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Union City, New Jersey

Union City is a city in the northern part of Hudson County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of the 2020 United States census, the city was the state's 18th-most-populous municipality,[23] with a population of 68,589,[12][13] an increase of 2,134 (+3.2%) from the 2010 census count of 66,455,[24][25] which in turn had reflected a decline of 633 (−0.9%) from the 67,088 counted in the 2000 census.[26] As of the 2010 Census, among cities with a population of more than 50,000, it was the most densely populated city in the United States,[a] with a density of 54,138 per square mile of land.[27][28] The Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program calculated that the city's population was 65,366 in 2022,[12] ranking the city the 590th-most-populous in the country.[14]

Union City, New Jersey
City of Union City[1]
Nickname(s): 
"Embroidery Capital of the United States"
"Havana on the Hudson"[2]
"Little Havana on the Hudson"[3]
Location of Union City in Hudson County highlighted in red (left). Inset map: Location of Hudson County in New Jersey highlighted in orange (right).
Census Bureau map of Union City, New Jersey
Union City
Location in Hudson County
Union City
Location in New Jersey
Union City
Location in the United States
Coordinates: 40°46′03″N 74°01′56″W / 40.767425°N 74.032279°W / 40.767425; -74.032279[4][5]
Country United States
State New Jersey
County Hudson
IncorporatedJune 1, 1925
Government
 • TypeWalsh Act
 • BodyBoard of Commissioners
 • MayorBrian P. Stack (term ends May 18, 2026)[6][7]
 • Municipal clerkHilda I. Rosario (acting)[8]
Area
 • Total1.29 sq mi (3.33 km2)
 • Land1.29 sq mi (3.33 km2)
 • Water0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2)  0.00%
 • Rank472nd of 565 in state
10th of 12 in county[4]
Elevation190 ft (60 m)
Population
 • Total68,589
 • Estimate 65,366
 • Rank590th in country (as of 2022)[14]
18th of 565 in state
3rd of 12 in county[16]
 • Density53,293.7/sq mi (20,576.8/km2)
  • Rank2nd of 565 in state
2nd of 12 in county[16]
Time zoneUTC−05:00 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−04:00 (Eastern (EDT))
ZIP Code
Area code(s)201[19]
FIPS code3401774630[4][20][21]
GNIS feature ID0885424[4][22]
Websitewww.ucnj.com

Union City was incorporated as a city by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on June 1, 1925, with the merger of Union Hill and West Hoboken Township.[29] The city's name references the merger of those two municipalities.[30]

Two major waves of immigration, first of German speakers and then of Spanish speakers, greatly influenced the development and character of Union City. Its two nicknames, "Embroidery Capital of the United States" and "Havana on the Hudson", reflect important aspects of that history. Thousands visit Union City each year to see the nation's longest-running passion play.[31]

Union City is where Mallomars were first sold and the site of the first lunch wagon, built by Jerry and Daniel O'Mahoney and John Hanf, which helped spark New Jersey's golden age of diner manufacturing, for which the state is colloquially referred to by author Richard J.S. Gutman as the "diner capital of the world".[32]

History Edit

Early history and civic boundaries Edit

 
Sign marking Union City's southern border with Jersey City

The area of what is today Union City was originally inhabited by the Munsee-speaking branch of Lenape Native Americans,[33][34][35][36][37][38] who wandered into the vast woodland area encountered by Henry Hudson during the voyages he conducted from 1609 to 1610 for the Dutch, who later claimed the area (which included the future New York City) and named it New Netherland. The portion of that land that included the future Hudson County was purchased from members of the Hackensack tribe of the Lenni-Lenape and became part of Pavonia, New Netherland.[39]

The relationship between the early Dutch settlers and Native Americans was marked by frequent armed conflict over land claims. In 1658 by New Netherland colony Director-General Peter Stuyvesant re-purchased the territory.[40][41] The boundaries of the purchase are described in the deed preserved in the New York State Archives, as well as the medium of exchange: "80 fathoms of wampum, 20 fathoms of cloth, 12 brass kettles, 6 guns, one double brass kettle, 2 blankets, and one half barrel of strong beer."[42] In 1660, he ordered the building of a fortified village at Bergen to protect the area.[43] It was the first permanent European settlement in New Jersey, located in what is now the Journal Square area of Jersey City near Academy Street.[41][44] In 1664, the British captured New Netherland from the Dutch, at which point the boundaries of Bergen Township encompassed what is now known as Hudson County. North of this was the unpopulated Bergen Woods, which would later be claimed by settlers, after whom a number of Union City streets today are named,[41] including Sipp Street,[45][46][47] Brown Street,[46][48] Golden Lane,[48] Tournade Street and Kerrigan Avenue,[49] which is named after J. Kerrigan, the owner of Kerrigan Farm, who donated the land for Saint Michael's Monastery.[49][50]

The area that would one day be Union City, however, remained sparsely populated until the early 19th century. The British granted Bergen a new town charter in 1668. In 1682 they created Bergen County, which was named to honor their Dutch predecessors. That county comprised all of present-day Hudson, Bergen and Passaic counties. Sparsely inhabited during the 17th and 18th centuries, the southeast section of Bergen County had grown by the early 19th century to the point where it was deemed necessary to designate it a separate county. The New Jersey legislature created Hudson County in 1840, and in 1843, it was divided into two townships: Old Bergen Township (which eventually became Jersey City) and North Bergen Township, which was gradually separated into Hudson County's present day municipalities: Hoboken in 1849, Weehawken and Guttenberg in 1859, and West Hoboken and Union Township.[29][41] West Hoboken was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on February 28, 1861, from portions of North Bergen Township. The township was reincorporated on April 6, 1871, and again on March 27, 1874. Portions of the township were ceded to Weehawken in 1879.[29] On June 28, 1884, West Hoboken was reincorporated as a town, based on an ordinance passed nine days earlier. The town was reincorporated on April 24, 1888, based on the results of a referendum passed 12 days earlier.[29] Union Township, or simply Union,[48][49][51] was formed in 1864[29] through the merger of a number of villages, such as Dalleytown, Buck's Corners and Cox's Corners. The largest of these villages, Union Hill, became the colloquial name for the merged town of Union itself.[52] The northern section of Union Township was later incorporated as West New York in 1898.[41] Union City was incorporated on June 1, 1925, by merging the two towns of West Hoboken and Union Hill.[29][33] The name of one of the city's schools, Union Hill Middle School, recalls the former town.[53]

Immigration and industry Edit

 
Embroidery and lace exhibit at Union City's Park Performing Arts Center

In the 18th century, Dutch and English merchants first settled the area. Later, German immigrants immigrated from Manhattan. Irish, Polish, Armenians, Syrians, Eastern European Jews and Italians followed.[54] In 1851, Germans moved across the Hudson River from New York City in search of affordable land and open space. During the American Civil War a military installation, Camp Yates, covered an area now bounded by Bergenline and Palisade Avenues from 22nd to 32nd Street. Germans began to settle what would become Union Hill in 1851,[41] and some descendants of the immigrants of this period live in the city today.[44] Although the area's diversity was represented by the more than 19 nationalities that made their home in the Dardanelles (a five-block area of Central Avenue from 23rd Street to 27th Street)[41] from the mid-19th century to the early 20th century, German Americans and Dutch dominated the area. Along with Swiss and Austrian immigrants, they founded the European-style lace making industries for which they were famous. The introduction of Schiffli lace machines in Hudson County[55] made Union City the "embroidery capital of the United States". The trademark of that industry is on the Union City Seal,[50][56][57] though foreign competition and austere prevailing fashions led to the decline of embroidery and other industries in the area by the late 1990s.[58] In May 2014 the city dedicated "Embroidery Square" at New York Avenue to commemorate that history.[59]

As immigration to the area progressed throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, Belgians, Armenians, Greeks, Chinese, Jews and Russians found a home in the area,[41] though its domination by Germans by the turn of the 20th century was reflected in the fact that the minutes of town meetings were recorded in German.[60] By this time, the area was witnessing a period of urbanization, as an extensive trolley system was developed by the North Hudson County Railway, spurred by both electrification in 1890 and the arrival of Irish and Italian immigrants, which dominated the city until the late 1960s. Successive waves of immigrants from Eastern Europe, the Near East and Latin America contributed to the embroidery industry in subsequent years. "The Cultural Thread"/"El Hilo", an exhibit highlighting this industry, is on display at Union City's Park Performing Arts Center.[61]

