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Regional information guide, discussion forum, news and events of interest to Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey and surrounding communities in Monmouth County, NJ.
http://www.ahherald.com/
Keywords:
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http://www.ahherald.com/

The Leader Newspaper Bergen County New Jerseys finest local newspaper. Covering news, sports, and real estate in the Meadowlands area, North Arlington, Lyndhurst, Rutherford, East Rutherford, Carlstadt and Wood-Ridge N.J. Featuring: Xanadu, Encap
http://www.leadernewspapers.net/
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http://www.leadernewspapers.net/

CourierPostOnline, the Courier-Post is South Jersey's information resource since 1875 - news, real estate, and classifieds online
http://www.courierpostonline.com/
Keywords:
Courier-Post, courierpostonline, courier-post online, South Jersey Classifieds, South Jersey News, South Jersey, South, Jersey, real, estate, South Jersey homes, homes, real estate, news, sports, town, and, school, information, community guide, New Jersey, Southern New Jersey, Garden State, Atlantic, Cape May, Camden, Gloucester, Burlington, Cumberland, Salem, entertainment, store fronts, ...

http://www.courierpostonline.com/

northjersey.com provides local news, news, classifieds, sports, entertainment news, obituaries and weather information for northern new jersey as reports by the record and herald news.
http://www.bergen.com/
Keywords:
new jersey news, new jersey obituaries, new jersey classifieds, new jersey sports, news, local news, bergen county, essex county, hudson county, morris county, passaic county, northern new jersey, sports, obituaries, new jersey weather, weather, classifieds, entertainment, living, northjersey.com

http://www.bergen.com/

Daily newspaper
http://www.shorenewstoday.com/
Keywords:
NJ Shore News, Daily, newspaper, listings, jersey, houses, bed, and, breakfast, free, newspaper, motels, inns, hotels, real estate, amusements, at, the, shore, automobiles, coupons, banks, mortgages, dining, home, improvement, health, lodging, north, wildwood, wildwood, wildwood, crest, northfield, linwood, somers, point, margate, ventnor, longport, hamilton, twp, ocean, city, avalon, sea, isle, ...

http://www.shorenewstoday.com/

Westfield, Scotch Plains, Fanwood, Mountainside, Union County, New Jersey's leading source of online news, business and sports updates from the Westfield Leader and The Scotch Plains-Fanwood Times newspapers
http://www.goleader.com
Keywords:
Westfield Scotch Plains, Fanwood, Mountainside, Union County, New Jersey, News, news, Jersey, www.goleader.com, Westfield Leader, The Westfield Leader, Scotch Plains Times, Fanwood Times

http://www.goleader.com

Epinions has the best comparison shopping information on Bergen Record. Compare prices from across the web and read reviews from other consumers on Bergen Record before you decide to buy.
http://tiffer0220.epinions.com/news-review-31F7-1C3FF4B-39CB6C7C-prod1
Keywords:
Bergen Record, Bergen Record reviews, product reviews, consumer reviews

http://tiffer0220.epinions.com/news-review-31F7-1C3FF4B-39CB6C7C-prod1

The Home News Tribune is the prime source for news, sports and entertainment information about Middlesex, Somerset and Union counties in New Jersey
http://www.injersey.com/hnt/
Keywords:
new jersey, in jersey, asbury park press, home, news, and, tribune, courier-news, business, entertainment, breen, sports, calendar, events, obit, community, features, opinions, ocean, monmouth, middlesex, world, nation, education

http://www.injersey.com/hnt/

New Jersey's leading source of online news, business and sports updates from the Newark Star-Ledger, Trenton Times, Jersey Journal, Express-Times, Bridgeton News, Gloucester County Times, Today's Sunbeam, Hunterdon County Democrat, the Warren Reporter and The Reporter, Somerset.
http://www.nj.com/
Keywords:
New Jersey, News, news, Jersey, Atlantic, Bergen, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Essex, Gloucester, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic, Salem, Somerset, Sussex, Union, Warren, New York, York, Philadelphia, NJO, NJO Online, Updates, Regional, Local, Weather, State, Information, Newark Star-Ledger, Times of Trenton, Jersey Journal, The Express-Times, ...

