List of crossings of the Upper Passaic River
Passaic River Bridge
The Upper Passaic River in New Jersey is the section of the Passaic River above the Dundee Dam , including the Great Falls . The entire river flows for 81 miles from its river's source in Mendham to the river mouth at Newark Bay in the northeastern part of the state .[ 1] The Passaic traverses 45 municipalities, and its watershed provides drinking water for more than 3.5 million people in the region.[ 2] [ 3] The midpoint of the upper river generally delineates the Passaic -Bergen , Passaic -Essex , Essex -Morris , Morris -Union and sections of the Morris -Somerset county lines .
There are over 110 crossings along the lower and upper river[ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7] including vehicular[ 8] [ 9] and rail bridges.[ 8] [ 10] The upper reaches are also crossed by footbridges , dams, culverts , and a pre-colonial weir . In the colonial era the first bridge along the lower reaches was at Bridge Street in Newark [ 11] and the first over the upper river was Totowa Bridge, constructed before 1737.[ 12] The creation of Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures in 1791[ 13] [ 14] began a period of development of cities and industries along the river. The emergence of the early railroads in the state led to further industrialization and urbanization and many rail bridges .[ 15] The flood of 1903 caused damage or destruction of most bridges in the vicinity of Paterson .[ 16] [ 17] The advent of the automobile age and suburbanization in the early and mid-20th century saw the construction of highway bridges in northern New Jersey.[ 15] [ 18]
At the Great Falls
Existing crossings of the Lower Passaic are PD Draw , Lincoln Highway Passaic River Bridge , Pulaski Skyway , Point-No-Point Bridge , Chaplain Washington Bridge, Harry Laderman Bridge , Jackson Street Bridge , Dock Bridge , Bridge Street Bridge , Newark Drawbridge , William A. Stickel Memorial Bridge , Clay Street Bridge , NX Bridge , WR Draw , Belleville Turnpike Bridge , Avondale Bridge , Lyndhurst Draw , Route 3 Passaic River Crossing , Union Avenue Bridge , Gregory Avenue Bridge , Market Street Bridge , Eighth Street Bridge , Passaic Street Bridge , Monroe Street Bridge and Veterans Bridge.[ 19] [ 9] [ 10]
Power transmission lines pass over the river several times. The Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G ) Northern Inner Ring Transmission Line runs from Metuchen Substation to Athenia Substation in Clifton via Roseland Substation and also includes right of way from Roseland Substation to West Orange Substation. The Pennsylvania-New Jersey Interconnection (PJM Interconnection ) Bushkill to Roseland Transmission Line extends from Roseland to Hardwick Township in Warren County.[ 20] Jersey Central Power and Light also has lines across the river.
Crossings
Crossing
Image
Dates
Type
Carries/Carried
Locale/Municipality
Coordinates
NBI /FRA code
Notes
References
Dundee Dam
1861
dam
Clifton -Garfield
40°53′01″N 74°07′36″W / 40.8835°N 74.1266°W / 40.8835; -74.1266 (Dundee Dam )
NJRHP #22327 (SHPO)
[ 21]
Garden State Parkway
Garden State Parkway milepoint 158.28
Clifton -Elmwood Park
40°53′23″N 74°07′47″W / 40.8898°N 74.1296°W / 40.8898; -74.1296 (Garden State Parkway bridge )
361582T
NJTA
[ 8] [ 22] [ 23]
Passaic River Bridge aka Crooks Avenue Bridge site of Weasel Bridge
c.1937 1995 rebuild
open spandrel (false concrete arch;true steel girder)
U.S. Route 46 milepoint 63.95
Clifton -Paterson -Elmwood Park
40°53′38″N 74°07′44″W / 40.8938°N 74.1290°W / 40.8938; -74.1290 (Passaic River Bridge )
1607168
Morris Goodkind NJDOT Cedar Lawn Cemetery NJRHP #2330 (SHPO) (breakout)
[ 24] [ 8] [ 25] [ 26] [ 27] [ 28] [ 29] [ 30]
Route 46
1955
culvert
U.S. Route 46 milepoint 64.52
Elmwood Park
40°53′36″N 74°07′07″W / 40.893297°N 74.118486°W / 40.893297; -74.118486 (Route 46 Fleischer Brook )
0220152
over branch of the Passaic
[ 8] [ 27] [ 25] [ 31]
Christopher Columbus Highway
1964 1969
Interstate 80 milepoint 60.47
Paterson -Elmwood Park
40°54′07″N 74°08′00″W / 40.9020°N 74.1334°W / 40.9020; -74.1334 (I-80 bridge )
1610152
NJDOT
[ 8] [ 32]
Market Street Bridge
1903 lost flood 1923 2005 replace
Market Street CR 448 CR 56
40°54′09″N 74°08′00″W / 40.90247°N 74.13342°W / 40.90247; -74.13342 (Market Street Bridge )
020011C
[ 8] [ 31] [ 33]
NYS&Wmilepost 18.00
c.1937
rail
New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway
40°54′15″N 74°07′57″W / 40.90405°N 74.13245°W / 40.90405; -74.13245 (NYS&W rail bridge )
6150???
NJ Midland Passaic–Bergen Rail Line
[ 34]
Broadway Bridge
1903 Bridge 1988 Bridge
1903 lost flood 1931 1988 rebuilt
arch
NJ Route 4 milepoint 0.17 Broadway Public Service
40°55′06″N 74°07′49″W / 40.9182°N 74.1303°W / 40.9182; -74.1303 (Route 4 Bridge )
0205150
NJDOT North Jersey Rapid Transit
[ 8] [ 31] [ 35] [ 36] [ 37] [ 38]
Morlot Avenue Bridge
1890 lost flood 1904 new 1976 rehab 2009 replace
open truss
Morlot Avenue 33rd Street CR 651
Paterson - Fair Lawn
40°55′27″N 74°08′25″W / 40.92408°N 74.14018°W / 40.92408; -74.14018 (Morlot Avenue Bridge )
020017E
[ 8] [ 31] [ 39] [ 40]
Fair Lawn Avenue Bridgeaka Fifth Avenue Bridge
1905 1967 rehab 2018 replace (planned)
through truss bridge
Fair Lawn Avenue Fifth Avenue
40°56′02″N 74°08′23″W / 40.9339°N 74.1396°W / 40.9339; -74.1396 (Fairlawn/Fifth Avenue Bridge )
1600009
Scheduled for replacement 2020[ 41]
[ 8] [ 42] [ 43] [ 44] [ 45] [ 46] [ 47]
Fair Lawn-Paterson Fish Weir
weir
40°56′11″N 74°08′26″W / 40.93631°N 74.14060°W / 40.93631; -74.14060 (Fairlawn-Paterson Fish Weir )
Acquackanonk tribe Slooterdam
[ 48] [ 49]
Maple Avenue Bridge replaced Wagaraw Bridge
1907 1992 rehab
County Route 507
40°56′26″N 74°08′38″W / 40.94056°N 74.14377°W / 40.94056; -74.14377 (Maple Avenue Bridge )
1600010
[ 8] [ 45] [ 50]
Lincoln Avenue Bridgereplaced Moffat Bridge
1903 lost flood 1926 1993 rebuilt
stringer
Lincoln AvenueCounty Route 504
Paterson - Hawthorne
40°56′30″N 74°08′53″W / 40.94164°N 74.14807°W / 40.94164; -74.14807 (Lincoln Avenue Bridge (Moffat Bridge) )
1600011
[ 8] [ 45] [ 17] [ 51]
NYS&W Bridge
1869 original
rail
New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway
40°56′17″N 74°09′14″W / 40.93808°N 74.15393°W / 40.93808; -74.15393 (NYS&W rail bridge )
6150???