The town was famous for being the home of the rowdy Hudson Burlesque.[3][62] Theaters in Union City featured vaudeville and burlesque and acts including Fred Astaire and Harry Houdini.[33][63] It was at a vaudeville theater in Union City that comedian George Burns would meet his longtime partner and wife, Gracie Allen.[64] Union City was also for a time the home to the headquarters of sports publisher Joe Weider.[65] Weider's empire included a Weider Barbell store in Union City, whose patrons included body builder Dave Draper.[66]

The first Cubans immigrated to Union City from New York City in the late 1940s, having been attracted to the city in search of work after hearing of its famed embroidery factories.[54][67][68] A majority of these Cubans hailed from small towns or cities, particularly Villa Clara Province in central Cuba.[54][67] After World War II, veterans relocated to Bergen County, causing a short-lived decline in the population.[69] By the 1960s the city was predominantly an old-line Italian enclave.[3][70] This began to change when large numbers of Cubans emigrated to the city after Fidel Castro took power in 1962. This made Union City for many years the city with the largest Cuban population in the U.S. after Miami, hence its nickname, "Little Havana on the Hudson."[3][69][71] Following the Mariel boatlift in 1980, 10,000 Cubans settled in New Jersey, leading to a second wave of Cubans to Union City, which totaled 15,000 by 1994.[57][72][73] The city, as well as neighboring towns such as West New York, experienced a profound cultural impact as a result of this, as seen in such aspects of local culture as its cuisine,[74] fashion, music, entertainment and cigar-making.[3][75][76][77][78]

Amid a redevelopment boom in the early 1960s, The Troy Towers, a 22-story twin tower luxury apartment complex, was completed in 1966 on the edge of the Palisades cliffs[79] on Mountain Road[80] at 19th Street, at the former site of the Abbey Inn, just north of where a motorized vehicle elevator and a staircase called the Lossburg Steps were located. The former was an angled ramp originally built for horse-drawn carriages, which along with the steps, connected to Hackensack Plank Road beneath the cliffs,[80] in the Shades section of Weehawken.[81] According to the Hudson County Multiple Listing service, between 2016 and 2018 the median list price of residential properties on the market in Union City fluctuated between $345,000 and $509,000. The most expensive home on the market in May 2018 was a four-family building on sale for $1.6 million, while the lowest was a studio apartment in Troy Towers for $148,000. A typical residential property was a six-bedroom, three-family house in need of updating, listed at $568,000.[79]

Development in the 21st century Edit

 
The name of the city's first high-rise condominium tower, the Thread, invokes its historical association with the embroidery industry.

Since its inception in 2000, the Cuban Day Parade of New Jersey became a major annual event in North Hudson, beginning in North Bergen and traveling south to its end in Union City.[82][83][84] Union City has historically been a family-oriented city predominantly made up of brownstones, two-family homes and locally owned businesses.[85] Another wave of modestly sized residences began development approximately in 2003, spurred by similar development in neighboring Hoboken, and the city's attempt to attract developers to what had historically been a town unfriendly to them, according to Mayor Brian P. Stack. Through approval of varied construction projects to address the needs of residents of different incomes, improved rent control laws and community input on such issues,[85] this "Hobokenization" resulted in positive comparisons with the redeveloped Hoboken of the mid-to-late 1990s, with new restaurants, bars, and art galleries cited as evidence of renewal. The city recorded $192 million in new construction in 2007, and 600 certificates of occupancy, with 500–700 projected for 2008–2009, compared with previous years, in which 50 certificates was considered a high amount.[86] This development continued for several years, reaching a milestone in 2008 with the completion of Union City's first high-rise condominium tower, The Thread, whose name evokes the city's historical association with the embroidery industry.[87][88][89][90] Other such buildings followed, such as the Altessa,[89] Park City Grand,[91] and Hoboken Heights.[92] In 2015, the AARP ranked Union City #6 on its list of the best small cities to live in.[93]

Geography Edit

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city had a total area of 1.29 square miles (3.33 km2), all of which was land.[4][5] Part of the New York metropolitan area,[94] it is one of the municipalities which comprise North Hudson. Located atop the ridge of the lower Hudson Palisades (just south of the highest point in the county),[95] many of its streets offer glimpses and views of the surrounding municipalities, the New York City skyline, and the New Jersey Meadowlands.

The city is bisected by New Jersey Route 495, a vehicular cut built in conjunction with the Lincoln Tunnel. Soon after its construction, many street names were abandoned in favor of numbering in most of North Hudson starting at 2nd Street, just north of Paterson Plank Road, which runs through the city's only major park and creates its border with Jersey City. 49th Street is the northern boundary with West New York. Apart from a small section between Bergen Turnpike and Weehawken Cemetery, Kennedy Boulevard, a major north–south thoroughfare, creates the western border with North Bergen. A former colonial road and previous border between the merged municipalities takes three names as it diagonally crosses the city's urban grid: Hackensack Plank Road, 32nd Street, and Bergen Turnpike. Most of the city north of the street, formerly Union Hill, shares its eastern border along Park Avenue with Weehawken. The southern section of the city, formerly West Hoboken, is indeed west of Hoboken,[29] which it overlooks and is connected by the road which creates their shared border, the Wing Viaduct.[96]

The city borders the Hudson County municipalities of Hoboken, Jersey City, North Bergen, Weehawken and West New York.[97][98][99]

Unincorporated communities, localities and place names located partially or completely within the city include Union Hill and West Hoboken.[100]

Demographics Edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18704,640
18805,84926.1%
189010,64382.0%
190015,18742.7%
191021,02338.4%
192020,651−1.8%
193058,659184.0%
194056,173−4.2%
195055,537−1.1%
196052,180−6.0%
197057,3059.8%
198055,593−3.0%
199058,0124.4%
200067,08815.6%
201066,455−0.9%
202068,5893.2%
2022 (est.)65,366[12][14][15]−4.7%
Population sources:
1870–1920[101] 1870[102][103] 1880–1890[104]
1890–1910[105] 1870–1930[106]
1940–2000[107] 2000[108][109]
2010[24][25] 2020[12][13]

20th century Edit

According to the 1910 United States census, the population of West Hoboken and Union Hill, the two towns that would later merge to form Union City was 37,000 and 23,000, respectively.[110]

By the late 20th century, Union City emerged as a working class community.[111] One of Hudson County's three homeless shelters, Palisades Emergency Residence Corp. (PERC), is located in Union City.[112] The PERC facility, which includes a soup kitchen, food pantry and 40-bed shelter on 37th Street, lost $100,000 in federal funding in 2011, and in January and August 2012, aided a record-breaking number of guests.[113]

2000 Census Edit

According to the 2000 United States Census, Union City had a population of 67,088, making it the second-most populous municipality in the county after Jersey City.[114][115]

The population density was 52,977.8 inhabitants per square mile (20,454.8/km2) in 2000, approximately twice as high as New York City as a whole, but less than Manhattan alone. Union City is the most densely populated city in the United States,[116][117] though neighboring Guttenberg (legally incorporated as a town) was more densely populated.[118] In 2000, the median age was 32 years. For every 100 females, there were 100.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 98.8 males.[108][109]

As of the 2000 Census, 58.7% of the population was foreign born and 21.6% of residents were naturalized citizens, while 13.9% only speak English at home, whereas 80.7% reported that they spoke Spanish at home.[108]

2010 Census Edit

Union City's 2010 population of 66,455 made it the state's 17th largest municipality, having seen a decline of 633 residents (-0.9%) from its population of 67,088 in the 2000 census, when it was the state's 16th most populous municipality.[119][114][115] As of 2010, it was still the country's second-most densely populated incorporated municipality (after the nearby Town of Guttenberg) and the most densely populated U.S. city.[28][120]

The 2010 United States census counted 66,455 people, 22,814 households, and 15,514 families in the city. The population density was 51,810.1 per square mile (20,004.0/km2). There were 24,931 housing units at an average density of 19,436.9 per square mile (7,504.6/km2). The racial makeup was 58.01% (38,549) White, 5.25% (3,487) Black or African American, 1.23% (819) Native American, 2.39% (1,587) Asian, 0.05% (33) Pacific Islander, 27.43% (18,231) from other races, and 5.64% (3,749) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 84.71% (56,291) of the population.[24] As of 2010, the city had the highest percentage of Hispanic residents in any municipality in New Jersey.[121]

Of the 22,814 households, 34.2% had children under the age of 18; 36.7% were married couples living together; 21.8% had a female householder with no husband present and 32.0% were non-families. Of all households, 23.8% were made up of individuals and 7.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.88 and the average family size was 3.39.[24]

23.7% of the population were under the age of 18, 10.6% from 18 to 24, 32.4% from 25 to 44, 22.8% from 45 to 64, and 10.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33.9 years. For every 100 females, the population had 100.4 males. For every 100 females ages 18 and older there were 98.3 males.[24]