http://www.nj.com/

PACKETONLINE.COM - Princeton and Central New Jersey. Local news, entertainment, business, sports, classified ads and much more!
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.asp?brd=1091&nav_sec=51318
Keywords:
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http://www.zwire.com/site/news.asp?brd=1091&nav_sec=51318

PACKETONLINE.COM - Princeton and Central New Jersey. Local news, entertainment, business, sports, classified ads and much more!
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.asp?brd=1091&nav_sec=51405

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.asp?brd=1091&nav_sec=51405

Rocky Hill Gazette is the community newspaper for Rocky Hill New Jersey NJ near Princeton New Jersey NJ
http://www.rockyhillgazette.com/
Keywords:
Rocky Hill, New Jersey, NJ, Princeton, Montgomery, West Windsor, newspapers, gazette, news, newspaper, publication, local, D&R Canal, www.rockyhillgazette.com

http://www.rockyhillgazette.com/

The Newspaper is an established monthly publication specializing in NJ Politics since 1995 with over 300,000 readers.
http://www.patriotofnj.com/
Keywords:
newsletter, politics, nj politics, new jersey, state, of, new, jersey

http://www.patriotofnj.com/

The source for what's happening in Trenton NJ. It includes news and reviews and and events calendar for the Trenton area.
http://www.trentondowntowner.com/
Keywords:
Trenton, NJ, downtown, newspaper, restaurants, happenings, entertainment, issues, news, Trenton Revitalization, Trenton Urban Revitalization, Urban Revitalization, downtown, Trenton, NJ

http://www.trentondowntowner.com/

http://www.phillyburbs.com/burlingtoncountytimes/

http://www.phillyburbs.com/burlingtoncountytimes/

http://branchburgnewspaper.tripod.com/

http://branchburgnewspaper.tripod.com/

http://www.injersey.com/c-n/

http://www.injersey.com/c-n/

http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/

http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/

http://www.ccwomannews.com/

http://www.ccwomannews.com/

http://publiccitizenonline.com/

http://publiccitizenonline.com/

http://www.nj.com/hunterdon/

http://www.nj.com/hunterdon/

http://www.nj.com/news/ledger/

http://www.nj.com/news/ledger/

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1918&nav_sec=65236

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1918&nav_sec=65236

http://www.fairlawnnews.com/

http://www.fairlawnnews.com/

http://www.njjewishnews.com/

http://www.njjewishnews.com/

http://www.shopjackson.com/jacksontimes/

http://www.shopjackson.com/jacksontimes/

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Wikipedia-Article "New Jersey"

State of New Jersey
Flag of New Jersey State seal of New Jersey
Flag of New Jersey Seal of New Jersey
State nickname: The Garden State
Map of the United States with New Jersey highlighted
Official languages None defined, English de facto
Capital Trenton
Largest city Newark
Governor Richard Codey (D) Acting, Outgoing

Jon Corzine (D) (Governor-Elect)

Senators Jon Corzine (D) (Outgoing)

Bob Menendez (D) (named as Corzine's replacement)
Frank Lautenberg (D)

Area
 - Total
 - % water
Ranked 47th
22,608 km²
14.9
Population
 - Total (2000)
 - Density
Ranked 9th
8,414,350
438/km² (1st)
Admission into Union December 18, 1787 (3rd)
Time Zone Eastern: UTC-5/-4
Coordinates
 - Latitude
 - Longitude
 - Width
 - Length

38°55'N to 41°21'23"N
73°53'39"W to 75°35'W
110 km
240 km
Elevation
 - Highest point
 - Mean
 - Lowest point

550 m
75 m
0 m
Abbreviations
 - USPS
 - ISO 3166-2

NJ
US-NJ
Web site www.state.nj.us

New Jersey is the fourth smallest and most densely populated state of the United States of America; the U.S. postal abbreviation is NJ. The state is named after the island of Jersey in the English Channel.

Contents

History

Main article: History of New Jersey

New Jersey was once inhabited by the Lenape Native Americans. New Jersey was settled by the Dutch in the early 1630s, who formed a settlement at present-day Jersey City. At the time, much of what is now New Jersey was claimed as part of the Dutch colony of New Netherland, which also included parts of present-day New York State and had its capital at New Amsterdam, now known as New York City. Some of southwestern New Jersey also was settled by the Swedes in the mid-1600s as part of the Swedish colony of New Sweden, which included parts of Delaware and southeastern Pennsylvania. These Swedish territories were seized by the Dutch under Peter Stuyvesant in 1654 and incorporated into New Netherland.