NJ Midland Passaic–Bergen Rail Line
[ 52] [ 34]
Main Line milepost 17.34
1848 original
railPratt through truss
NJT Main Line ELErie Main Line Newark Branch .
40°56′14″N 74°09′26″W / 40.93731°N 74.15715°W / 40.93731; -74.15715 (Main Line rail bridge )
4003???
NJRHP #252 (SHPO)
[ 8] [ 53] [ 52] [ 34]
Sixth Avenue Bridge
c.1900 1987 rehab
pony truss
North Sixth Street CR 652
Paterson -Prospect Park
40°56′03″N 74°10′00″W / 40.9342°N 74.1667°W / 40.9342; -74.1667 (Sixth Avenue Bridge )
1600012
[ 8] [ 45] [ 54] [ 55]
Hillman Street Bridge
1902 lost to flood 1907 lost to flood
arch replaced footbridge
Paterson
40°55′47″N 74°09′55″W / 40.9297°N 74.1653°W / 40.9297; -74.1653 (Hillman Street Bridge )
[ 56] [ 57]
Straight Street Bridge
1907 2003 restored
Pennsylvania (petit) truss
Straight Street North Bridge Street CR 650
40°55′35″N 74°09′58″W / 40.9263°N 74.1661°W / 40.9263; -74.1661 (Straight Street Bridge )
1600014
[ 8] [ 45] [ 58] [ 59] [ 60]
Arch Street Bridge
1905 2008 rehab
Parker truss
Arch Street
40°55′24″N 74°10′12″W / 40.9233°N 74.1701°W / 40.9233; -74.1701 (Arch Street Bridge )
1600015
Public Service
[ 8] [ 45] [ 60] [ 61]
Main Streetaka Temple Street Bridge
1905 Bridge 1998 Bridge
1905 1998 rebuilt
Main Street
40°55′20″N 74°10′22″W / 40.92210°N 74.17274°W / 40.92210; -74.17274 (Main Street Bridge )
1600016
[ 8]
Totowa Bridge
pre 1737 ?? removed
wooden
40°55′18″N 74°10′28″W / 40.92154°N 74.17431°W / 40.92154; -74.17431 (Totowa Bridge )
Acquackanonk Bridge
[ 62] [ 12]
West Broadway Bridge
1897 2004 restore
Melan type concrete arch
Paterson-Hamburg Turnpike West BroadwayCounty Route 509 CR 673
40°55′16″N 74°10′30″W / 40.9211°N 74.1751°W / 40.9211; -74.1751 (West Broadway Bridge )
1600017
NJRHP #3959 (SHPO)
[ 8] [ 45] [ 63] [ 64]
Mulberry Streetaka Alfano Island Bridge
to Alfano Island
40°55′13″N 74°10′32″W / 40.92017°N 74.17554°W / 40.92017; -74.17554 (Mulberry Street Bridge )
Footbridge(proposed)
pedestrian pathbike path
over Alfano Island
40°55′09″N 74°10′38″W / 40.9193°N 74.1771°W / 40.9193; -74.1771 (Proposed footbridge )
[ 65]
Chasm BridgePaterson Great Falls National Historical Park
1827 1844 1868 1888 1944
utilityfootbridge (former)
water pipes and pedestrian path
40°54′58″N 74°10′52″W / 40.91600°N 74.18112°W / 40.91600; -74.18112 (Chasm Bridge )
NJRHP #2362 NRHP #7000391
original known as Clinton Btidge[ 66] [ 67]
FootbridgePaterson Great Falls National Historical Park
1971
footbridge
pedestrian path
40°54′58″N 74°10′52″W / 40.91607°N 74.181200°W / 40.91607; -74.181200 (Footbridge at Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park )
NJRHP #2362 NRHP #7000391
[ 68] [ 69]
Island Damaka SUM Dam
c.1794 1840
dam
40°54′56″N 74°10′55″W / 40.91547°N 74.18191°W / 40.91547; -74.18191 (Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures Dam )
Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures NJRHP #2362 NRHP #7000391
[ 70]
Footbridgeat Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park
footbridge
pedestrian path
40°54′55″N 74°10′53″W / 40.91529°N 74.18143°W / 40.91529; -74.18143 (Footbridge at Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park )
over cove of Passaic NJRHP #2362 NRHP #7000391
Wayne Avenue
1985 opened 2018 rebuilt (planned)
Wayne Avenue CR 673
40°54′55″N 74°10′55″W / 40.9152°N 74.1820°W / 40.9152; -74.1820 (Wayne Avenue Bridge )
1600018
[ 8] [ 71]
Spruce Street Bridge
c.1931 1985 replaced
40°54′53″N 74°10′56″W / 40.91473°N 74.18221°W / 40.91473; -74.18221 (Spruce Street Bridge )
1600018
[ 72]
Westside Park Footbridge
Postcard View
footbridge
pedestrian path
40°54′44″N 74°11′08″W / 40.91209°N 74.18552°W / 40.91209; -74.18552 (Westside Park Footbridge )
Lincoln Bridge
removed
over islandPaterson, Passaic and Rutherford Electric Railway
40°54′29″N 74°11′44″W / 40.90792°N 74.19567°W / 40.90792; -74.19567 (Lincoln Bridge )
Lido Venice Club (closed)
[ 73] [ 74] [ 75] [ 76]
Glover Avenue Bridge
Glover Avenue CR 636
Paterson &Woodland Park -Totowa
40°54′27″N 74°11′45″W / 40.90752°N 74.19575°W / 40.90752; -74.19575 (Glover Avenue Bridge )
16002020
Holy Sepulchre Cemetery
[ 8]
Hillery Street Bridge
1898 Bridge Postcard View 1973 Bridge 2009 Bridge
1898 1973 rehab 2009 rehab
Pratt pony truss
Hillery Street Totowa Road CR 644
Totowa - Woodland Park
40°54′15″N 74°12′02″W / 40.90406°N 74.20043°W / 40.90406; -74.20043 (Hillery Street Bridge )
1600039
[ 8] [ 77] [ 78]
Paterson High Bridgemilepost 18.00
1964 removed
railPlate girder
Boonton Branch Erie-Lackawanna Railroad DL&W
40°53′47″N 74°12′04″W / 40.89632°N 74.20118°W / 40.89632; -74.20118 (Paterson High Bridge )
[ 79]
Christopher Columbus Highway
1964 2009 repaired
Interstate 80 milepoint 56.34
40°53′46″N 74°12′05″W / 40.8962°N 74.2014°W / 40.8962; -74.2014 (I-80 bridge )
1610153
NJDOT
[ 8] [ 32] [ 80]
Lackawanna Avenue
1894 1965 rehab 1976 rehab
Lackawanna Avenue part of original westbound Route 46
40°53′30″N 74°13′05″W / 40.89165°N 74.21796°W / 40.89165; -74.21796 (Lackawanna Avenue Bridge )
1600021
[ 8] [ 28]