The Census Bureau's 2006–2010 American Community Survey showed that (in 2010 inflation-adjusted dollars) median household income was $40,173 (with a margin of error of +/− $1,946) and the median family income was $43,101 (+/− $2,185). Males had a median income of $31,987 (+/− $1,696) versus $25,010 (+/− $1,517) for females. The per capita income for the city was $18,506 (+/− $719). About 17.0% of families and 20.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 29.4% of those under age 18 and 20.8% of those age 65 or over.[122]

Hispanics remained the dominant ethnic group in the city, and their percentage of the population increased from 82.3% in the 2000 Census to 84.7% in the 2010 Census. Non-Hispanic whites made up 15.3% of the city's population in 2010; up from 13.3% in the 2000 Census. Blacks made up 5.2% of the city's population in 2010; up from 3.3% in the 2000 Census. The rest of the racial makeup of the city was 0.70% Native American, 2.15% Asian, 0.08% Pacific Islander, 28.19% from other races, and 6.87% from two or more races.[108][109] Though Native Americans comprise less than 1% of the city's population, they doubled between the 2000 and 2010 Census, and combined with West New York's Native Americans, comprise 38% of the county's Native American population.[115] Spanish was spoken at home by more than half of the residents of Union City, according to U.S. Census Bureau data released in 2017.[123]

Demographics in the 2010s and 2020s Edit

As of May 2017, the age breakdown of the city was as follows: 22.5% of residents were under the age of 18, of which 6.6% were under the age of five; and 10.9% who were 65 years of age or older.[124] In 2019, the median age was 37.8 years.[125]

As of July 2019, Union City's employment breakdown was: 7.8% Construction; 9.6% Manufacturing; 4.4% Wholesale trade; 12.3% Retail; 9.4% Transportation and warehousing; 0.4% Utilities; 1.8% Information; 3.7% Finance and insurance; 2.1% Real estate, rental, leasing; 4.1% Professional, scientific, technical services; 8.2% Administrative, support, waste management; 5.2% Educational services; 10.1% Health care and social assistance; 2.1% Arts, entertainment, recreation; 11.0% Accommodation, food services; 5.7$ Other services; and 2.1% Public administration.[124]

As of July 2019, 71.5% of residents age 25 or older had completed high school or a higher level of education, and 21.6% had a Bachelor's degree or higher degree of education.[126] As of the 2000 Census, 17% of the city's employed residents work in New York City.[127]

Of Union City's 24,931 housing units in 2010 (up 1,190 from the 2000 Census), 2,117 of them, or 8%, were vacant, twice the vacancy rate of the 2000 Census.[115]

As of May 2017, the average income of a Union City resident was $19,834 a year, and the compared to a national average of $28,555 a year. The median household income of a Union City resident is $40,939 a year, compared to the national median of is $53,482.[124] By July 2019, the median household income was $48,992.[126]

In the 2000s, the Brookings Institution studies ranked Union City among the 92 most economically depressed localities in the United States, with 18.1% of the population and 27.5% of the children falling below the poverty line. In 1997, the New Jersey Municipal Distress Index, which is based on social, economic, fiscal and physical indicators, ranked Union City as the third most distressed community in the state.[67] By July 2019, 19.6% of residents lived in poverty.[126]

The Latino and Hispanic community Edit

 
Revelers during the 2010 Cuban Day Parade on Bergenline Avenue

Immigration from Cuba to Union City began slowly in the late 1940s and early 1950s, when jobs in the local embroidery and textile factories were abundant.[128] By 1955, the city's Cuban population was large enough that Fidel Castro visited Union City to raise money for his revolt against Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista, though a speech he gave one night at a bar on 26th Street, Le Molino Rojo ("The Red Mill") led to a brawl that resulted in Castro's arrest.[129][130][131] Following the Cuban Revolution of 1959, large numbers of Cubans in professional occupations emigrated to Union City,[128] resulting in Union City's status as the nation's second-largest Cuban population, behind Miami, Florida, leading to the nickname "Little Havana on the Hudson".[69][72][78] Aspects of the enclave are explored in the 2009 publication The Cubans of Union City: Immigrants and Exiles in a New Jersey Community.[132] In the ensuing decades, Cuban residents spread out to other communities of North Hudson County. West New York, at 19.64%, now has the highest percentage of Cubans in New Jersey, with Union City in second place, with 15.35%. These two municipalities have the highest Cuban population percentage in the United States outside of Florida.[133] Moreover, Union City still boasts the largest Hispanic population percentage in New Jersey, at 84.7% by the 2010 Census.[115] By the early 2000s Union City had become a mix of the Latin and Asian diasporas, with Dominicans cited as the fastest-growing ethnic group, and other groups including Colombians, Ecuadoreans and Salvadorans.[134] Despite the decline in the size of the Cuban population, the major New York City television news outlets will often journey to Union City to interview citizens when developments in Cuba–United States relations occur.[78][129] As of the 2000 Census, 5.94% of Union City's residents identified themselves as being of Ecuadorian ancestry, which was the third highest of any municipality in New Jersey and the seventh highest percentage of Ecuadorian people in any place in the United States with 1,000 or more residents identifying their ancestry.[135] That number increased to 12.6%, according to December 2017 Census figures.[136]

Parks and recreation Edit

The Hudson County Park System maintains Washington Park, which covers 22-acre (8.9 ha) straddling the border of the city and Jersey City Heights.[137] The idea for the park likely originated in the late 1880s or early 1890s. The two sets of residents most instrumental in its creation were the Suckley and Allen families. The Suckleys owned the land on which the park was built for generations, which came to be called the Suckley estate. The family, however, did not pay much attention to the plot, which was just a flat expanse of dirt, and eventually came to be used to host visiting carnivals, circuses, and Wild West shows, including Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, which put on its performance there in 1908, when the plot was called the North Street Grounds. On January 12, 1909, a joint committee representing various Hudson County groups was formed to petition the relevant government agencies, such as the Hudson County freeholders, for the money needed to purchase the Suckley estate and other smaller properties that were part of the site. Assemblyman William R. Davidson argued at the committee's first meeting that the 14th Street viaduct being constructed at the time in Hoboken, which the park site overlooked, would be a significant transportation corridor, which would increase property values. The Suckley Park Association was founded that same year for the purpose of turning the plot into a park. Its co-founder and first president was doctor and civic leader Ulamor Allen, who has been called the Father of Washington Park. On June 8 that year, Allen addressed the Hudson County Park Commission to argue for the park, joining with others who lobbied for the purchase the Curries Woods site for a county park, which would later straddle the Bayonne-Jersey City border. The County Park Commission agreed that both "border line" parks deserved to be developed, though bureaucratic red tape would delay the endeavor for years. In July 1914, the Suckley Park Association asked the Park Commission to requisition the County Board of Freeholders for $500,000 for the park. The following month, the commissioners passed a resolution asking the Freeholders to borrow that money. In 1917 the county reached an agreement to purchase the land from the property owners for a total of $562,435. The park took its current shape in the 1930s, partially as a result of the input of the Works Progress Administration.[138]

Reservoir Park, located around Hackensack Reservoir on Palisade Avenue between 20th and 22nd Streets, opened on September 25, 2015. The passive park, at the city border in Weehawken, was created on the 14.4-acre (5.8 ha) site of a reservoir that had been owned by United Water but had not been used since 1996.[139][140]

Commerce and economy Edit

 
Bergenline Avenue then and now: Facing south toward 32nd Street, c. 1900 (left), and in 2010 (right)

Originally, Bergenline Avenue was the width of a cowpath, and was not regarded as a business center. Street car tracks were expected to be laid on Palisade Avenue where the Town Hall was located. However, an influential citizen named Henry Kohlmeier, who had just built his residence on Palisade Avenue, did not wish to be disturbed by the noise of the passing cars, and proposed that the tracks be laid on Bergenline Avenue, two blocks to the west, and before those who would have objected to this became aware of this change, the motion was approved.[141]

The continuous line of retail stores that appeared on Bergenline Avenue by the time the town of Union Hill was incorporated[142] made it not only the city's main commercial thoroughfare,[50][54] but a major shopping thoroughfare for North Hudson County, one of the leading shopping centers and commercial strips in Northern New Jersey,[142] and the longest commercial avenue in the state.[143] Among the Cuban Americans in the area, it has earned the nickname La Avenida.[68]

Bergenline runs through not only the entire length of Union City from north to south, but also through West New York, Guttenberg and North Bergen. Also known as the "Miracle Mile", Bergenline's largest concentration of retail and chain stores begins at the intersection of 32nd Street and continues north until 92nd Street in North Bergen, and while it is a narrow one-way, southbound street throughout most of Union City, it becomes a four lane, two-way street at 48th Street, one block south of the town's northern boundary. Bergenline Avenue is also used as the route for local parades, such as the annual Memorial Day Parade.[142][144]

