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  1. Hoboken (/ ˈ h oʊ b oʊ k ən / HOH-boh-kən; Unami: Hupokàn) is a city in Hudson County in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Hoboken is part of the New York metropolitan area and is the site of Hoboken Terminal, a major transportation hub.

  2. Hoboken é uma cidade localizada no Estado americano de Nova Jérsia, no Condado de Hudson. A sua área é de 5,1 km² (dos quais 1,8 km² estão cobertos por água), sua população é de 38 577 habitantes, e sua densidade populacional é de 11 636,5 hab/km² (segundo o censo americano de 2000 ).

    • Trenton
    • Geography
    • History
    • Demographics
    • Character
    • Waterfront
    • Local Attractions
    • Parks
    • Born in Hoboken
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    Hoboken is at 40°44'41" North, 74°1'59" West (40.744851, -74.032941). The United States Census Bureau said the city has a total area of 5.1 km² (2.0 mi²). 3.3 km² (1.3 mi²) of it is land and 1.8 km² (0.7 mi²) of it is water. The total area is 35.35% water.

    Early history

    Hoboken was originally an island. The Hudson River was to the east. To the west was a swamp near the Palisades Sill. The island was a campsite used by the Lenni Lenape. The name Hoboken comes from the original Lenape name for "Hobocan Hackingh" or "land of the tobacco pipe." Europeans came in the 17th century. The first European to find Hoboken was Henry Hudson. He stopped his ship near Weehawken Cove on October 2, 1609. Three Native Americans sold Hoboken to Michael Paauw, Director of the Du...

    The nineteenth century

    After the American war for independence, Hoboken was bought by Colonel John Stevens in 1784 for about $90,000. In the early 19th century, Stevens made the waterfront better for Manhattan people. He tested his inventions. Later in the century, Hoboken became better by being a shipping port and industrial center. Hoboken became a city in 1855, and Cornelius V. Clickener became the first Mayor. By the 19th century, shipping lines were using Hoboken as a port, and the Delaware, Lackawanna & Weste...

    "Heaven, Hell or Hoboken."

    World War I had drastic effects on Hoboken. The city had one of the highest population of Germans in the state, in terms of percentage. Over the course of the war, many of Hoboken’s German residents were detained, evicted from their homes, lost their jobs or businesses. A high amount of German residents had to move to Ellis Island in nearby New York Harbor. Or they left the city. During the war Hoboken became famous. In Hoboken terminal, American troops got onto ships that went to Europe. Mor...

    In 2020, Hoboken was home to 60,419 people, organized into 28,175 households. This is an increase of 10,414 people, or 20.8%, since 2010. The median(middle) age was 31.7 years. Of the people living in Hoboken, 15.2% were under 18 years old, 77.4% were between 18 and 65, and 7.4% were over 65 years old. The population was 50.2% male and 49.8% female...

    With containerization in the 20th century Hoboken lost business as a port town and became rundown. Paterson, Elizabeth, and Camden were other places in New Jersey with similar problems. In the late 1970s, it began to prosper again and many people wanted to live there. The city today is known for its excellent views of Manhattan, its fine-grained st...

    The Hoboken waterfront is the western shore of the Hudson from Newark Street and the Holland Tunnel to the south, and the Stevens Institute of Technology and Lincoln Tunnel to the north. The waterfront defined Hoboken as a port town and powered its economy from the mid-19th century to the outbreak of World War I when the federal government took con...

    Kannekt Archived 2020-07-10 at the Wayback Machine- an unofficial guide to Hoboken
  3. One of Hoboken's best known landmarks, it was first excavated around 1832 by Hoboken's founder, Col. John Stevens III, and adorned with a gothic-style stone arch. Named after the ancient Greco-Roman prophetesses , it was originally Hoboken's biggest tourist attraction, for the magnesium-laced water that flows from the spring.

  4. Há 5 dias · The city is recognized as the first place an organized baseball game was played (1846). During World War I Hoboken was a major port of embarkation for American troops leaving for Europe. In 1952 the Port of New York Authority leased the port of Hoboken for operation as part of the Port of New York.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Hoboken (HOH-boh-kən) is a small city on the Hudson River in northeastern New Jersey. Once known only as the birthplace of baseball and crooner Frank Sinatra and the site of Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken has become a party town, rich in bars and clubs, and a bedroom community for young, mostly twenty-something professionals who work ...

  6. Hoboken es una ciudad ubicada en el condado de Hudson en el estado estadounidense de Nueva Jersey. En el año 2020 tenía una población de 60,419 habitantes y una densidad poblacional de 9805 personas por km². 2 Hoboken tiene la cuarta densidad de población más alta de los Estados Unidos, más alta incluso que la de Nueva York. 3 Hoboken es ...