions in the 17th century, provided support networks that intersected with later Underground Railroad activity.[3]
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Hudson's New Jersey shore transformed into one of the most industrialized stretches of shoreline in North America. Railroads reached the riverbank by the 1830s, and by the Civil War era, Jersey City had become the eastern terminus of several major rail lines whose freight was ferried across to Manhattan. Oil refining, chemical manufacturing, and heavy shipping clustered around Bayonne, Kearny, and the Hackensack Meadowlands. The Standard Oil refinery at Bayonne — one of the largest in the world by the 1880s — processed crude oil shipped in by rail and dispatched finished products by barge. Pollution was severe and largely unregulated. By the mid-20th century, the lower Hudson had measurable levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), heavy metals, and raw sewage that had collapsed the shad and striped bass fisheries that once sustained communities along the river.[4]
The Clean Water Act of 1972 marked the beginning of a legal framework that forced industrial dischargers to obtain permits and meet standards. Enforcement was uneven and slow, but the law gave environmental groups legal standing they hadn't previously held. The decade before the Act had seen grassroots organizing galvanized in part by the Hudson itself: Consolidated Edison's proposed Storm King Mountain pumped-storage plant, which would have required massive water intake from the river, sparked the litigation that effectively created modern environmental law. Though Storm King is upstream of New Jersey, the legal precedents it set shaped what was possible in cleanup efforts statewide.[5]
Geography
The New Jersey side of the Hudson River encompasses several distinct geographic zones running roughly north to south: the Palisades escarpment in Bergen County, the densely developed urban waterfront from Weehawken through Bayonne, and the tidal marsh and estuary zone near the river's confluence with Upper New York Bay.
The Palisades are the river's most visually striking feature on the New Jersey shore. This formation of columnar basalt — technically diabase — rises 300 to 540 feet above the river along a stretch of approximately 40 miles from Edgewater north into Rockland County, New York. The cliffs formed roughly 200 million years ago when magma intruded into sedimentary rock during the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea and cooled relatively slowly, producing the characteristic vertical jointing that gives the Palisades their distinctive appearance. They were nearly quarried away entirely in the late 19th century, when trap rock was in heavy demand for road construction and railway ballast. By 1900, blasting had removed significant sections of the lower cliffs near Fort Lee. A campaign led largely by New Jersey and New York women's organizations, including the New Jersey Federation of Women's Clubs, pressured the legislatures of both states to create the Palisades Interstate Park Commission in 1900, which acquired land and halted quarrying. The park now protects about 100,000 acres across both states.[6]
South of the Palisades, the terrain flattens and the shoreline transitions to the built waterfront of the Hudson County municipalities: Edgewater, Fort Lee at the top of the bluff, then Weehawken — where the river narrows to roughly half a mile at the Lincoln Tunnel's New Jersey portal — and then Hoboken, Jersey City, and Bayonne continuing south. The river's depth along this stretch varies considerably, reaching over 60 feet in the main navigation channel. The width at the George Washington Bridge, between Fort Lee and Washington Heights, is approximately 4,760 feet. Near Hoboken, the river averages about 2,500 feet across to lower Manhattan. These narrow, deep reaches made the urban waterfront ideal for ferry crossings, then rail terminals, then container shipping, and now residential development.[7]
The southernmost stretch of the New Jersey Hudson shoreline, near Bayonne and the Kill Van Kull, grades into tidal flats and salt marsh. The Hackensack Meadowlands — technically draining to Newark Bay rather than the Hudson directly, though hydrologically connected — represent one of the largest remaining wetland complexes in the northeastern United States, covering roughly 8,400 acres. The Meadowlands were long regarded as wasteland and used for garbage disposal, industrial siting, and landfill; the Meadowlands Commission, created by New Jersey in 1969, has overseen partial restoration and the development of the wetlands as wildlife habitat. Several species of wading birds, including great egrets and great blue herons, now nest in Meadowlands marshes that were open dumps forty years ago.[8]
Environment and Conservation
The environmental history of the Hudson's New Jersey shore is, bluntly, a record of severe industrial contamination followed by incomplete but genuine recovery. The most significant pollution source was upstream: General Electric discharged an estimated 1.3 million pounds of PCBs into the Hudson between 1947 and 1977 from its capacitor manufacturing plants at Hudson Falls and Fort Edward, New York. PCBs accumulate in sediment and move downstream over time, and by the 1980s, PCB contamination in Hudson River fish had prompted bans on commercial fishing and advisories against eating resident species — striped bass, bluefish, and carp — that persist in modified form today. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency designated the Upper Hudson as a Superfund site in 1984. After decades of legal battles with GE, EPA ordered dredging of contaminated sediment, which began in 2009 and removed approximately 2.65 million cubic yards of PCB-laden material from a 40-mile stretch upstream by the time Phase 2 dredging concluded.[9]