 
Transfer Station was once an interchange for trolleys and buses. The trapezoidal building at 707 Summit Avenue was home to a bank, and later the headquarters of Teamsters Local 560 when it was led by mobster Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, before being purchased in by the city in 2023 to convert into affordable housing.[145][146]

At Union City's southern end, Bergenline is primarily a residential street, with the shopping district concentrated at Summit Avenue and Transfer Station,[142][144] so called because it was a transfer point for buses[147] and three trolley lines.[32] A prominent landmark of Transfer Station is its five-corner intersection of Summit Avenue, Paterson Plank Road, and 7th Street, on which sits a five-story, trapezoid-shaped brick building at 707 Summit Avenue, originated in 1910 as the National Bank of North Hudson. It later became the First National Bank of Union City. By the 1960s, it had become the headquarters of Teamsters Local 560, which was controlled by mobster Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano,[145][146] a reported caporegime in the Genovese crime family, and a top associate of Jimmy Hoffa.[148] On July 30, 1975, Hoffa intended to meet Provenzano Bloomfield Township, a suburb of Detroit, but Hoffa famously disappeared that afternoon. According to Time, Provenzano was seen fraternizing with local union members in Hoboken,[149] although Provenzano, according to the Associated Press, told investigators that "he was playing cards with Stephen Andretta in Union City, New Jersey the day Hoffa disappeared",[150] and denied having arranged any meeting with Hoffa.[151] In 2023, when the building went on sale, the city planned to purchase it for $3.1 million, and convert it into 24 affordable housing units.[145]

Transfer Station was also the site, in 1912, of the first lunch wagon built by Jerry and Daniel O'Mahoney and John Hanf, which was bought for $800 and operated by restaurant entrepreneur Michael Griffin, who chose the location for its copious foot traffic. The wagon helped spark New Jersey's so-called "golden age of diner manufacturing", which in turn made the state the informal "diner capital of the world". In the decades that followed, nearly all major U.S. diner manufacturers, including Jerry O'Mahoney Inc., started in New Jersey.[32] During World War II, the area was a 24-hour hotspot for U.S. servicemen, who patronized the dozens of nightclubs located there.[147] In later decades, Summit Avenue was not as busy a shopping area as upper Bergenline, so the city implemented a series of improvements in 2009 to improve business there, such as improved sidewalks, landscaping and street lights from Seventh Street to 13th Street.[144]

In terms of business, Union City is notable for being the location where Mallomars were first sold. Nabisco sold them to a grocer in the southern half of the town, when it was West Hoboken.[152]

Union City is one of several cities in Hudson County that contains a state-established Urban Enterprise Zone (UEZ), under a program that was implemented in 1983 by the New Jersey Department of Commerce and Economic Development assist businesses and revitalize economically distressed communities in New Jersey.[153] One of 32 zones covering 37 municipalities statewide, Union City was selected in 1994 as one of a group of 10 zones added to participate in the program and one of four of those chosen based on a competition.[154] In addition to other benefits to encourage employment and investment within the UEZ, shoppers can take advantage of a reduced 3.3125% sales tax rate (half of the 6+58% rate charged statewide) at eligible merchants.[155] Established in April 1995, the city's Urban Enterprise Zone status expires in April 2026.[156] There are approximately 180 UEZ-certified businesses in the city, which includes Bergenline Avenue from 49th to 15th Streets, 32nd Street from Bergenline Avenue to Kennedy Boulevard, Summit Avenue from 18th to Fifth Street, and Paterson Plank Road from Fifth to Seventh Streets. In addition to providing an incentive for shoppers and for business owners to invest in the area without raising taxes, up to $30,000 in annual UEZ revenue is also used for area upkeep and safety projects, marketing campaigns, and holiday decorations.[143]

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Union City's unemployment rate as of September 2009 was 15%, the highest in the state, compared with the lowest, Hoboken, at 6.3%, and a statewide rate of 9.8%.[157] By 2018, the city's unemployment rate was 4.5%, compared to a rate of 3.9% in Hudson County.[158]

Government Edit

Local government Edit

 
City Hall

Union City's City Hall is located at 3715 Palisade Avenue. The oldest municipal building in North Hudson, it was built in the 1890s as the town hall for Union Hill. Prior to the 1914 opening of Union Hill High School, classes were also held in the building. After the 1925 consolidation of West Hoboken and Union Hill into Union City, the town hall for the former was converted into the new fire headquarters for the city. It also served as the second police precinct for many years.[159]

The governing body is comprised of a five-member Board of Commissioners, as per the city's Walsh Act form of government, which has been in place since 1930. The members of the commission are elected at-large on a non-partisan basis in the May municipal election. At a reorganization meeting held after the election, each commissioner is assigned a department to oversee. The mayor of Union City also serves as a commissioner.[9][160][161] The city is one of 30 municipalities (of the 564) statewide that use this form.[162]

 
Mayor Brian P. Stack also serves as state senator.

As of 2023, the mayor of Union City is Brian P. Stack,[6] who became mayor in 2000 after a recall election forced the resignation of then-mayor Raúl "Rudy" Garcia.[163] The five members of the Union City Board of Commissioners serve in both administrative and legislative capacities, with each commissioner acting as the director of one of the five major departments of the city, administering the daily operations of a designated department. The five commissioners and their departmental assignments are Mayor Brian P. Stack (Commissioner of Public Safety), Lucio P. Fernandez (Commissioner of Public Affairs), Wendy A. Grullon (Commissioner of Public Works), Maryury A. Martinetti (Commissioner of Revenue and Finance) and Celin J. Valdivia (Commissioner of Parks and Public Property), all serving concurrent terms ending on May 15, 2026.[164][165][166][167][168]

The budget adopted by the city in 2021 was $151 million, which remained balanced during the COVID-19 pandemic.[169]

Federal, state, and county representation Edit

Union City is located in the 8th Congressional District[170] and is part of New Jersey's 33rd state legislative district.[171][172][173]

For the 118th United States Congress, New Jersey's Eighth Congressional District is represented by Rob Menendez (D, Jersey City).[174][175] New Jersey is represented in the United States Senate by Democrats Cory Booker (Newark, term ends 2027)[176] and Bob Menendez (Englewood Cliffs, term ends 2025).[177][178]

For the 2022–2023 session, the 33rd Legislative District of the New Jersey Legislature is represented in the State Senate by Brian P. Stack (D, Union City) and in the General Assembly by Annette Chaparro (D, Hoboken) and Raj Mukherji (D, Jersey City).[179]

Hudson County is governed by a directly elected County Executive and by a Board of County Commissioners, which serves as the county's legislative body. As of 2023, Hudson County's County Executive is Thomas A. DeGise (D, Jersey City), whose term of office expires December 31, 2023.[180] Hudson County's Commissioners (all serving concurrent terms that end on December 31, 2023) are[181][182][183] District 1:[184] Kenneth Kopacz (Bayonne and parts of Jersey City),[185] District 2:[186] William O'Dea (western parts of Jersey City),[187] District 3:[188] Jerry Walker. (southeastern parts of Jersey City),[189] District 4:[190] Yraida Aponte-Lipski (northeastern parts of Jersey City),[191] District 5:[192] Vice Chair Anthony L. Romano Jr. (Hoboken and adjoining parts of Jersey City),[193] District 6:[194] Fanny J.Cedeno (Union City),[195] District 7:[196] Caridad Rodriguez (West New York, Weehawken, Guttenberg),[197] District 8:[198] Chair Anthony P. Vainieri Jr. (North Bergen, West New York, Secaucus)[199] and District 9:[200] Albert Cifelli (East Newark, Harrison, Kearny, and Secaucus).[201]

Hudson County's constitutional officers are: Clerk E. Junior Maldonado (D, Jersey City, 2027),[202][203] Sheriff Frank Schillari, (D, Jersey City, 2025)[204] Surrogate Tilo E. Rivas, (D, Jersey City, 2024)[205][206] and Register Jeffery Dublin (D, Jersey City, 2024).[207][206]

Political demographics Edit

As of March 2011, there were a total of 28,503 registered voters in Union City, of which 18,589 (65.2%) were registered as Democrats, 1,839 (6.5%) were registered as Republicans and 8,062 (28.3%) were registered as Unaffiliated. There were 13 voters registered to other parties.[208]