Passaic Valley Water Commission
utility
Passaic Valley Water Commission water main
40°53′27″N 74°13′09″W / 40.89086°N 74.21930°W / 40.89086; -74.21930 (PVWC water main )
[ 81]
Passaic River Bridge
1939 1998 rehab
open spandrel
U.S. Route 46 milepoint 57.94
Totowa - Little Falls
40°53′25″N 74°13′12″W / 40.8903°N 74.2199°W / 40.8903; -74.2199 (Passaic River Bridge )
1606158
Morris Goodkind NJDOT
[ 8] [ 26] [ 28] [ 27] [ 82]
Passaic Valley Water Commission
utility
PVWC water main
40°52′59″N 74°13′52″W / 40.88312°N 74.23122°W / 40.88312; -74.23122 (PVWC water main )
[ 10]
Little Falls Water Treatment Plant
c1925
access road
Totowa
40°52′59″N 74°13′52″W / 40.88312°N 74.23122°W / 40.88312; -74.23122 (Former Morris Canal Little Falls Aqueduct )
Little Falls Aqueduct
1828 c1925 remove
stone archnavigable aqueduct
Morris Canal
Totowa - Little Falls
40°52′59″N 74°13′52″W / 40.88312°N 74.23122°W / 40.88312; -74.23122 (Former Morris Canal Little Falls Aqueduct )
[ 83] [ 84]
Union Avenue Bridgereplaced Beatties Bridge
1850 1890 1966 1995
covered (original)
Union Avenue CR 646 over uninhabited island
Little Falls Wayne
40°53′01″N 74°13′59″W / 40.8836°N 74.2330°W / 40.8836; -74.2330 (Union Avenue Bridge )
1600022
Little Falls Station NJ Route 62
[ 8] [ 67]
Union Avenue
Union Avenue CR 646 over uninhabited island
Totowa Wayne
40°53′04″N 74°13′57″W / 40.88456°N 74.23249°W / 40.88456; -74.23249 (Union Avenue Bridge )
1600022
NJ Route 62
[ 85]
Beatties Dam Little Falls
1899
dam
Totowa - Little Falls
40°53′03″N 74°14′04″W / 40.88420°N 74.23455°W / 40.88420; -74.23455 (Little Falls/Beatties Dam )
[ 1]
Montclair-Boonton Line milepost 19.43
4004???
rail
Montclair-Boonton Line (NJT)New York and Greenwood Lake Railway (Erie)
Singac ,Little Falls -Wayne
40°53′18″N 74°14′45″W / 40.88843°N 74.24597°W / 40.88843; -74.24597 (Montclair-Boonton Line rail bridge )
[ 8] [ 86] [ 87]
Newark-Pompton Turnpike
1916 1988 rehab
concrete arch
Newark-Pompton Turnpike NJ Route 23 milepoint 4.52
40°53′16″N 74°14′48″W / 40.88778°N 74.24665°W / 40.88778; -74.24665 (Newark-Pompton Turnpike bridge )
1604150
[ 8] [ 88]
Route 46 Passaic River Bridge dual bridges
1927 EB
1951 WB 2008 rehab
U.S. Route 46 milepoint 55.45
Wayne - Fairfield Township
40°53′33″N 74°15′57″W / 40.8925°N 74.2658°W / 40.8925; -74.2658 (Route 46 bridge )
0722157 0722158
Morris Goodkind NJDOT
[ 8] [ 28] [ 27] [ 89]
Christopher Columbus Highwaydual bridges
1967 1988 rehab
Interstate 80 milepoint 52.87
40°53′39″N 74°16′00″W / 40.8943°N 74.2666°W / 40.8943; -74.2666 (I-80 bridge )
0726155 EB 0726156 WB
NJDOT
[ 8] [ 32] [ 89]
Two Bridges Road
1928
Two Bridges Road
Fairfield Township -Lincoln Park
40°53′50″N 74°16′22″W / 40.8973°N 74.2728°W / 40.8973; -74.2728 (Two Bridges Road Bridge )
070M060
William A. Stickel At the confluence with the Pompton River
[ 8] [ 89]
Horseneck Road Bridge
1906 2000 replace
Horseneck Road
Fairfield Township - Montville
40°52′56″N 74°20′24″W / 40.8822°N 74.3400°W / 40.8822; -74.3400 (Horseneck Road Bridge )
1400282
[ 8] [ 90] [ 91] [ 92]
Christopher Columbus Highwaydual bridges
EB WB
1968
stringer/multi-beam or girder
Interstate 80 milepoint 48.46
Fairfield Township - Montville
40°52′04″N 74°19′52″W / 40.8677°N 74.3310°W / 40.8677; -74.3310 (I-80 bridge )
1415157 EB 1415158 WB
Great Piece Meadows NJDOT
[ 8] [ 32] [ 93]
Route 46 Passaic River Bridge
1940 2008 rebuilt
U.S. Route 46 milepoint 51.85
Fairfield Township - Pine Brook , Montville
40°51′45″N 74°19′16″W / 40.86250°N 74.32114°W / 40.86250; -74.32114 (Route 46 bridge )
1410159
Great Piece Meadows NJDOT
[ 8] [ 28] [ 27] [ 94]
Pine Brook Bridgedual bridges
EB WB
c.1940 1981 reenforce
Bloomfield AvenueNJ Route 159 milepoint 0.32
40°51′31″N 74°19′09″W / 40.8585°N 74.3193°W / 40.8585; -74.3193 (Pine Brook Bridge )
1430152 EB 1430153 WB
Great Piece Meadows
[ 8] [ 91] [ 95] [ 90]
Old Bloomfield Road
1921
stringer
Bloomfield Avenue
Pine Brook , Montville
40°51′35″N 74°19′39″W / 40.85986°N 74.32758°W / 40.85986; -74.32758 (Old Bloomfield Road bridge )
1410433
over a branch of the Passaic
[ 8] [ 90]
Route 46 NJ Route 159 dual bridges
1940 1921
stringer
Bloomfield AvenueU.S. Route 46 milepoint 51.54NJ Route 159 milepoint 0.25
40°51′33″N 74°19′39″W / 40.85924°N 74.32758°W / 40.85924; -74.32758 (Bloomfield Avenue bridges )
1431051 EB 1410158 WB
over a branch of the Passaic
[ 8] [ 28] [ 27] [ 95] [ 90]
Essex Freewaydual bridges
Interstate 280 milepoint 3.32
West Essex Park , Roseland -East Hanover
40°49′50″N 74°19′47″W / 40.8305°N 74.3296°W / 40.8305; -74.3296 (I-280 bridge )
1410155 EB 1410154 WB
[ 8] [ 96]
Eagle Rock Avenue Bi-County Bridgereplaced Swinefield Bridge
1968 2015 rebuilt
Eagle Rock AvenueLenape Trail CR 611
40°49′39″N 74°20′06″W / 40.8276°N 74.3349°W / 40.8276; -74.3349 (Eagle Rock Avenue Bi-County Bridge )
1400443
[ 8] [ 91] [ 97] [ 98]
Morristown and Erie Railway
rail
ME rail spur
Roseland -East Hanover
40°49′06″N 74°20′04″W / 40.81841°N 74.33431°W / 40.81841; -74.33431 (Morristown and Erie Railway bridge )
6155???