On the New Jersey shore specifically, contamination has come from multiple sources beyond GE's upstream discharges. Chromium contamination from former tanneries and chemical plants in Hudson County — particularly around Kearny and Jersey City — left behind more than 100 sites where hexavalent chromium ore processing residue was used as fill material, sometimes under schools and residential developments. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection has managed remediation of these sites since the 1980s, with cleanup costs exceeding $200 million.[10]
The Hudson River National Wildlife Refuge, established by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2004, protects tidal wetlands and islands along the river in New York State, but its establishment reflected broader recovery trends that also extended to the New Jersey shore. Populations of American shad, which had been commercially extinct in the Hudson by the 1970s, began recovering following pollution controls; the Hudson River Shad Festival in Edgewater, held annually since 1981, marks the spring shad run. Striped bass returned to abundance. Bald eagles, absent from the Hudson Valley for much of the 20th century, now winter and occasionally nest along both shores. The recovery isn't complete — PCB advisories still caution against frequent consumption of locally caught fish, and combined sewer overflows during heavy rain events continue to send untreated sewage into the river at numerous New Jersey outfalls — but the improvement from the river's mid-century nadir is measurable and documented.[11]
Transportation and Infrastructure
The Hudson River has defined transportation patterns in the New York metropolitan area for four centuries, and the crossings built along New Jersey's share of the riverbank remain among the busiest in the world.
Ferry service across the Hudson predates American independence. The Hoboken Ferry, connecting Hoboken to lower Manhattan, operated continuously from 1774 until 1967 — one of the longest-running ferry routes in American history. By the mid-19th century, passenger ferries and freight-car floats connecting New Jersey's rail terminals to Manhattan were crossing the river hundreds of times daily, as every railroad reaching the Hudson's west bank was forced to float its cars across to reach New York's markets. The construction of fixed crossings gradually ended that era. The Holland Tunnel, opened in November 1927 and connecting Jersey City to lower Manhattan, was the first fixed vehicular crossing of the Hudson; it was the world's longest underwater tunnel at the time of its opening and remains an engineering landmark. The Lincoln Tunnel, connecting Weehawken to Midtown Manhattan, opened in 1937, with additional tubes added in 1945 and 1957. The George Washington Bridge, connecting Fort Lee to Washington Heights and opened in October 1931, carries more motor vehicles daily than any other bridge in the world — typically over 100 million vehicles per year — and is operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.[12]
Rail transit across the Hudson has its own layered history. The Hudson–Bergen Light Rail line runs along New Jersey's waterfront from Bayonne through Hoboken, connecting waterfront communities to ferry terminals and the broader transit network. The PATH train system — formally the Port Authority Trans-Hudson, acquired by the Port Authority in 1962 from the bankrupt Hudson & Manhattan Railroad — runs under the river on tunnels opened between 1908 and 1910, connecting Newark, Jersey City, and Hoboken to lower Manhattan and Midtown. PATH carried approximately 82 million riders annually before the COVID-19 pandemic sharply reduced ridership in 2020; numbers have recovered substantially since, though not fully to pre-pandemic levels.[13]
Ferry service returned to the Hudson in a new form beginning in the 1980s and expanding significantly through the 1990s and 2000s. NY Waterway, founded in 1986 by Arthur Imperatore, operates routes from multiple New Jersey terminals — Weehawken, Port Imperial, Hoboken, and Belford — to Manhattan. The service revived passenger ferry travel that had ended with the original Hoboken Ferry two decades earlier and now carries millions of passengers annually.
Culture
The Hudson River's cultural weight on the New Jersey side is partly a product of geography — the dramatic cliff faces and river views are simply hard to ignore — and partly a consequence of proximity to New York City, which has made the New Jersey waterfront a backdrop for enormous amounts of American commercial and artistic production.
The 19th-century Hudson River School of painting drew directly from the river's scenery, with artists including Thomas Cole, Frederic Edwin Church, and Albert Bierstadt depicting the Palisades, river bends, and storm light over the Hudson Valley in works that helped define American landscape painting. Cole, who lived in Catskill, New York, crossed to the New Jersey side repeatedly, and the Palisades appear in several major Hudson River School compositions. The movement's emphasis on the American wilderness as morally restorative — and the implicit argument that it deserved protection — had direct consequences: the same aesthetic arguments deployed in defense of the Palisades in the 1890s drew directly on a visual vocabulary the Hudson River School had spent sixty years establishing.[14]
The folk singer and activist Pete Seeger had a profound influence on Hudson River environmental culture, though his base was in Beacon, New York, on the river's eastern bank. Seeger co-founded the Clearwater organization in 1966, built the sloop Clearwater to sail the river as a floating environmental classroom, and spent decades drawing public