In the 2012 presidential election, Democrat Barack Obama received 82.1% of the vote (14,569 cast), ahead of Republican Mitt Romney with 17.2% (3,050 votes), and other candidates with 0.8% (134 votes), among the 17,893 ballots cast by the city's 30,841 registered voters (140 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 58.0%.[209][210] In the 2008 presidential election, Democrat Barack Obama received 74.6% of the vote (13,657 cast), ahead of Republican John McCain with 23.9% (4,366 votes) and other candidates with 0.8% (150 votes), among the 18,305 ballots cast by the city's 32,030 registered voters, for a turnout of 57.1%.[211] In the 2004 presidential election, Democrat John Kerry received 64.8% of the vote here (10,894 ballots cast), outpolling Republican George W. Bush with 32.0% (5,375 votes) and other candidates with 0.3% (90 votes), among the 16,811 ballots cast by the city's 27,727 registered voters, for a turnout percentage of 60.6.[212]

In the 2013 gubernatorial election, Republican Chris Christie received 58.1% of the vote (6,653 cast), ahead of Democrat Barbara Buono with 40.6% (4,651 votes), and other candidates with 1.3% (148 votes), among the 12,583 ballots cast by the city's 31,515 registered voters (1,131 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 39.9%.[213][214] In the 2009 gubernatorial election, Democrat Jon Corzine received 76.8% of the vote here (8,611 ballots cast), ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 20.2% (2,265 votes), Independent Chris Daggett with 1.4% (152 votes) and other candidates with 0.8% (89 votes), among the 11,218 ballots cast by the city's 27,373 registered voters, yielding a 41.0% turnout.[215]

Public safety Edit

The Union City Police Department consists of over 200 officers.[216] Union City's Chief of Police is Nichelle Luster, the city's first female Police Chief, who replaced former Chief Richard Molinari. Luster had been a captain since 2013, when she became the first female to attain that position.[217]

Until 1999, the Union City Fire Department consisted of 100 firefighters, and four fire stations.[218] In January 1999[219] Union City and four other cities in North Hudson merged their fire departments into North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue. The other municipalities include Guttenberg, North Bergen, Weehawken and West New York.[220] Three of the NHRFR's fire stations are located in Union City:[221]

  • Battalion 1 / Squad 2 / Ladder 1 – 1600 New York Avenue
  • Deputy 1 / Engine 4 – 541–29th Street
  • Battalion 2 / Rescue 1 / Squad 1 – 4300 Kennedy Boulevard[221]

Transportation Edit

Roads and highways Edit

 
View east along Route 495 in Union City

As of 2010, the city had a total of 41.67 miles (67.06 km) of roadways, of which 37.46 miles (60.29 km) were maintained by the municipality, 3.42 miles (5.50 km) by Hudson County and 0.64 miles (1.03 km) by the New Jersey Department of Transportation and 0.15 miles (0.24 km) by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority.[222]

Several major roadways traverse Union City.[223] New Jersey Route 495 is the most significant highway passing through, connecting directly to the Lincoln Tunnel into New York City.[224] To the west, it connects with, Interstate 95 (the New Jersey Turnpike),[225] U.S. Route 1/9[226] and New Jersey Route 3.[227][228] County Route 505 also passes through the city.[229] Within the city, Bergenline Avenue and the marginal highway of Route 495 are major public transportation corridors.[96]

Public transportation Edit

 
The Hudson-Bergen Light Rail station on Bergenline Avenue at 48th Street

The Bergenline Avenue station of the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail is located at 49th Street near the city line with West New York and North Bergen.[96][230]

New Jersey Transit bus service transportation is available to points in Hudson, Bergen, and Passaic counties and to the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Midtown Manhattan. Routes which stop in the city are the 111, 121, 123, 124, 125, 127, 129, 154, 156, 159, 144, 190 (and the 107, 108, 160, 161, 163, 167, 191, 192 by passenger request for travel to the Port Authority Bus Terminal only), and the 195 (Saturdays only). The George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal is served by the 181. Jersey City can be reached on the 22, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 88 and 89 routes.[231][232][233][234]

OurBus routes link Union City to Washington, D.C.[235]

Additional public transportation service is augmented by privately operated dollar vans that link Union City to various points throughout the New York metropolitan area,[236] such as the Hudson County Courthouse, Newport Mall, 42nd Street in Manhattan, and Paterson, New Jersey.[237] The minibuses, locally known by their Spanish language name guagua,[238] have come subject to greater scrutiny due to alleged safety issues.[239][240][241]

In 2021, Union City was among the municipalities in Hudson County that formally codified regulations governing the use of electric bicycles and scooters.[169]

Newark Liberty International Airport is located 12.5 miles (20.1 km) south in Newark/Elizabeth. LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York, is 12.3 miles (19.8 km) away. John F. Kennedy Airport is also in Queens. The Colombian airline Avianca operates a private bus service from to Union City and Elizabeth for passengers on Avianca flights departing from and arriving to JFK.[242]

Education Edit

 
The city's Board of Education building

The student population was 9,730 as of November 2009.[243] In 2021, its 14 public schools served 11,893 students.[244]

Historically, Union City schools have ranked among the highest in Hudson County in reported incidents of violence compared to the size of the student population more than once, most recently in a November 2009 report by the New Jersey Department of Education, which annually records incidents of violence, vandalism, weapons and substance abuse or possession. According to the report, such incidents declined statewide between the 2006–2007 and the 2007–2008 school years, but rose slightly in Hudson County, with Union City schools having the second-highest number of reported incidents behind the Jersey City Public Schools.[243]

University of California, Berkeley Professor David L. Kirp, in his 2011 book, Kids First, and his 2013 book, Improbable Scholars, praised Union City's education system for bringing poor, mostly immigrant kids (three quarters of whom live in homes where only Spanish is spoken and a quarter of which are thought to be undocumented and fearful of deportation) into the educational mainstream. Kirp, who spent a year in Union City examining its schools, notes that while in the late 1970s, Union City schools faced the threat of state takeover, they now boast achievement scores that approximate the statewide average. Kirp also observes that in 2011, Union City boasted a high school graduation rate of 89.5 percent—roughly 10 percentage points higher than the national average, and that in 2012, 75 percent of Union City graduates enrolled in college, with top students winning scholarships to the Ivy League. Kirp singles out the city's practice of enrolling almost every 3- and 4-year-old in kindergarten, and the leadership of Union City High School principal John Bennetti for the positive educational atmosphere in that school.[245][246][247][248]

Public schools Edit

 
Union City High School

The Union City School District operates public schools in Union City, serving students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade. The district is one of 31 former Abbott districts statewide that were established pursuant to the decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Abbott v. Burke[249] which are now referred to as "SDA Districts" based on the requirement for the state to cover all costs for school building and renovation projects in these districts under the supervision of the New Jersey Schools Development Authority.[250][251]

As of the 2018–19 school year, the district, comprised of 14 schools, had an enrollment of 13,768 students and 837.2 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 16.4:1.[252] Schools in the district (with 2018–19 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics[253]) are:

The city's single public high school, Union City High School, opened September 3, 2009,[273] and was built on the site of the former Roosevelt Stadium.[274] The $178 million school, whose signature feature is an athletic field on its second floor roof, replaced the former Emerson High School and Union Hill High School, which converted to middle schools.[275]

Hudson County Community College's $28.1 million North Hudson Higher Education Center opened in September 2011. The seven story, 92,250-square-foot (8,570 m2) Center is located on Kennedy Boulevard, adjacent to the Bergenline Avenue Light Rail station. It incorporates green technology, such as photovoltaic electrical systems, rainwater harvesting tanks, daylight and occupancy sensors, low-flow fixtures, and high-efficiency mechanical equipment. The NHHEC also houses offices for the Hudson County Career Development Center and the County Clerk.[276][277]

 
Mother Seton Interparochial School (left) and Miftaahul Uloom Academy, a Pre-K to 12th grade Islamic school (right), are both located on 15th Street.