Beaufort Station
Route 10
1931 Bridge
1931 2014-17 rebuilt
NJ Route 10 milepoint 17.6-17.9
Livingston -East Hanover
40°48′02″N 74°21′32″W / 40.80065°N 74.35897°W / 40.80065; -74.35897 (Route 10 bridge )
1402153
[ 8] [ 94] [ 99] [ 100]
Hanover Cook Bridge
1800s Bridge 1920 Bridge
1920
Newark and Mount Pleasant Turnpike Old Mt. Pleasant Avenue
40°48′00″N 74°21′35″W / 40.79995°N 74.35968°W / 40.79995; -74.35968 (Hanover Cook Bridge )
070M063
William A. Stickel
[ 8] [ 101]
Columbia Turnpike South Orange Avenue
Columbia Turnpike South Orange AvenueCounty Route 510
Livingston -Florham Park & Hanover
40°46′45″N 74°22′08″W / 40.77915°N 74.36887°W / 40.77915; -74.36887 (Columbia Turnpike bridge )
1400447
[ 8]
Eisenhower Parkway
unbuilt
Triborough Road
Chatham - Livingston
40°45′30″N 74°22′31″W / 40.7582°N 74.3753°W / 40.7582; -74.3753 (unbuilt Eisenhower Parkway bridge )
Passaic Avenue
1925
1969 redecked
Passaic Avenue CR 607
Florham Park - Millburn
40°45′21″N 74°21′41″W / 40.75575°N 74.36134°W / 40.75575; -74.36134 (Passaic Avenue Bridge )
070M065
[ 8]
Route 24
1975
culvert
NJ Route 24 milepoint 5.98
Chatham
40°44′34″N 74°22′14″W / 40.74274°N 74.37066°W / 40.74274; -74.37066 (Route 24 bridge )
1422161
over branch of the Passaic
[ 8] [ 94] [ 102]
Route 24dual bridges
1971
NJ Route 24 milepoint 6.52
Chatham - Millburn
40°44′34″N 74°22′14″W / 40.74274°N 74.37066°W / 40.74274; -74.37066 (Route 24 bridge )
1733154 EB 1733153 WB
[ 8] [ 89] [ 102]
Main Streetwestbound
NJ Route 124
40°44′22″N 74°22′18″W / 40.73938°N 74.37165°W / 40.73938; -74.37165 (Route 124 eastbound bridge )
1406157
[ 8]
Main Street Morris Turnpikeeastbound
1874 1909
Main Street Morris TurnpikeNJ Route 124
40°44′21″N 74°22′18″W / 40.73923°N 74.37159°W / 40.73923; -74.37159 (Main Street Bridge )
1406158
Hobart Gap
[ 8] [ 94] [ 103]
Edwards Mill Bridge
1916
concrete arch
Summit Avenue
Chatham -Summit (Passaic River Parkway )
40°44′04″N 74°22′39″W / 40.73433°N 74.37756°W / 40.73433; -74.37756 (Summit Avenue/Edwards Mill Bridge )
1400514
[ 8] [ 94] [ 104] [ 105]
Bonnel's Bridge
1925
stringer
Watchung Avenue CR 646
40°43′44″N 74°22′45″W / 40.72892°N 74.37913°W / 40.72892; -74.37913 (Watchung Avenue Bridge )
1400515
Shunpike Road
[ 8] [ 94]
Morristown Line milepost 22.31
rail
Morristown Line (NJT ) ELDL&W Morris and Essex
40°43′33″N 74°23′13″W / 40.72575°N 74.38688°W / 40.72575; -74.38688 (Morristown Line rail bridge )
4006???
NJRHP #234 (SHPO) NJT # 319
[ 8]
Spillway Dam
spillway dam
40°43′34″N 74°23′21″W / 40.72620°N 74.38905°W / 40.72620; -74.38905 (Spillway Dam )
[ 94]
Page Mill Bridge
1929
stringer
Stanley Avenue
40°43′34″N 74°23′23″W / 40.72608°N 74.38974°W / 40.72608; -74.38974 (Stanley Avenue Bridge )
1400516
[ 8] [ 94]
Mt. Vernon Avenue
1906 1974 rehab 1989 rehab
steel through girder
Mt. Vernon Avenue
40°43′13″N 74°23′27″W / 40.72034°N 74.39097°W / 40.72034; -74.39097 (Mt. Vernon Avenue Bridge )
1400520
[ 8]
Passaic Street
Passaic Street
Chatham -New Providence (Passaic River Parkway )
40°42′48″N 74°24′26″W / 40.71344°N 74.40734°W / 40.71344; -74.40734 (Passaic Street Bridge )
2011060
[ 8] [ 106]
Central Avenue Fairmont Avenue
1928
stringer
Central Avenue Fairmont Avenue
40°42′06″N 74°25′37″W / 40.70173°N 74.42693°W / 40.70173; -74.42693 (Central Avenue Bridge )
2011062
[ 8] [ 85]
Bridge Avenue Snyder Avenue
1927
stringer
Bridge Avenue Snyder Avenue
Chatham -Berkeley Heights
40°41′23″N 74°26′23″W / 40.68970°N 74.43965°W / 40.68970; -74.43965 (Bridge Avenue Bridge )
2001001
[ 8] [ 85]
Valley Road Springfield Avenue
1936
girder
Valley Road Springfield AvenueCR 512
Berkeley Heights (Passaic River Parkway ) -Gillette , Long Hill Township
40°40′47″N 74°27′06″W / 40.67981°N 74.45162°W / 40.67981; -74.45162 (Valley Road Bridge )
2001017
[ 8] [ 85]
Gladstone Branch milepost 26.27
rail
Gladstone Branch (NJT) EL DL&W
40°40′47″N 74°27′06″W / 40.67967°N 74.45158°W / 40.67967; -74.45158 (NJT Gladstone Branch rail bridge )
4009???
