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Acquackanonk Township, New Jersey

 
Wikipedia: Acquackanonk Township, New Jersey

Acquackanonk Township was incorporated in 1693 by the British in the newly established colony of New Jersey It was located in the northern part of Essex County, New Jersey on the Passaic River. In 1837, Passaic County was created, incorporating this township and some portions of both Bergen County and Essex County. When formed, the township included parts of present day Clifton, Paterson and Passaic.

The land on which the town was situated was at one time owned by the Surveyor General of New Netherland Jacques Cortelyou, some "12,000 morgens at Aquackanonk on the Passaic, purchased by himself and associates of the Indians."[1] It was first settled in 1678 by Dutch traders, who in 1693 formed a Dutch Reformed congregation [2][3][4] </ref> The Acquackanonk were a Lenape group who spoke the same Algonquian language dialect and shared the same totem (turtle) as the neighboring Hackensack and Tappan. They were so called by the New Netherlanders, who commonly referred to the people by the indigenous word for their territory. The name may mean a place in a rapid stream where fishing is done with a net. [5] Alternatively, at the lamprey stream from contemporary axkwaakahnung (spellings include Achquakanonk, Acquackanonk) [6] Lastly it may mean where gum blocks were made for pounding corn.[7] Ackquekenon [8] was spelling used by European explorer Jasper Danckearts in 1679.

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