Colin Powell Elementary School opened in September 2012 and was dedicated on February 7, 2013. It is the seventh educational facility created over the course of a decade, and the 14th school in the city.[278] For the 2013–2014 school year students from Gilmore and Hudson Schools were relocated to Colin Powell, so that the former schools, both of which are over 100 years old, could undergo renovations.[279] The K-5 school, which is located on New York Avenue and 15th Street, was visited by its namesake, former Secretary of State Colin Powell, in June 2013.[280]

Woodrow Wilson School was awarded the Blue Ribbon School Award of Excellence by the United States Department of Education, the highest award an American school can receive, during the 2004–2005 school year.[281] The Blue Ribbon School Award of Excellence was awarded again to Woodrow Wilson for the 2014–2015 school year.[282][283]

The Sarah M. Gilmore Elementary School, which is located on Kerrigan Avenue, between 16th and 17th Streets, opened in September 2017. The school, which cost $29 million, opened with 350 students.[284]

The city's newest school is Union City Middle School, which began construction in September 2023. The 15th school in the city, the six-story, $93.7 million project, which is located at 518 36th Street between Kennedy Boulevard and Bergenline Avenue, was conceived to ease overcrowding in the city's classrooms. It will house students that otherwise would have attended Emerson and Union Hill Middle Schools, as well as some ninth graders that would have otherwise attended Union City High School, and enable the city to move all sixth graders into its elementary schools. It is expected to open for the 2025 Fall semester. Although it will be able to host 936 students, the city will limit it to 827. Its specialized classrooms will include a robotics lab, a hydroponics lab, and a dance studio.[272]

Private schools Edit

St. Francis Academy is a K-8 Catholic school operated under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark.[285] In September 2013, St. Francis Academy was one of 15 schools in New Jersey to be recognized by the United States Department of Education as part of the National Blue Ribbon Schools Program, an award called the "most prestigious honor in the United States' education system" and which Education Secretary Arne Duncan described as honoring schools that "represent examples of educational excellence".[286][287] In the wake of declining enrollment and lingering financial issues, Mother Seton Interparochial School (which had been formed in 2006 from the merger of St. Michael's and St. Anthony of Padua) and St. Augustine's School were closed by the Newark Archdiocese after the 2019–20, school year and merged into Academy of St. Joseph of the Palisades in West New York, New Jersey.[288]

Other schools in Union City include two Islamic schools, Miftaahul Uloom Academy[289][290] and Rising Star Academy,[291] a Jewish school, Mesivta Sanz,[292][293] and Union City Daycare Program School.[294]

Notable landmarks Edit

 
Hudson Presbyterian Church
 
José Martí STEM Academy and Union City Public Library

The former Monastery and Church of Saint Michael the Archangel on West Street, once the largest Roman Catholic church in Hudson County, is the one landmark on the National Register of Historic Places in Union City,[295] and one of several locations which have been designated by New Jersey Register of Historic Places.[296] It is now known as the Hudson Presbyterian Church.[297] In 2002 José Martí Middle School and the southern branch of the Union City Public Library were built on the southern side of the Monastery grounds, on 18th Street. They opened in 2004.[298][299] When Union City High School opened in September 2009, the middle school converted to José Martí Freshman Academy to house most of town's ninth graders. In 2019 that school converted again to José Martí STEM Academy, in order to expand the city's STEM instructon.[300]

The Park Performing Arts Center was originally built in 1931 by the German congregation the Catholic parish of Holy Family Church (and still owned by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark) to house their cultural and educational programs Its outstanding feature is the Park Theater which seats 1,400. Incorporated in 1983 the non-profit arts center presents works of local, national, and international artists, as well as permanent and rotating exhibitions.[301]

Union City High School and Athletic Complex opened in September 2009 on the site of the former Roosevelt Stadium, demolished in 2005 to make way for it. The sports field is located on the second floor roof of the building, which also houses the Union City Performing Arts Center and a community health center.[302][303]

Emerson Middle School, was opened in April 1915 as West Hoboken High School, and was home to the Bulldogs. It was renamed Emerson High School for the writer Ralph Waldo Emerson, when the two towns merged. Located on New York Avenue at 18th Street, the original building is connected with the gym building, built in the 1980s, by a second story enclosed bridge that runs over New York Avenue. The school became the South campus of Union City High School in September 2008, before converting to a middle school in September 2009, with the opening of the new Union City High School proper. The mascot of Union City was also changed to the Soaring Eagles. Alumni of the school include DJ and music producer Erick Morillo[304] and former Green Bay Packers center Frank Winters.[305]

Union City is home to two Carnegie Libraries funded by the donations of steel magnate Andrew Carnegie. Both are considered historically and architecturally significant by the city.[306] The first was built in 1903 by the Cranwell family builders, who were active in the construction of many of the city's buildings,[307] with a $25,000 donation by Carnegie in what was once West Hoboken on 15th Street between Bergenline Avenue and New York Avenue. The second was built in 1905 at the corner of 43rd Street and New York Avenue in what was once Union Hill,[308][309] and is the main branch. The 15th Street library retains its original stained glass, but was closed in 2004 upon the completion of a new library on the corner of Summit Avenue and 18th Street, housed in the same building as José Martí Middle School.[310] It was converted into the William V. Musto Cultural Center,[33][311] which opened in June 2011. It houses the Union City Museum of Art, the Union City Police Museum, the Union City Art Gallery & Concert Hall, the Union City Museum of History, and a senior citizen center.[307][312]

 
Celia Cruz Park was constructed in tribute to Cuban-American salsa singer Celia Cruz and other Latin stars.

Celia Cruz Park On June 4, 2004, nearly a year after the death of Cuban-American salsa singer Celia Cruz (who lived in nearby Fort Lee), Union City heralded its annual Cuban Day Parade by dedicating a park to Cruz, which is also known as Celia Cruz Plaza, at 31st Street and Bergenline Avenue, with Cruz's widower, Pedro Knight, present. The park featured a sidewalk star in Cruz's honor, and an 8' × 10' mural by Union City's Edgardo Davila, a collage of Cruz's career throughout the decades. There are four other similar dedications to Cruz around the world.[313] The Latin American Kiwanis Club refurbished the park in early June 2006, replacing the mural with a backlit photograph of Cruz. Cruz's star has expanded into Union City's "Walk of Fame",[314] as new marble stars are added each spring to honor Latin entertainment and media personalities. People so honored at the park include merengue singer Joseíto Mateo, salsa singer La India, Cuban musician Israel "Cachao" Lopez, Cuban tenor Beny Moré,[315] Tito Puente, Spanish language television news anchor Rafael Pineda, salsa pioneer Johnny Pacheco,[316] singer/bandleader Gilberto Santa Rosa and music promoter Ralph Mercado.[317]

 
Spectators viewing the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks from Doric Park. The park was later turned into Firefighter's Memorial Park.

9/11 Memorials The city's first memorial to honor the five Union City citizens who died in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks[318] was a sculpture placed in Doric Park, in whose courtyard citizens gathered on September 11, 2001 to view the attacks' aftermath.[319] On September 11, 2007, the city dedicated its Liberty Plaza to commemorate the event. The Plaza, which serves as a transit hub through which commuters pass on their way to and from Manhattan, includes two memorial markers.[320][321] Doric Park was later rebuilt as Firefighters Memorial Park, which opened in August 2009. The park includes a public swimming pool, and a new memorial to local fallen firefighters that stands at the entrance.[322][323] Its popularity has attracted visitors from Manhattan and Staten Island.[323]

The Monastery of the Perpetual Rosary, known as The Blue Chapel, was constructed between 1912 and 1914, as the first monastery dedicated to the recitation of the Perpetual Rosary in the United States. Although the monastery was well-maintained for many decades, after the number of resident nuns and finances dwindled, the chapel deteriorated and was vacated in mid-2009. Plans were announced later that year to renovate and expand the monastery in order to create housing units and underground parking, but negative public reaction squelched those plans. In 2010, the chapel was included on Preservation New Jersey's annual 10 Most Endangered Historic Sites list, which is intended to draw attention to historical sites in need of preservation. The site's caretakers have previously indicated that it will likely be abandoned or sold,[324] but the city Board of Commissioners passed a November 3, 2010 resolution designating it as a historic site as part of efforts to protect it.[325][326]

 
The city's COVID-19 pandemic memorial

Historical markers In 2009, Union City began installing a series of historical markers to commemorate the lives of its noteworthy natives.[327][328] The first marker was dedicated to the memory of boxer Joe Jeanette on April 17, 2009, and placed at the corner of Summit Avenue and 27th Street on April 17, 2009, where Jeanette's former residence and gym once stood.[327][328][329][330][331] The marker lies two blocks from a street, located between Summit Avenue and Kennedy Boulevard, that was named Jeanette Street in his honor.[331] Present at the dedication ceremony was Jeanette's grandniece, Sabrina Jennette.[332] Another historical marker was dedicated September 26, 2009 to Peter George Urban, a 10th degree karate grandmaster, writer and teacher who founded an American karate system, American Goju Do. Present at the dedication ceremony was Urban's daughter, Julia Urban-Kimmerly.[333] On May 22, 2010 the city dedicated a marker to novelist and screenwriter Pietro di Donato, and placed at Bergenline Avenue and 31st Street, where di Donato once lived. That area was named Pietro di Donato Plaza in his honor. Present at the dedication ceremony was di Donato's son, Richard.[334][335] The fourth marker was dedicated to painter William Tylee Ranney on September 18, 2010.[336] In addition to those honoring people, subsequent markers were erected to honor particular sites. As of December 2012, the city had eight historic markers.[329]