Main article: Province of New Jersey

The entire region became a territory of Britain in 1664 when a British fleet under the command of Colonel Richard Nicolls sailed into what is today New York Harbor and took over the colony. They met extremely little resistance.

During the English Civil War the Channel Isle of Jersey remained loyal to The English Crown and gave sanctuary to the King. It was from the Royal Square in St. Helier that Charles II of England was first proclaimed King of England in 1649, following the execution of his father, Charles I of England. The North American lands were divided by King Charles II of England, who gave his brother, the Duke of York (later King James II) the region between New England and Maryland as a proprietary colony (as opposed to a royal colony). James then granted the land between the Hudson River and the Delaware River (the land that would become New Jersey) to two friends who had been loyal through the English Civil War: Sir George Carteret and Lord Berkeley of Stratton.

Settlement for the first 10 years of English rule was in the Hudson River region and came primarily from New England. On March 18, 1673 Berkeley sold his half of New Jersey to Quakers in England (with William Penn acting as trustee for a time) who settled the Delaware Valley region as a Quaker colony. New Jersey was governed as two distinct provinces, West Jersey and East Jersey, for the 28 years between 1674 and 1702. In 1702, the two provinces were united under a royal, rather than a proprietary, governor.

Revolutionary War era

New Jersey was one of the thirteen colonies that revolted against British rule in the American Revolution. During the American Revolutionary War, British and American armies crossed New Jersey numerous times and several pivotal battles took place in the state. Today, New Jersey is often referred to as "The Crossroads of the Revolution" because of that.

The New Jersey Constitution of 1776 gives the vote to "all inhabitants of this Colony, of full age, who are worth fifty pounds proclamation money." This included blacks, spinsters, and widows. (Married women could not own property under the common law.) It used to be held that this was an accident of hasty drafting: the British were at Staten Island when the constitution was proclaimed, and it declares itself temporary, void if there was reconciliation with Great Britain. Klinghoffer and Elkis ("The Petticoat Electors: Women’s Suffrage in New Jersey, 1776–1807." Journal of the Early Republic 12, no. 2 (1992): 159–193.) show that it was a considered decision, and enforced by later law.

On Christmas, 1776, the Continental Army under George Washington crossed the Delaware River and engaged the unprepared Hessian troops in the Battle of Trenton. The river crossing has become an iconic moment in the early history of the United States of America, having been immortalized in Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze's painting Washington Crossing the Delaware.

Slightly more than a week after victory at Trenton, on January 3, 1777, the American forces scored an important victory by first defeating Cornwallis's charges at the Second Battle of Trenton. By dodging Cornwallis's soldiers, Washington made a surprise attack on Princeton, and successfully defeated the British garrison there.

Later on, the American forces underneath George Washington engaged the forces underneath General Henry Clinton at the Battle of Monmouth, resulting indecisively. Washington attempted to take the British column by surprise; when the British army attempted to flank the Americans the Americans retreated in disorder. The ranks were later reorganized and withstanded the British charges.

In the summer of 1783, the Continental Congress met in Nassau Hall at Princeton University, making Princeton the nation's capital for four months. It was there that the Continental Congress learned of the signing of the Treaty of Paris (1783) which ended the war. On November 20, 1789, the state became the first in the newly-formed Union to ratify the Bill of Rights.

Ironically, on February 15, 1804 New Jersey became the last northern state to abolish slavery by enacting legislation that slowly phased out slavery. However, by the close of the Civil War, about a dozen African-Americans in New Jersey were still apprenticed freedmen. New Jersey initially refused to ratify the Constitutional Amendments banning slavery and granting rights to America's Black population.

In 1844, the Second New Jersey State Constitution was ratified and placed into action. This newer constitution removed the right of women and blacks of suffrage. This right had previously been granted to those groups in the original State Constitution.

Civil War

Unlike during the Revolutiony War, no battles of the American Civil War took place within the state of New Jersey. However, throughout the course of the American Civil War, over 25,000 enlisted in the Northern army to defeat the Southern rebels. In total, the soldiers from New Jersey formed 31 regiments.

