Wanaque River

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Wanaque River near Back Beach Park in Wanaque Wanaque River.jpg
Wanaque River near Back Beach Park in Wanaque
Map of the Passaic/Hackensack watershed. Passaicwatershedmap.png
Map of the Passaic/Hackensack watershed.

The Wanaque River (Native American for "place of the sassafras") is a tributary of the Pequannock River in Passaic County in northern New Jersey in the United States. [1]

Contents

Once known as the Long Pond River, the source of the Wanaque River is Greenwood Lake, once known as Long Pond (not to be confused with the nearby village of Greenwood Lake in the state of New York). [1]

Both Greenwood Lake and the surrounding Sterling Forest watershed straddle the border of the states of New Jersey and New York. [1]

Downstream, the construction of dams at Monks and Wanaque created the Monksville and Wanaque reservoirs, respectively. [1]

From the Raymond Dam of the Wanaque Reservoir, the river flows to its confluence with the Pequannock River. [1]

See also

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monksville Reservoir</span> Body of water

The Monksville Reservoir is an artificial lake created in 1987 by damming on the Wanaque River in West Milford, New Jersey. It is named after the former community of Monksville, which was relocated and flooded upon its completion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pompton Plains station</span>

Pompton Plains is a former railroad station in Pequannock Township, Morris County, New Jersey. United States. Located at 33 Evans Place in the Pompton Plains section of Pequannock, the station is a former stop on the Erie Railroad's Greenwood Lake Division. The station was a single side-platform station with service from Wanaque–Midvale station in Wanaque to Pavonia Terminal in Jersey City, where connections were made to ferries to New York City. The next station north was Pompton–Riverdale after 1951. The next station south was Pequannock station.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wanaque Reservoir</span> New Jersey reservoir

Wanaque Reservoir is a man-made lake located within Wanaque and Ringwood, New Jersey along the Wanaque River. The reservoir came into being in 1928 by the construction of the Raymond Dam along the river in Wanaque. Besides the Wanaque River, the reservoir receives water from two diversions: the Pompton Lakes intake, which takes water from the Ramapo River, and the Two Bridges intake, which takes water from the Pompton River. It is the second largest reservoir in New Jersey by volume, after Round Valley Reservoir. It is the second largest body of water in New Jersey by area, after Lake Hopatcong.

Tranquility Ridge Park is a 2,062 acre Watershed Protection Area that spans the border of Ringwood and West Milford, New Jersey, United States, and is directly south of the New Jersey-New York State Line. Tranquility Ridge Park is directly adjacent to Sterling Forest State Park in NY, and Long Pond Ironworks State Park in NJ. The area was once part of Long Pond Ironworks, which was developed as an ironworks "plantation" by Peter Hasenclever in 1766, and produced iron for American forces during the American Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the American Civil War.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Gertler, Edward. Garden State Canoeing, Seneca Press, 2002. ISBN   0-9605908-8-9

Coordinates: 41°02′36″N74°17′42″W / 41.043393°N 74.294992°W / 41.043393; -74.294992