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      • Passaic County derived from the word "Pasaeck," a Lenape word meaning "valley." The county was created from portions of Bergen and Essex counties in 1837 as a political compromise between rural South Jersey and industrial North Jersey.
      www.nj.com/news/2016/12/how_njs_21_counties_got_their_names.html
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  2. Passaic County was created on February 7, 1837, from portions of Bergen and Essex counties. [3] The county derives its name from "Pasaeck", which is a native Lenape word meaning "valley". [12]

  3. Passaic County was created on February 7, 1837, from portions of both Bergen County and Essex County. Its county seat is Paterson. It is part of the New York metropolitan area. Etymology - Origin of Passaic County Name. Passaic is named for Passajeek, a Native American word meaning valley. Demographics: County QuickFacts: CensusBureau Quick Facts.

  4. In October of 1693, the Township of Acquackanonk was created in the northern part of Essex County. The village and city of Passaic were first known as Acquackanonk, believed to be either the name or a variation of the name used by the native Lenni-Lenapi Indians.

  5. Being located at the head of tide water, Passaic soon became a noted shipping port for northern New Jersey, to and from which were shipped the products of the forests, fields, and mines of Hunterdon, Sussex and part of Bergen counties of this State, and of Rockland and Orange counties, New York.

  6. 2 days ago · Passaic County was created out of parts of Essex and Bergen Counties with the same legislation that created Atlantic County in 1837. Passaic County borders New York State on the north and is surrounded on the other sides by Sussex, Morris, Essex and Bergen counties in New Jersey.

  7. Passaic, city, Passaic county, northeastern New Jersey, U.S., on the Passaic River, 9 miles (14 km) north of Newark. It was established by the Dutch in 1678 as a fur-trading post. In 1685 Hartman Michielson purchased the site, then called Acquackanonk, from the Delaware Indians.

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