Industries of New Jersey. . it has a very large and profitable exporttrade, by water and rail, in fish, cranberries, etc.: ithas also a manufactory of wintergreen oil, a largehotel and other accommodations for visitors, whocome here in considerable numbers in the season forfishing, gunning, etc. The business of Toms Riverand its neighborhood .sustains a national bank and anewspaper. The resident population is about 1200. Totowa (Passaic co.), mail Paterson. Tower PlafH? (Bergen CO.), mail Tenafly. Townsbury (Warren co.), a post village on thePequest River, about 8 miles above Belvidere, with a


Industries of New Jersey. . it has a very large and profitable exporttrade, by water and rail, in fish, cranberries, etc.: ithas also a manufactory of wintergreen oil, a largehotel and other accommodations for visitors, whocome here in considerable numbers in the season forfishing, gunning, etc. The business of Toms Riverand its neighborhood .sustains a national bank and anewspaper. The resident population is about 1200. Totowa (Passaic co.), mail Paterson. Tower PlafH? (Bergen CO.), mail Tenafly. Townsbury (Warren co.), a post village on thePequest River, about 8 miles above Belvidere, with agood local trade, a grist and a lumber mill, , 102. Townsend Inlet (Cape May co.), a post village onthe Townsend Creek, 2 miles above the bay or covecalled Townsend Inlet, and 2 miles of Swain ; itderives its support largely from fishing and cranberryculture, and has a good local trade. Population, (Monmouth co.), a hamlet on the Freeholdand Jamesburg Railroad, 4i< miles s e. of POK CONEV [SLA liOCKAVVAV BEACH. TraiKjilility (Sussex co.), a post hamlet 4 of Waterloo Station. Population, 150. Trap Tavern (Monmouth CO.), af)rmer name ofHamilton, earlier than that of Shark River. Trcniley (Union co.), a hamlet on the CentralRailroad of New Jersey, i mile n. of East Rahway. Trenton (Mercer CO.), a city, the capital of thecounty and of the State, on the Delaware River, atthe head of tide-water and of navigation, and on bothsides of the Assanpink Creek, which flows into theDelaware here. Trenton has ample facilities forcommunication by rail with all parts of the State andof the nation, .several lines of the united railroadsleased and run by the Pennsylvania Company passingthrough or making close connections here ; while theBound Brook and its connecting lines, controlled bythe Philadelphia and Reading Company, and consti-tuting its Philadelphia and New York line, also con-nects directly with this city. The domestic trade ofTrent


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidindustriesof, bookyear1882