COVID-19 Victims Memorial On March 25, 2022, the city dedicated a memorial in Ellsworth Park, in tribute to the citizens who died and suffered as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[337] A plaque on the forward side of the pedestal reads, "In memory of all those who perished from the COVID-19 Pandemic. You will always be in our hearts."[338][339]

Media and culture Edit

Union City is located within the New York media market, with most of its daily papers available for sale or delivery. Until its closing in 1991 the Hudson Dispatch, a morning daily newspaper that once had a circulation of 39,132, was based in Union City for 117 years.[340] It later relaunched as a free bilingual weekly.[341] Local, county, and regional news is covered by the daily Jersey Journal. The Union City Reporter was part of the Hudson Reporter group of local weeklies[342] until that chain closed in January 2023.[343] Other publications that cover local news include the River View Observer[344] and El Especialito, which is as of 2016, is headquartered in Union City.[345]

Among the films set or shot in the city are Union City (1980) (which was released in conjunction with the Blondie song "Union City Blue"), Out of the Darkness (1985),[346] Bloodhounds of Broadway (1989),[111][346][347] and Far from Heaven (2002).[346] The low-budget film directed by former Guttenberg mayor Peter Lavilla, Oak Hill, features local institutions including Union City's Palisades Emergency Residence Corporation homeless shelter and a synagogue in North Bergen.[348]

 
Artwork at the Union City Multi-Arts Festival

In the late 2000s, Union City, West New York, Weehawken and North Bergen came to be dubbed collectively as "NoHu", a North Hudson haven for local performing and fine artists, many of whom are immigrants from Latin America and other countries, in part due to lower housing costs compared to those in nearby art havens such as Hoboken, Jersey City and Manhattan.[349] The Union City area is a major training ground for actors in the county.[350] In September 2008, Union City held its first annual month-long Art Month, which originated with the September 2006 "Celebrate Art" show at St. John's Episcopal Church. Art Month includes events such as the Union City Arts and Crafts Festival, held the second week of every September. Group shows are also arranged by organizations such as La Ola,[349][351] a group formed to help unite local artists, and Federación Mercantil, which provides support to artists in the form of bank loan assistance and help avoiding foreclosure, and puts on an annual show of work by Spanish-American painters.[349] Another is the Union City Artists Collective, founded in 2007 by a group of artists and public officials that includes painter/sculptor Amado Mora,[352] who was named Union City's first Art Curator,[353] responsible for the Union City Art Gallery at City Hall.[352] Locations in which artists reside or have put on tours or shows include the Yardley Building, a former Yardley of London soap factory on Palisade Avenue that overlooks Hoboken, and the old R.H. Simon Silk Mill on 39th Street, which has been dubbed the "Union Hill Arts Building". The Park Performing Arts Center is also a popular arts venue in the city, as it houses Hudson Theatre Works, a theatre company founded in 2011.[350] It was also the first venue for the Park Players, an acting troupe founded in the early 1980s by local teacher Joseph Conklin,[354] and formerly hosted the NoHu Visions show, and the annual two-day Multi-Arts Festival[349][355] until 2010, when the latter moved to Union City High School, which houses the Union City Performing Arts Center.[356][357]

In 2009 poet/musician Graciela Barreto was named Union City's first poet laureate.[356] By April 2010 she was succeeded by Ben Figueroa.[358] During the late 2000s the city also named a City Historian and organized a Historical Committee.[353]

The 2010 independent gothic horror art film, Vampire in Union City, was filmed entirely in Union City, and was directed by entertainer and Union City Commissioner Lucio Fernandez. Produced by MeLu Films, it premiered on September 3, 2010 at the Summit Theater, marking the city's first movie premiere,[359][360] and the 2010 Celebrate Art Month, which included art exhibits, jazz, dance and opera performances, a film festival, and the public release of Francisco Rivadeneira's book, Los Amos del Planeta, Tomo II.[361][362]

On April 20, 2018, Union City's Performing Arts Center hosted the official premiere of Union City, U.S.A., a documentary on the city's history and culture. It was written, directed, and produced by Fernandez, who began research for the film in 2008 with city historian Gerard Karabin, conducting interviews with numerous past and current residents of the city. The film was edited by director of photography Mauro De Trizio, and narrated by Tom Colavito.[363][364]

The Multi-Arts Festival is an exhibition of artwork, musical performances and workshops held every May since 1981. Students and alumni of the various schools of Union City display their artwork, put on musical performances, and put on free demonstrations of sculpture, portraiture and caricature for attendees. It was created by Agnes Dauerman, a Union Hill High School art teacher, who coordinated the program for 25 years before she retired in 2005.[355] The Union City Museum of Art, the Union City Police Museum, the Union City Art Gallery and Concert Hall and the Union City Museum of History are housed in the William V. Musto Cultural Center, formerly the 15th Street library.[307][312] The Musto Center hosts a number of events, including various concerts and theatrical performances.[365] Specific events it has hosted include the Union City Artist Awards,[366] the NoHu International Film Festival,[367] and Artists Assemble!, a comics festival first held in February 2013.[368]

The first annual Union City International Film Festival began in December 2010, with the short film X, which was written and directed by Josh Brolin, as the opening film.[369][370][371] Later that month Union City unveiled the Union City Plaza of the Arts on Bergenline Avenue between 30th and 31st Streets, as a venue for artists to congregate and showcase their work. The location, which sees copious traffic to and from Midtown Manhattan, was chosen in order to showcase the city in a positive light to commuters, and so that the plaza could represent fine arts alongside the adjacent Pietro Di Donato Plaza and Celia Cruz Plaza, which represent literature and music, respectively.[372][373]

On June 11, 2014, the city's Board of Commissioners passed a resolution adopting "Union City" as the city's official song. The song was composed by Union City native Phil Gallo and Weehawken native Mike Boldt, and performed by the group Dez Manku, which features Boldt and Gallo. An accompanying music video was produced and edited by Mauro DeTrizio for Action Productions, and released on YouTube and iTunes. The guitar-driven rock song's lyrics make references to local streets such as Bergenline Avenue and Monastery Place, and landmarks such as the Roosevelt Theater, the Hudson Burlesque, and the former high schools, Emerson and Union Hill.[353]

Notable people Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

^ a: Nearby Guttenberg, New Jersey is more densely populated, but is incorporated as a town (not as a city).

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References Edit

  • Ryman, Ella-May. History of West Hoboken and Union Hill (1965)
  • Primont, Daniel A.; Fiedler, William G.; and Zuccaro, Fred. The Historical Background of Union City: A Monograph, Prepared for the Commemoration of New Jersey's Tercentenary 1664–1964 and As a Teaching Material and Aid in the Union City School System by (1964)
  • The City of Union City (A 1996 calendar)

