Irvington is a Township in Essex County, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township had a total population of 60,695.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 7.7 km² (3.0 mi²), all land.
There were 22,032 households out of which 33.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 30.2% were married couples living together, 27.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 34.6% were non-families. 29.3% of all households were made up of individuals and 6.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.74 and the average family size was 3.39.
In the township the population was spread out with 28.0% under the age of 18, 10.7% from 18 to 24, 32.3% from 25 to 44, 21.5% from 45 to 64, and 7.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 32 years. For every 100 females there were 87.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 81.5 males.
The median income for a household in the township was $36,575, and the median income for a family was $41,098. Males had a median income of $32,043 versus $27,244 for females. The per capita income for the township was $16,874. About 15.8% of families and 17.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 22.9% of those under age 18 and 12.2% of those age 65 or over.
The first inhabitants of the Elizabeth River valley were the Awkinges awky or Hackensacks, a subtribe of the Lenni Lenape Native Americans. No Indian village is known to have existed in Irvington, but the region's plentiful game and well-stocked streams leaves little doubt that the Hackensack made their camps here. In 1666 several small vessels from Connecticut sailed up the Passaic River in search of a safe landing. Within a decade Newark's first settlers laid out highways, erected a meeting house and established themselves on the banks of the river. The next generation looked to the west for additional land. Irvington had been explored soon after Newark was settled: The Indian trail that later became Clinton Ave. led straight to the Elizabeth River and the open meadows of the valley. History has not preserved the name of Irvington's first European settler nor the date when he and his family cleared the woods to build the first rough cabin here. Tradition has it that Irvington was founded in 1692.
The story of the American Revolutionary War was played out in miniature in what was to become Irvington. Joseph Camp's son, Caleb, was a stalwart patriot. A member of the Provincial Congress, he served as a member of the New Jersey General Assembly after independence was declared member of the Council of Safety for 11 years and Speaker of the Assembly. His neighbor and sometime business partner, Samuel Hayes, earned his laurels during eight years as a major in the Essex County Militia. More than 40 men from West Farms and vicinity served the America cause in the fight for independence.
Camptown built a new schoolhouse in 1809, saw it burn to the ground in 1826 and replaced it with a three-story brick building that was to stand as a landmark at the Center until 1913. The Camptown Academy was Irvington's only schoolhouse until Central School on Clinton Ave. opened in 1870. A stagecoach line between Morristown and Jersey City began operating with a stop in Camptown in 1798. The new fast mail line from Philadelphia to New York City chose the village as a relay station in 1800.
Clinton Township, which included what is now Irvington, Maplewood and parts of Newark and South Orange, was created in 1834. What remained of the old township was absorbed into Newark in 1902.
By the mid 1800s Camptown was a village of about 900, most of them farmers but a growing number professional and business people from Newark, Jersey City and New York City who had sought the place out for its quiet country lifestyle. When Stephen Foster published his new ballad, Camptown Races, in 1850, the "better folk" of the village were mortified that people would associate their hometown with the bawdy goings-on celebrated in Foster's song. To Lydia Crawford, the wife of the local postmaster, belongs the honor of choosing Camptown's new name: her 1852 suggestion, "Irvingtown," commemorated Washington Irving, America's greatest living man of letters.
Irvington sent nearly 70 of her sons to fight for the Union in the Civil War. Amos J. Cummings, sergeant major of the 26th New Jersey Volunteers, was the most decorated, winning the Medal of Honor for "distinguished gallantry" at the Battle of Salem Heights. Irvington's George Jefferson, a private in the U. S. Colored Troops, lost an arm at the Siege of Petersburg.
By the turn of the century Irvington had been transformed from a country village to a thriving middle class suburb of Newark. The town's first electric trolley in 1890 was largely responsible.
Milestones along the road of Irvington's growth include: Wooden sidewalks and gas lamps in the Center, 1874; the first telephone, 1884; a volunteer fire department, 1894; an underground water system, 1894; the first Town Hall, 1895; the first auto owned by a town resident, 1900; a paid police force, 1902; the first paved road (Clinton Avenue) in 1905; the first airplane built here, 1911; and the founding of a free public library, 1915.
Over one thousand Irvingtonians served in World War One, 26 giving their lives in the war to end wars. Less than a generation later Fireman Robert Wyckoff of the USS Arizona was the first Irvington casualty of World War II, killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Seven thousand served; 172 died.
Since the building boom finally ended in 1930 after consuming every farm and field in town, Irvington's population has remained relatively stable. A little over three square miles in area, Irvington is one of the most densely populated places in the state. Census takers in 1905 found that one-fifth of Irvington's people were foreign born, most of them natives of Germany, England and Ireland. During the first three quarters of the 20th Century, a wave of immigrants swept over Irvington. German Americans bought or rented so heavily in the East Ward that from the 1880s to the 1950s they were the town's most dominant ethnic group. The town's Jewish community, numbering over 9,000 in the 1970s, was virtually non-existent until 1900. The largest ethnic group by the 1970s, Polish-Americans moved here in force after World War One. Italian-Americans began arriving in the West Ward in the early 1940s, followed in the 1960s by Ukrainian-Americans, 4,000 strong (most of them in the North Ward) when the 1970 census was taken.
The Newark riots of July 1967 hastened an exodus of families from that city, many of them moving the few short blocks to Irvington. Until 1965 Irvington was almost exclusively white. By 1980 the town was nearly 40% black, by 1990 it was 70%. On July 1, 1980, Fred Bost, the first black to serve on the Town Council, was sworn in as East Ward Councilman. Michael G. Steele, the town's first black mayor, was elected in 1990, followed by Sara B. Bost in 1994. The current Mayor is Wayne Smith.
The Council is the legislative body of the municipality and is composed of seven members. Four are elected from Wards and three are elected at-large. The Council can, by a majority vote, reduce items in the Mayor's budget, but needs a 2/3rd majority to increase any item in the budget.
Members of the governing body are elected for four year terms the 2nd Tuesday in May each year. Terms are staggered biennially and the elections are non-partisan.
Members of the Township Council are:
On the national level, Irvington leans strongly toward the Democratic Party. In 2004, Democrat John Kerry received 92 percent of the vote here, defeating Republican George W. Bush, who received around 7 percent.
Irvington High School serves the city of Irvington.
Essex County, New Jersey | Faulkner Act | New Jersey Urban Enterprise Zone | Townships in New Jersey
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