aka Townley Bridge Morris and Essex Railroad New Jersey West Line Railroad
[ 8] [ 107]
Hillcrest Road Mountain Avenue
1998
stringer
Mountain Avenue Hillcrest RoadCounty Route 531
Gillette , Long Hill Township -Warren Township
40°40′14″N 74°27′52″W / 40.67053°N 74.46443°W / 40.67053; -74.46443 (Hillcrest Road Bridge )
18L1109
[ 8] [ 108]
Stirling Road Plainfield Road
1993
slab
Stirling Road Plainfield Road CR 653
Long Hill Township -Warren Township
40°39′58″N 74°28′56″W / 40.66605°N 74.48232°W / 40.66605; -74.48232 (Plainfield Road Bridge )
18L1108
[ 8] [ 108]
Valley Road
1930-31
stringer
Valley RoadCounty Route 512
Millington ,Long Hill Township -Bernards Township
40°39′53″N 74°31′47″W / 40.66482°N 74.52971°W / 40.66482; -74.52971 (Valley Road Bridge )
18H1110
[ 8] [ 108] [ 109]
Stonehouse Road Bridge
1923 Bridge 2009 Bridge
1923 2009 replace
arch
Stonehouse Rd. Haas Road
40°40′16″N 74°31′33″W / 40.67111°N 74.52575°W / 40.67111; -74.52575 (Stonehouse Road Bridge )
1400540
Millington Station
[ 8] [ 94] [ 110]
Millington High Bridgemilepost 30.47
1928
rail
Gladstone Branch (NJT) EL DL&W
40°40′39″N 74°31′40″W / 40.67745°N 74.52779°W / 40.67745; -74.52779 (Millington High Bridge )
4009???
Morris and Essex Railroad New Jersey West Line Railroad NJT #104
[ 8] [ 111]
Davis Bridge
South Maple Avenue Basking Ridge Road CR 657
40°40′53″N 74°31′43″W / 40.68125°N 74.52851°W / 40.68125; -74.52851 (South Maple Avenue Bridge )
1400541
[ 8] [ 94] [ 112]
White Bridge
1890 1952 reinforce
Lord Stirling Road White Bridge Road
Lord Stirling Park Millington ,Long Hill Township -Basking Ridge
40°41′40″N 74°30′52″W / 40.69453°N 74.51431°W / 40.69453; -74.51431 (White Bridge )
1400563
Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge
[ 8] [ 113]
Osborn Pond Dam
Dam
Bernards Township -
Harding Township
40°43′16″N 74°31′56″W / 40.72110°N 74.53209°W / 40.72110; -74.53209 (Osborn Pond Dam )
Madisonville Road Lee's Hill Road
1975
box beam
Lee's Hill Road Madisonville Road
40°43′16″N 74°31′55″W / 40.72117°N 74.53207°W / 40.72117; -74.53207 (Madisonville Road Bridge )
18H1305
[ 8] [ 108]
Interstate 287dual bridges
NB SB
NB 1968 SB 1966
culvert
Interstate 287 milepoint 30.17 Marine Hector Cafferata Jr. Congressional Medal of Honor Highway
40°43′55″N 74°32′16″W / 40.73205°N 74.53767°W / 40.73205; -74.53767 (I-287 bridge )
1815182 NB 1815183 SB
[ 8] [ 108] [ 114]
Mt. Kemble Avenue Morristown Road
1924 Bridge
1924
2012 rebuilt
Mt. Kemble Avenue Morristown RoadUS Route 202 milepoint 39.06
40°44′01″N 74°32′24″W / 40.73369°N 74.53994°W / 40.73369; -74.53994 (Mt. Kemble Avenue Bridge )
1809158
[ 8] [ 108] [ 115] [ 116] [ 117]
Van Dorans Mill Dam
milldam
40°44′00″N 74°32′34″W / 40.73324°N 74.54267°W / 40.73324; -74.54267 (Van Dorans Mill Dam )
Hardscrabble Road Extension
private way
Harding Township
40°44′26″N 74°32′56″W / 40.74069°N 74.54893°W / 40.74069; -74.54893 (Hardscrabble Road Extension? )
At confluence with Indian Grove Brook
Patriots' Path
footbridge
Patriots' Path
Bernardsville
40°45′07″N 74°33′05″W / 40.75191°N 74.55136°W / 40.75191; -74.55136 (Patriots' Path bridge )
Morristown National Historical Park New Jersey Brigade Encampment Site NJRHP #3381 NRHP #66000053
[ 118]
Leddell Road Jockey Hollow Road
culvert
Leddell Road Jockey Hollow Road
40°45′25″N 74°33′18″W / 40.75689°N 74.55511°W / 40.75689; -74.55511 (Leddell Road / Jockey Hollow Road bridge )
1400658
[ 8]
Leddell Road
Leddell Road
Mendham Township
40°45′40″N 74°33′15″W / 40.76120°N 74.55415°W / 40.76120; -74.55415 (Leddell Road Bridge )
Tempe Wick Road
Tempe Wick Road CR 646
40°45′58″N 74°33′16″W / 40.76615°N 74.55443°W / 40.76615; -74.55443 (Tempe Wick Road Bridge )
[ 119]
Ledells Damaka Washington Corners Dam
milldam
40°45′59″N 74°33′16″W / 40.76641°N 74.55458°W / 40.76641; -74.55458 (Ledells Dam )
NJRHP #5410 NJRHP #316 NRHP #00000959Tempe Wick Road-Washington Corners Historic District Tributary sources in vicinity ofWest Morris Mendham High School
[ 120] [ 121]
Corey Lane
Corey Lane
40°46′09″N 74°33′41″W / 40.76911°N 74.56142°W / 40.76911; -74.56142 (Corey Lane Bridge )
Tempe Wick Road
Tempe Wick Road CR 646
40°46′18″N 74°34′11″W / 40.77174°N 74.56978°W / 40.77174; -74.56978 (Tempe Wick Road Bridge )
[ 2] [ 3] [ 1]
Corey Lane
culvert
Corey Lane
40°45′51″N 74°34′32″W / 40.76427°N 74.57551°W / 40.76427; -74.57551 (Corey Lane culvert )
Hardscrabble Road
culvert
Hardscrabble Road
Mendham Borough
40°45′46″N 74°34′37″W / 40.76276°N 74.57696°W / 40.76276; -74.57696 (Hardscrabble Road culvert )
Abbreviations and definitions
See also
The course and watershed of the Passaic and area of the prehistoric Lake Passaic
References
^ a b c Cowen, Richard (May 6, 2007). "Not-so-old-man river" (PDF) . The Record. Retrieved November 7, 2016 .
