People used ferry services. There is an interesting article in the NY Times here: http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F20E12FA3B5D14738DDDAB0894DF405B828EF1D3
Boats
The George Washington Bridge connects New Jersey to Manhattan. The Golden Gate Bridge is in San Francisco.
The George Washington Bridge traverses the Hudson River. It connects New Jersey to Upper Manhattan.
The George Washington Bridge is a suspension bridge that spans the length of the Hudson River. This bridge connects the states of New York and New Jersey.
The George Washington Bridge connects New Jersey to New York City. It traverses the Hudson River at Fort Lee in Bergen County, New Jersey, and 181st Street in Upper Manhattan.
The George Washington Bridge connects New Jersey to New York City. It traverses the Hudson River at Fort Lee in Bergen County, New Jersey, and 181st Street in Upper Manhattan.
new jersey and new york
The George Washington Bridge connects the north west part of Manhattan Island to Bergen County's municipality of Fort Lee in New Jersey.
The George Washington Bridge is located in the state of New York City. It's purpose is to connect neighborhoods within the borough of Manhattan to New Jersey. It is the world's busiest vehicular bridge it stands at an impressive height of 604 Ft and spans a whopping 4,760 ft in length.
There are three bridges connecting Manhattan to Brooklyn: the Brooklyn Bridge, Manhattan Bridge and Williamsburg Bridge. You can remember them, and the order they are in from south to north, very easily, as the acronym formed by their names is the name of a popular kind of car, the BMW: Brooklyn, Manhattan, Williamsburg.
Fort Lee. The George Washington Bridge traverses the Hudson River at Fort Lee, New Jersey and 179th Street in Manhattan. However, Fort Lee is actually not a city, but a borough belonging to Bergen County.
The result of George Washington attacking Trenton,New Jersey was it led to war between Britian and the Colonist!!
The George Washington Bridge (GWB) connect Ft. Lee of New Jersey to upper Manhattan. The official estimated daily traffic by the New York & new Jersey Port Authority for 2013 was 49,402,245-vehicles per day in the direction of Manhattan.