New Jersey was one of the few states to reject President Abraham Lincoln twice in national elections. It sided towards Stephen Douglas and George Brinton McClellan during their campaigns. George McClellan later became a governor of the state.

1900s

Through both World Wars, New Jersey was a center for war production, especially in naval construction. Battleships, cruisers, and destroyers were all made in this state. In addition, Camp Kilmer, Fort Dix, and Camp Merritt were all constructed to help American soldiers through both World Wars. New Jersey also became a prinicipal location for defense in the Cold War. 14 Nike Missile stations were constructed, especially for the defense of New York City and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

New Jersey became a prosperous state through the Roaring Twenties, but fell in prosperity under the Great Depression. Begging licenses were even offered to the unemployed by the state government in order to provide money for those who could not be helped by the exhausted state funds. During this time period, the zeppelin Hindenburg went up in flames over Lakehurst, New Jersey.

Law and government

The state capital of New Jersey is Trenton. Jon Corzine was elected Governor of New Jersey on November 8, 2005, and will take office on January 17, 2006. Currently, Richard Codey (Democrat) is the Acting governor, because he is (and concurrently serves as) President of the State Senate. Former Governor James E. McGreevey resigned on November 15, 2004, and New Jersey (along with Arizona, Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Wyoming) had no position of Lieutenant Governor at the time. However, on Election Day, November 8, 2005, the voters passed an amendment to the state constitution that creates the position of Lieutenant Governor, effective with the 2009 elections. The amendment also provides that in the event of a permanent vacancy in the office of Governor after January 17, 2006 (when the next Governor is sworn in) and before the first Lieutenant Governor takes office in 2010, the President of the Senate, followed by the Speaker of the General Assembly, would become Governor (rather than Acting Governor) but will now be required to vacate his or her Senate (or Assembly) seat.

The New Jersey governor is considered one of the most powerful governorships in the nation, as it is the only state-wide elected office in the state and appoints many government officials. Additionally, an acting governor is even more powerful as he simultaneously serves as president of the senate, thus directing the entire legislative and executive process. Current Acting Governor Codey will likely be the last Acting Governor to serve simultaneously as Senate President, as a result of the Constitutional amendment approved by the voters in 2005 (as the current dual role would remain in effect if Codey were to step down before the new Governor takes office).

The state's two U.S. Senators are Frank R. Lautenberg (Democrat) and Jon Corzine (Democrat). As governor-elect, Corzine will appoint his own replacement after he steps down from the Senate and is sworn in as Governor in January. New Jersey has 13 Congressional Districts.

Politics

New Jersey is a politically competitive state; the Governorship alternated between the parties from the election of Richard J. Hughes in 1961 until Democrat Jon Corzine was elected to replace a Democrat in 2005; the legislature has also switched hands, and one house was evenly divided from 19992001. Three of the last five gubernatorial elections have been close. The Congressional seats have also been as evenly divided as thirteen seats can be.

In national elections, the state now tends to lean towards the national Democratic Party. It was, however, a Republican stronghold for years in the past, having given comfortable margins of victory to the Republican candidate in the close elections of 1948, 1968, and 1976. New Jersey was a crucial swing state in the elections of 1960, 1968, and 1992. In national elections, the state gave large victories to Democrats in the 1990's, while in the 2004 presidential election, John F. Kerry defeated George W. Bush by about 6%. The last elected Republican to hold a Senate seat from New Jersey was Clifford P. Case in 1979. (Nicholas Brady was appointed a U.S. Senator by Governor Thomas Kean in 1982 after Harrison A. Williams resigned the Senate seat following the Abscam investigations. Brady served eight months.

The state's Democratic strongholds include Mercer County around the cities of Trenton and Princeton; Essex County and Hudson County, the state's two most urban counties, around the state's two largest cities, Newark and Jersey City; as well as in Camden County and most of the other urban communities just outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and New York City. More suburban northern counties in the orbit of New York, such as Union and Middlesex, also trend Democratic.

The more suburban northwestern and southeastern counties of the state are reliably Republican: Republicans have strong backing along the coast in Ocean County and in the mountainous northwestern part of the state, especially Sussex County, Morris County and Warren County. Somerset and Hunterdon counties, more suburban counties in the region, are also Republican in local elections, but can be competitive in national races. In the 2004 General Election, Bush received about 51% in Somerset and 56% in Hunterdon, while up in rural Republican Sussex County, Bush won with 64% of the vote.