^ a b "Streams of the Great Swamp Watershed: Upper Passaic River" . Great Swamp Watershed Association. Retrieved November 2, 2016 .
^ a b "2011 – 2015 Business Plan" (PDF) . Passaic River Coalition. 2010. Retrieved October 31, 2016 . The source of the Passaic River begins near Mendham Township where small streams come together to form a brook running along the edge of Mendham High School's athletic field. It continues through open farm land and eventually collects water from eight counties in New Jersey and two in New York. Forty-five municipalities line its banks as it flows into Newark Bay and the whole watershed contains 118 municipalities. The river is about 81 miles long; the 935-square mile watershed is the primary water supply for over three and a half million people and major industries.
^ "Crossings" . tools.wmflabs.org. Retrieved December 8, 2016 .
^ "Crossings" . tools.wmflabs.org. Retrieved December 8, 2016 .
^ "Lower Passiac River" . Google Maps. Retrieved December 8, 2016 .
^ "Upper Passiac River" . Google Maps. Retrieved December 8, 2016 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo "Interim Bridge Report" (PDF) . NJDOT. August 9, 2007. Retrieved December 1, 2016 .
^ a b Federal Highway Administration (n.d.). "New Jersey" . National Bridge Inventory . Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved December 10, 2016 – via Uglybridges.
^ a b c "New Jersey Coverage Map" . Bridgehunter. Retrieved December 10, 2016 .
^ Olsen, Kevin K. (2008), A Great Conveniency A Maritime History of the Passaic River, Hackensack River, and Newark Bay , American History Imprints, ISBN 9780975366776
^ a b Nelson, William; Shriner, Charles Antony (1920), History of Paterson and Its Environs (the Silk City) , vol. 2, Lewis Historical Publishing Company, p. 169, ISBN 9785877307438
^ "History of Development" . PVWC. Retrieved November 7, 2016 .
^ Friends of the Great Falls Archived February 14, 2004, at the Wayback Machine S.U.M.
^ a b "New Jersey Historic Bridge Survey" (PDF) . NJDOT. September 1994. Retrieved November 7, 2016 . Within the epoch of New Jersey's transportation history from the 17th century to 1945, two periods stand out as extraordinary for their rapid pace of change and growth. The first, running from about 1800 to 1860, saw internal improvements and technological advances such as turnpikes, canals, and railroads. They were all aimed at greater capacity, speed, directness, flexibility, and regularity of service than could be achieved by earlier modes of river navigation and overland travel. Historian George Rogers Taylor has quite correctly called 1800-1860 the "transportation revolution." The second extraordinary period of transportation growth occurred from 1919 to 1936, and was, in terms of historian Bruce Seely, "the golden age of highway building." During this period, New Jersey's road and highway bridges were substantially modernized to handle modern load requirements and increased volume of vehicular traffic. The result was to shift emphasis from railroads to highways.
^ Ensslin, John C. (September 2, 2011). "1903 flood still ranks as North Jersey's worst" . The Record. Archived from the original on November 16, 2016. Retrieved November 14, 2016 .
^ a b Leighton, Marshall Ora (1904). "The Passaic Flood Of 1903" (PDF) . Government Printing Office. p. 23. Retrieved November 9, 2016 . The bridges crossing Passaic River in Passaic, Essex, and Bergen counties were almost completely destroyed, and the damage amounted to $654,811. Within the limits of Paterson, below Great Falls, all of the highway bridges except two were either severely damaged or completely carried away. West street bridge, the first below the falls, was a Melan concrete, steel-arch structure, built in 1897, and costing $65,000. It was composed of three spans, each about 90 feet long. The flood practically split two spans longitudinally, the upstream side of each, equal to about one-third of the width of the bridge, being carried away. This structure was built to conform to the established grades of streets on both sides of the river and was completely inundated, forming a barrier for floating débris and practically making a dam in the river. Main street bridge is a 3-span, steel-arch structure, which was completely covered during the flood, but was only slightly injured. Arch street bridge, built in 1902 to take the place of a structure carried away by the March flood, was a concrete-arch bridge of three spans. It was undermined at the north pier and collapsed, being practically destroyed. The original cost of this bridge was $34,000. Its piers presented a serious obstruction to the flow of the stream, especially as the channel is very narrow at this point. In addition to this, the bridge was of low grade and admirably adapted for deterring flood flow. Below Arch street bridge all the other structures crossing the Passaic were of iron and were carried away, with the exception of Sixth avenue and Wesel bridges. Those destroyed were designated as follows: Straight street, Hillman street, Moffat, Wagaraw, Fifth avenue, East Thirty-third street, and Broadway bridges. All these structures were built too low, and were inundated during the early stages of the flood.
^ KSK Architects (January 2011). "New Jersey Historic Roadway Study" (PDF) . NJDOT, NJSHPO, FHWA. Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ "Bridges over the Passaic River" . Passaic River Basin. Retrieved January 10, 2017 .
^ "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places" . New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection - Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved January 19, 2016 .
^ Historic American Engineering Record (1968). "Dundee Canal Industrial Historic District, Beginning at George Street in Passaic & extending north along Dundee Canal approximately 1.2 miles to Canal headgates opposite East Clifton Avenue in Clifton, Passaic, Passaic County, NJ" . Library of Congress. Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ New Jersey Turnpike Authority (2013), Garden State Parkway , Arcadia Publishing Company, ISBN 9781439643600
^ "Garden State Parkway straight line diagram" (PDF) . NJDOT. Retrieved November 13, 2016 .
^ NJ-96
^ a b "National Bridge Inventory NJ 2015 NJ" . Federal Highway Administration. 2015. Retrieved January 10, 2017 .
^ a b "Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ a b c d e f New Jersey Department of Transportation (July 2014). "US 46 Straight Line Diagram" (PDF) . New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved November 25, 2016 .
^ a b c d e f "Route 46 Corridor Project" (Press release). NJDOT. September 5, 2008. Retrieved October 30, 2016 .
^ "Evaluation of Bridge Scour Monitoring Methods" (PDF) . NJODT. March 2002. Retrieved November 15, 2016 .
^ "The Capture of John Cadmus" . Passaic County Historical Society. November 1956. Retrieved November 10, 2016 .
^ a b c d "National Bridge Inventory Data Bergen County New Jersey" . Uglybridges. Retrieved November 25, 2016 .
^ a b c d "I-80 Straight Line Diagram" (PDF) . New Jersey Department of Transportation . Retrieved November 26, 2016 .
^ "Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ a b c "Recording and Coding Guide for Structure Inventory and Appraisal" (PDF) . New Jersey Department of Transportation. 2003.
^ "Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Route 4 straight line diagram" (PDF) . New Jersey Department of Transportation . Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ Sennstrom, Bernard H; Francis, Edward T. (1994). "Public Service Railway, Bergen Division" . H.E. Cox. p. 175. Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ Eid, Jr., Joseph; Gummere, Barker (2007), Streetcars of New Jersey: Metropolitan Northeast , ISBN 9780980102628
^ "Morlot Ave - 33rd St. Bridge Over the Passaic River" . Historical Marker Project. Retrieved November 12, 2016 . Reflecting the need for additional river crossings as the area grew in the late 19th century, the contract for the original bridge was awarded in July 1890 to Riverside Bridge and Iron Works of Paterson, N.J. for $8,895. This original bridge was washed away on October 10 during the disastrous Passaic river flood of 1903. The flood destroyed practically all the bridges over the Passaic River in Bergen, Passaic, and Essex counties. In 1904, a contract for the second bridge was awarded to Cyclopean Iron Works of Jersey City, N.J. for $27,890. The second bridge, which remained in use from 1904 to 2008, was a through grider [sic] bridge with three 82' spans supported on stone abutments and concrete piers. In 2008, construction began on the third bridge which was placed in service February 2009.
^ "Rehabilitation of the Morlot Avenue Bridge - Maser Consulting PA" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ Noda, Stephanie. "Fair Lawn bridge replacement could begin in 2020" . North Jersey Media Group .
^ "Fifth Avenue Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ Nobile, Tom. "Historic bridge in Fair Lawn will be replaced" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ DIDUCH, MARY. "Fair Lawn Avenue bridge to be replaced in 2018" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ a b c d e f g Federal Highway Administration (n.d.). "Passaic County New Jersey" . National Bridge Inventory . Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved November 25, 2016 – via Uglybridges.
^ "Transportation Improvement Program Fiscal Years 2014 - 2017: Fifth Avenue Bridge (AKA Fair Lawn Avenue Bridge) over Passaic River" (PDF) . North Jersey Transportation Planning Association. July 2, 2015. Retrieved December 23, 2016 .
^ "Deterioration prompts traffic limits on aging bridge" . Retrieved December 20, 2016 .
^ Lutins, Allen; De Condo, Anthony P. (1999). "The Fair Lawn/Paterson Fish Weir" . Vol. 54. Archaeological Society of New Jersey. Retrieved October 30, 2016 .
^ Villenueve, Marina (August 9, 2016). "History surfaces when Passaic River runs low" . The Record. Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ "Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Passaic County Road System" . Passaic County. 2001. Archived from the original on July 28, 2016. Retrieved November 14, 2016 .
^ a b "Environmental Resource Inventory Borough of Hawthorne:Transportation" (PDF) . Borough of Hawthorne. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 13, 2016. Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ "NJT - Passaic River Bridge (Paterson-Hawthorne)" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Sixth Avenue Bridge" . NJTPA. 2015. Retrieved November 13, 2016 .
^ "Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "HUNDREDS HOMELESS IN PATERSON FLOOD; Armory Opened and 110 Fam- ilies Sheltered There. Mrs. Garret A. Hobart at Head of Relief Committee -- One Life Lost -- Water Starts to Recede" (PDF) . Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ "FLOOD THREATENS PATERSON.; Many People Stay Up All Night -- Police on Guard and Mills Flooded" . The New York Times . March 20, 1907. Retrieved November 11, 2016 .
^ "Straight Street Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "AWARDS" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ a b Malone, Jim; Brady, Barry; Staudinger, Ruth (January 1, 1983). "An Archaeological Survey of the Arch Street Bridge Project M-8203 and the Straight Street Bridge Project M-8172 in Paterson, NJ" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Arch Street Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ Graf, E. M. (April 1944). "Totowa Bridge" . The Passaic County Historical Society. Retrieved November 30, 2016 .
^ "West Broadway Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ Mahmoud, Khaled (2015), Sustainable Bridge Structures: Proceedings of the 8th New York City Bridge Conference, 24-25 August, 2015, New York City, USA , CRC Press, ISBN 9781315657837
^ TEAM. "Paterson Great Falls State Park" (PDF) . NJ Department of Parks and Forestry. Retrieved December 25, 2016 .
^ Graff, E.M. (October 1944). "Passaic Falls Bridges" . Passaic County Historical Society. Retrieved November 5, 2016 .
^ a b Brydon, Norman F. (December 2006). "Passaic County's Covered Bridges (Extracted frcm Of Time, Ftre and the River:The Story of New Jersey's Covered Bridges)" (PDF) . Vol. 6. The Fassaie County Historical Society by Norman F. Brydon). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 24, 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2017 .
^ "Paterson Dedicates Park in Celebrating Great Falls Festival" . The New York Times . September 2, 1971. Retrieved November 8, 2016 .
^ Dente, Marcia A. (2010), Great Falls of Paterson , Arcadia Publishing, ISBN 9780738573229
^ Historic American Buildings Survey (HAER NJ-2). "Great Falls/S. U. M. Power Canal System, Paterson, Passaic County, NJ" . Library of Congress. Retrieved December 25, 2016 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^ MALINCONICO, JOE. "Wayne Avenue bridge in Paterson being rebuilt" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Spruce Street Bridge (OLD)" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ No Name Supplied (January 1, 1935). "Lincoln Street Bridge crossing over the Passaic River into Totowa in Paterson, New Jersey" . No Publisher Supplied. doi :10.7282/T39887GV . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Lincoln Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ redOrbit (August 12, 2008). "Deserted Island's Past Nearly Forgotten - Redorbit" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "The Island where The Lido Venice once stood. Paterson, NJ" . Facebook . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Hillery Street Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ "Hillery Street Bridge" . RCC Fabricators. Retrieved November 1, 2016 .
^ "EL - Paterson High Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ Unit, NJDOT Web Development. "NJDOT announces Route 80 westbound resurfacing and bridge repair project in Passaic County" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Passaic River Water Pipe Bridge" . Retrieved October 26, 2016 .
^ NJ-100
^ "Morris Canal in Passaic County" . Passaic County. Retrieved December 25, 2016 .