About half of the counties in New Jersey, however, are considered swing counties, but some go more one way than others. For an example, Bergen County, which leans Republican in the northern half of the county, is mostly Democratic in the more populated southern parts, causing it to usually vote slightly Democratic (same with Passaic County, with a highly populated Hispanic Democratic south and a rural, Republican north), other "swing" counties like Cape May tend to go Republican, as they also have population in conservative areas.

The governor's mansion is Drumthwacket.

New Jersey State Constitution

The constitution was adopted in 1947. It provides for a bicameral Legislature consisting of a Senate of 40 members and an Assembly of 80 members. Each of the 40 legislative districts elects one Senator and two Assembly members. Assembly members are elected by the people for a two-year term in all odd-numbered years; Senators are elected in the years ending in 1, 3, and 7 and thus serve either four or two year terms.

The New Jersey Supreme Court

The New Jersey Supreme Court [1] consists of a chief justice and six associate justices. All are appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of a majority of the membership of the state senate. Justices serve an initial seven-year term, after which they can be reappointed to serve until age 70.

Geography

Further information: List of New Jersey counties

New Jersey is broadly divided into three geographic regions: North Jersey, Central Jersey, and South Jersey. North Jersey is within New York City's general sphere of influence, with many of its residents commuting into the city for work. Central Jersey is a largely suburban area. South Jersey is within Philadelphia, Pennsylvania's general sphere of influence. Such geographic definitions are broad, however, and there is often dispute over where one region begins and another ends.

High Point Mountain, in Montague Township, Sussex County has the highest elevation in New Jersey.

New York Harbor, with views of Jersey City, in North Jersey, and its Gold Coast featuring Goldman Sachs Tower.
Enlarge
New York Harbor, with views of Jersey City, in North Jersey, and its Gold Coast featuring Goldman Sachs Tower.

New Jersey is bordered on the north and northeast by New York, on the east by the Atlantic Ocean, on the south by Delaware, and on the west by Pennsylvania (the latter two across the Delaware River.) Prominent geographic features include:

Economy

The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that New Jersey's total state product in 2003 was $397 billion. New Jersey's per capita income is the highest in the nation. Its per capita personal income in 2003 was $40,427, 4th in the United States of America. Its median household income is also the highest in the nation with $55,146. It is also ranked 2nd in the nation by the number of places with per capita incomes above national average with 76.4%. Nine of New Jersey's counties are also in the wealthiest 100 of the country. Women in New Jersey earn the highest per capita income as stated in a 2002 article in the Newark Star-Ledger.

Its agricultural outputs are nursery stock, horses, vegetables, fruits and nuts, seafood, and dairy products. In particular, cranberries and eggplant are two of the state's largest crops. Hammonton in the southern part of the state is known as the blueberry capital of the world. Its industrial outputs are pharmaceutical and chemical products, food processing, electric equipment, printing and publishing, and tourism. New Jersey's economy has a large base of industry and chemical manufacturing. Additionally, New Jersey is home to the largest petroleum containment system in the world, outside of the Middle East. Although the state is certainly not defined by these activities, their existence and visibility to those passing through the state along some of its major highways does contribute to many jokes about pollution and ironic plays on the state's nickname, the "Garden State." In terms of quantity and quality, New Jersey ranks ninth in the union, in the number of manufactured goods that come from this state's factories.

New Jersey is also a leader in the number of businesses that have their headquarters or do business here. 50 Fortune 500 companies alone have headquarters or do business in Morris County alone. Nearly 100 Fortune 500 companies have headquarters or conduct business in New Jersey. This allows New Jersey to have the largest concentration of Fortune 500 companies in the world. Paramus is long noted for having one of the highest business per person ratio in the nation, because of the huge number of shops in that town and the surrounding area. Several New Jersey counties such as Essex, Morris, Middlesex, Union, and Bergen counties have been ranked in the World Almanac 2002, as being among the top 15 highest per person per capita income areas in the country. New Jersey has the nation's most diverse economy, with its major industries being agriculture, tourism, nursery products, electronics, manufacturing equipment, pharmacuticals, etc. It is for this reason, New Jersey is able to weather severe economic declines in the national economy and it is why New Jersey's unemployment rate is well below the national average. New Jersey's location between Philadephia and New York City, has allowed New Jersey to grow and thrive since the time of its creation as a state in 1702. Another of New Jersey's great strengths is its large and well-educated labor pool that allow the myriad of industries to exist today. The Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal is the world's largest container ports. Newark Liberty International Airport is ranked as number 7 in the top ten list of the nation's busiest airports and among the top 20 busiest airports in the world.