^ "Spotlight on the Morris Canal in the Township of Little Falls" . Passaic County. Retrieved December 25, 2016 .
^ a b c d "Historic Bridge Survey Union County (1991-1994)" (PDF) . NJDOT. 2001. Retrieved November 3, 2016 .
^ "NJT - Passaic River Bridge (Singac)" . Retrieved December 20, 2016 .
^ "Railway Bridge Rehabilitation" . Atlantic Engineering. 2008. Retrieved December 5, 2016 .
^ "NJ 23 Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ a b c d Federal Highway Administration (n.d.). "Essex County New Jersey" . National Bridge Inventory . Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved November 25, 2016 – via Uglybridges.
^ a b c d Federal Highway Administration (n.d.). "Morris County New Jersey" . National Bridge Inventory . Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved November 25, 2016 – via Uglybridges.
^ a b c "Passaic River Bridge at Hanover, NJ" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Horseneck Road Bridge Replacement Project Fairfield and Montville" . Berger Group. Retrieved November 17, 2016 .
^ "Uglybridges.com - I-80 EB over PASSAIC RIVER, Morris County, New Jersey" . Retrieved December 20, 2016 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j "Historic Bridge Survey: Morris County (1991-1994)" (PDF) . NJDOT. 2001. Retrieved November 3, 2016 .
^ a b NJDOT. "NJ 159" (PDF) . NJDOT. Retrieved December 5, 2016 .
^ NJDOT. "Interstate 280 Straight Line Diagram" (PDF) . NJDOT. Retrieved December 5, 2016 .
^ "Eagle Rock Avenue Bridge Re-opens - WBGO Jazz 88.3FM" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Eagle Rock Avenue Bi-County Bridge to close May 18-Sept. 18" . May 9, 2015. Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ Unit, NJDOT Web Development. "NJDOT to replace Route 10 bridge over Passaic River connecting East Hanover and Livingston" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "NJTPA Transportation Improvement Program Fiscal Years 2014 - 2017 (Morris)" (PDF) . NJTPA. p. 8. Retrieved November 29, 2016 .
^ Swanbeck, Steve (2001), East Hanover , Arcadia Publishing, p. 12, ISBN 9780738509655 , retrieved November 9, 2016
^ a b "Route 24 straight line diagram" (PDF) . New Jersey Department of Transportation . Retrieved December 21, 2016 .
^ Cunningham, John T (1997), Chatham , Arcadia Publishing, ISBN 9780738545615
^ "Summit Avenue Bridge" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Passaic River front in Summit garners Council's attention" . September 24, 2010. Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Passaic St Bridge, New Providence to Chatham: Environmental Impact Statement" . Northwestern University via Federal Highway Administration. 1972. Retrieved January 13, 2017 .
^ Troeger, Virginia B. (1996). Berkeley Heights . Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738589947 . Retrieved January 13, 2017 .
^ a b c d e f Federal Highway Administration (n.d.). "Somerset County New Jersey" . National Bridge Inventory . Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved December 23, 2016 – via Uglybridges.
^ "Local capitaL project DeLivery program: Local concept Development phase Somerset and Morris Valley Road (H111)" . NJTPA. Retrieved December 25, 2016 .
^ "Stone House Road Bridge" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "DL&W - Millington High Bridge" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Passaic River Bridge" . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Whitebridge Road Bridge" . Retrieved November 3, 2016 .
^ "I-287 Straight Line Diagram" (PDF) . NJDOT . Retrieved October 31, 2016 .
^ "Route 202 straight line diagram" (PDF) . NJDOT. Retrieved December 21, 2016 .
^ "NJDOT to reconstruct the Route 202 bridge over the Passaic River" (Press release). NJDOT. March 7, 2012.
^ NJDOT. "Route 202 bridge reopened to traffic over the Passaic River on August 26, 2012" . www.nj.gov . Retrieved March 30, 2018 .
^ "Morristown National Park" . National Park Service National Register of Historic Places. May 7, 1979. Retrieved December 25, 2016 .
^ "Tempe Wick Road over the Passaic River" . Amer Com Corp. 2012. Retrieved December 29, 2016 .
^ "Leddell's pond and dam, Tempe Wick Rd., not dated, Mendham, NJ :: The North Jersey History and Genealogy Center Photograph and Image Collection" . Retrieved November 3, 2016 .
^ "Ruins: Liddell's Saw Mill / John Logan's Mill / Leddell's Mills - Morris Co. - New Jersey" . Retrieved November 3, 2016 .
^ Recording and Coding Guide for Structural Inventory and Appraisal of the Nation's Bridges (FHWA PD-96-001) (PDF) (Report). Federal Highway Administration. December 1995. Retrieved November 29, 2016 . When recording and coding for this item and following items, any structure or structures with a closed median should be considered as one structure, not two. Closed medians may have either mountable or non-mountable curbs or barriers.
^ *"Historic Bridge Survey (1991-1994)" . NJDOT. 2001. Retrieved December 10, 2016 . State highways are measured west to east or south to north from the (1) state line or (2) origination of the route. Milepoints (referred to as mileposts on railroads) are measured to the nearest hundredth of a mile.
Sources
"Historic Bridge Survey (1991-1994)" . NJDOT. 2001.
"New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places" . NJ DEP - State Historic Preservation Office.
"Masonry and Metal The Historic Bridges of Bergen County, New Jersey" (PDF) . Richard Grubb and Associates. 2008.
"Bridges over the Passaic River" . Passaic River Basin.
"Bridgehunter: Passaic River" .
"BridgesNYC" .
Jag9889 (August 5, 2007). "Passaic River Bridges" . Flickr. {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
"National Bridge Inventory Database" . Archived from the original on February 2, 2019. Retrieved November 1, 2016 .
Olsen, Kevin K. (2008), A Great Conveniency A Maritime History of the Passaic River, Hackensack River, and Newark Bay , American History Imprints, ISBN 9780975366776
"County Routes" . Passaic County. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 17, 2017. Retrieved November 1, 2016 .
"Passaic County Road System" . Passaic County. 2001. Archived from the original on July 28, 2016. Retrieved November 15, 2016 .
Bauer, Ruth (May 2001). "Street Name Changes Paterson, NJ" . Passaic County Historical Society.
"National Bridge Inventory 2015 (NJ) NBI ASCII Files: Disclaimer Title 23 - United States Code Section409 - Discovery and Admission as Evidence of Certain Reports and Surveys" . Federal Highway Administration. August 5, 2015.
"Interim Bridge Report" (PDF) . NJDOT. August 9, 2007. Retrieved December 1, 2016 .
Title 33 of the Code of Federal Regulations Navigation and Navigable Waters PART 117—DRAWBRIDGE OPERATION REGULATIONS Subpart B—Specific Requirements, New Jersey
Tributaries Lakes Towns
Crossings