Six Flags Great Adventure is one of the largest theme parks in the world. It is home to the largest wild safari out of Africa and is now home to the world's tallest and fastest coaster, Kingda Ka. As of 2001, New Jersey makes $30 billion each year from tourism as stated in the Star-Ledger's article The Best Of New Jersey. New Jersey is one of the top ten most visited states in the nation.

Demographics

Historical populations
Census
year
Population

1790 184,139
1800 211,149
1810 245,562
1820 277,575
1830 320,823
1840 373,306
1850 489,555
1860 672,035
1870 906,096
1880 1,131,116
1890 1,444,933
1900 1,883,669
1910 2,537,167
1920 3,155,900
1930 4,041,334
1940 4,160,165
1950 4,835,329
1960 6,066,782
1970 7,168,164
1980 7,364,823
1990 7,730,188
2000 8,414,350

As of 2004, the population of New Jersey was estimated to be 8,698,879. There are 1.6 million foreign-born living in the state (accounting for 19.2% of the state population). New Jersey is the tenth most populous state, but the most densely populated, at 1,134.4 residents per square mile. [2].

Race, ethnicity, and ancestry

The racial makeup of New Jersey is:

New Jersey has the 15th largest percentage of minority residents of any state and the 2nd highest percentage in the North. It also has the second largest Jewish population by percent (after New York) and the second largest Muslim population by percent (after Michigan), and, additionally, it has the third highest Italian-American population by percent of any state according to the 2000 Census, and a large percentage of the population is Black, Hispanic, Arab, and Asian. All of these facts combine to make New Jersey one of the most religiously and ethnically diverse states in the country.

The five largest ancestry groups in New Jersey are: Italian (17.9%), Irish (15.9%), African American (13.6%), German (12.6%), Polish (6.9%).

Newark and Camden are two of the poorest cities in America, but New Jersey as a whole has the highest median household income in the nation, as well as the second highest per capita income, after Connecticut. This is largely due to the fact that so much of New Jersey is comprised of suburbs, most of them affluent, of New York City and Philadelphia. New Jersey is also the most densely populated state in the nation, and the first and only state that has had every one of its 21 counties deemed "urban," as opposed to rural.

The dominant race, ethnicity, or ancestry by county, according to the 2000 Census, are the following:

  • New Jersey
    • Italian - Bergen, Morris, Somerset, Ocean, Monmouth
    • Irish - Sussex
    • Black - Essex, Union, Mercer
    • German - Warren, Hunterdon
    • Polish/Slavic - Middlesex
    • Puerto Rican/Hispanic - Hudson, Passaic

Ancestry citation with county maps: [3] (Adobe PDF) Specific ancestry maps by county, place, and census tract available at: [4]

6.7% of its population were reported as under 5, 24.8% under 18, and 13.2% were 65 or older. Females made up approximately 51.5% of the population.

Religion

The religious affiliations of adults of New Jersey are:

(disputed )


Culture

Music

New Jersey has long been an important area for both rock and rap music. Some prominent musicians with connections to New Jersey are:

  • Musician Bruce Springsteen, who has sung of New Jersey life on his debut album, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. and in many of his most popular songs, including "Atlantic City," "Born to Run," "Darlington County," "Freehold," "Jersey Girl" (written by Tom Waits), "Jungleland," "Spirit in the Night," and others. Fellow musician Jon Bon Jovi has also written many songs about New Jersey and even named one of his albums after it (see New Jersey). Both reside in New Jersey today.
  • Frank Sinatra, born December 12, 1915, the only child of working-class Italian-American immigrants, in a tenement at 415 Monroe St. in Hoboken. He sang with a neighborhood vocal group, the Hoboken Four, and appeared in neighborhood theater amateur shows before he became an entertainment legend and Academy Award winning actor.
  • Asbury Park, home of The Stone Pony, where Springsteen and Bon Jovi frequented early in their careers, which is still considered by many to be a "Mecca" for up-and-coming musicians.