External links Edit

union, city, jersey, confused, with, union, township, union, county, union, township, hunterdon, county, jersey, union, city, city, northern, part, hudson, county, state, jersey, 2020, united, states, census, city, state, 18th, most, populous, municipality, wi. Not to be confused with Union Township Union County or Union Township Hunterdon County New Jersey Union City is a city in the northern part of Hudson County in the U S state of New Jersey As of the 2020 United States census the city was the state s 18th most populous municipality 23 with a population of 68 589 12 13 an increase of 2 134 3 2 from the 2010 census count of 66 455 24 25 which in turn had reflected a decline of 633 0 9 from the 67 088 counted in the 2000 census 26 As of the 2010 Census among cities with a population of more than 50 000 it was the most densely populated city in the United States a with a density of 54 138 per square mile of land 27 28 The Census Bureau s Population Estimates Program calculated that the city s population was 65 366 in 2022 12 ranking the city the 590th most populous in the country 14 Union City New JerseyCityCity of Union City 1 William V Musto Cultural CenterSealNickname s Embroidery Capital of the United States Havana on the Hudson 2 Little Havana on the Hudson 3 Location of Union City in Hudson County highlighted in red left Inset map Location of Hudson County in New Jersey highlighted in orange right Census Bureau map of Union City New JerseyUnion CityLocation in Hudson CountyShow map of Hudson County New JerseyUnion CityLocation in New JerseyShow map of New JerseyUnion CityLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 40 46 03 N 74 01 56 W 40 767425 N 74 032279 W 40 767425 74 032279 4 5 Country United StatesState New JerseyCountyHudsonIncorporatedJune 1 1925Government 9 TypeWalsh Act BodyBoard of Commissioners MayorBrian P Stack term ends May 18 2026 6 7 Municipal clerkHilda I Rosario acting 8 Area 10 Total1 29 sq mi 3 33 km2 Land1 29 sq mi 3 33 km2 Water0 00 sq mi 0 00 km2 0 00 Rank472nd of 565 in state10th of 12 in county 4 Elevation 11 190 ft 60 m Population 2020 12 13 Total68 589 Estimate 2022 12 14 15 65 366 Rank590th in country as of 2022 14 18th of 565 in state3rd of 12 in county 16 Density53 293 7 sq mi 20 576 8 km2 Rank2nd of 565 in state2nd of 12 in county 16 Time zoneUTC 05 00 EST Summer DST UTC 04 00 Eastern EDT ZIP Code07087 17 18 Area code s 201 19 FIPS code3401774630 4 20 21 GNIS feature ID0885424 4 22 Websitewww wbr ucnj wbr comUnion City was incorporated as a city by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on June 1 1925 with the merger of Union Hill and West Hoboken Township 29 The city s name references the merger of those two municipalities 30 Two major waves of immigration first of German speakers and then of Spanish speakers greatly influenced the development and character of Union City Its two nicknames Embroidery Capital of the United States and Havana on the Hudson reflect important aspects of that history Thousands visit Union City each year to see the nation s longest running passion play 31 Union City is where Mallomars were first sold and the site of the first lunch wagon built by Jerry and Daniel O Mahoney and John Hanf which helped spark New Jersey s golden age of diner manufacturing for which the state is colloquially referred to by author Richard J S Gutman as the diner capital of the world 32 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history and civic boundaries 1 2 Immigration and industry 1 3 Development in the 21st century 2 Geography 3 Demographics 3 1 20th century 3 2 2000 Census 3 3 2010 Census 3 4 Demographics in the 2010s and 2020s 3 5 The Latino and Hispanic community 4 Parks and recreation 5 Commerce and economy 6 Government 6 1 Local government 6 2 Federal state and county representation 6 3 Political demographics 6 4 Public safety 7 Transportation 7 1 Roads and highways 7 2 Public transportation 8 Education 8 1 Public schools 8 2 Private schools 9 Notable landmarks 10 Media and culture 11 Notable people 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditEarly history and civic boundaries Edit nbsp Sign marking Union City s southern border with Jersey CityThe area of what is today Union City was originally inhabited by the Munsee speaking branch of Lenape Native Americans 33 34 35 36 37 38 who wandered into the vast woodland area encountered by Henry Hudson during the voyages he conducted from 1609 to 1610 for the Dutch who later claimed the area which included the future New York City and named it New Netherland The portion of that land that included the future Hudson County was purchased from members of the Hackensack tribe of the Lenni Lenape and became part of Pavonia New Netherland 39 The relationship between the early Dutch settlers and Native Americans was marked by frequent armed conflict over land claims In 1658 by New Netherland colony Director General Peter Stuyvesant re purchased the territory 40 41 The boundaries of the purchase are described in the deed preserved in the New York State Archives as well as the medium of exchange 80 fathoms of wampum 20 fathoms of cloth 12 brass kettles 6 guns one double brass kettle 2 blankets and one half barrel of strong beer 42 In 1660 he ordered the building of a fortified village at Bergen to protect the area 43 It was the first permanent European settlement in New Jersey located in what is now the Journal Square area of Jersey City near Academy Street 41 44 In 1664 the British captured New Netherland from the Dutch at which point the boundaries of Bergen Township encompassed what is now known as Hudson County North of this was the unpopulated Bergen Woods which would later be claimed by settlers after whom a number of Union City streets today are named 41 including Sipp Street 45 46 47 Brown Street 46 48 Golden Lane 48 Tournade Street and Kerrigan Avenue 49 which is named after J Kerrigan the owner of Kerrigan Farm who donated the land for Saint Michael s Monastery 49 50 The area that would one day be Union City however remained sparsely populated until the early 19th century The British granted Bergen a new town charter in 1668 In 1682 they created Bergen County which was named to honor their Dutch predecessors That county comprised all of present day Hudson Bergen and Passaic counties Sparsely inhabited during the 17th and 18th centuries the southeast section of Bergen County had grown by the early 19th century to the point where it was deemed necessary to designate it a separate county The New Jersey legislature created Hudson County in 1840 and in 1843 it was divided into two townships Old Bergen Township which eventually became Jersey City and North Bergen Township which was gradually separated into Hudson County s present day municipalities Hoboken in 1849 Weehawken and Guttenberg in 1859 and West Hoboken and Union Township 29 41 West Hoboken was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on February 28 1861 from portions of North Bergen Township The township was reincorporated on April 6 1871 and again on March 27 1874 Portions of the township were ceded to Weehawken in 1879 29 On June 28 1884 West Hoboken was reincorporated as a town based on an ordinance passed nine days earlier The town was reincorporated on April 24 1888 based on the results of a referendum passed 12 days earlier 29 Union Township or simply Union 48 49 51 was formed in 1864 29 through the merger of a number of villages such as Dalleytown Buck s Corners and Cox s Corners The largest of these villages Union Hill became the colloquial name for the merged town of Union itself 52 The northern section of Union Township was later incorporated as West New York in 1898 41 Union City was incorporated on June 1 1925 by merging the two towns of West Hoboken and Union Hill 29 33 The name of one of the city s schools Union Hill Middle School recalls the former town 53 Immigration and industry Edit nbsp Embroidery and lace exhibit at Union City s Park Performing Arts CenterIn the 18th century Dutch and English merchants first settled the area Later German immigrants immigrated from Manhattan Irish Polish Armenians Syrians Eastern European Jews and Italians followed 54 In 1851 Germans moved across the Hudson River from New York City in search of affordable land and open space During the American Civil War a military installation Camp Yates covered an area now bounded by Bergenline and Palisade Avenues from 22nd to 32nd Street Germans began to settle what would become Union Hill in 1851 41 and some descendants of the immigrants of this period live in the city today 44 Although the area s diversity was represented by the more than 19 nationalities that made their home in the Dardanelles a five block area of Central Avenue from 23rd Street to 27th Street 41 from the mid 19th century to the early 20th century German Americans and Dutch dominated the area Along with Swiss and Austrian immigrants they founded the European style lace making industries for which they were famous The introduction of Schiffli lace machines in Hudson County 55 made Union City the embroidery capital of the United States The trademark of that industry is on the Union City Seal 50 56 57 though foreign competition and austere prevailing fashions led to the decline of embroidery and other industries in the area by the late 1990s 58 In May 2014 the city dedicated Embroidery Square at New York Avenue to commemorate that history 59 As immigration to the area progressed throughout the 19th and 20th centuries Belgians Armenians Greeks Chinese Jews and Russians found a home in the area 41 though its domination by Germans by the turn of the 20th century was reflected in the fact that the minutes of town meetings were recorded in German 60 By this time the area was witnessing a period of urbanization as an extensive trolley system was developed by the North Hudson County Railway spurred by both electrification in 1890 and the arrival of Irish and Italian immigrants which dominated the city until the late 1960s Successive waves of immigrants from Eastern Europe the Near East and Latin America contributed to the embroidery industry in subsequent years The Cultural Thread El Hilo an exhibit highlighting this industry is on display at Union City s Park Performing Arts Center 61 The town was famous for being the home of the rowdy Hudson Burlesque 3 62 Theaters in Union City featured vaudeville and burlesque and acts including Fred Astaire and Harry Houdini 33 63 It was at a vaudeville theater in Union City that comedian George Burns would meet his longtime partner and wife Gracie Allen 64 Union City was also for a time the home to the headquarters of sports publisher Joe Weider 65 Weider s empire included a Weider Barbell store in Union City whose patrons included body builder Dave Draper 66 The first Cubans immigrated to Union City from New York City in the late 1940s having been attracted to the city in search of work after hearing of its famed embroidery factories 54 67 68 A majority of these Cubans hailed from small towns or cities particularly Villa Clara Province in central Cuba 54 67 After World War II veterans relocated to Bergen County causing a short lived decline in the population 69 By the 1960s the city was predominantly an old line Italian enclave 3 70 This began to change when large numbers of Cubans emigrated to the city after Fidel Castro took power in 1962 This made Union City for many years the city with the largest Cuban population in the U S after Miami hence its nickname Little Havana on the Hudson 3 69 71 Following the Mariel boatlift in 1980 10 000 Cubans settled in New Jersey leading to a second wave of Cubans to Union City which totaled 15 000 by 1994 57 72 73 The city as well as neighboring towns such as West New York experienced a profound cultural impact as a result of this as seen in such aspects of local culture as its cuisine 74 fashion music entertainment and cigar making 3 75 76 77 78 Amid a redevelopment boom in the early 1960s The Troy Towers a 22 story twin tower luxury apartment complex was completed in 1966 on the edge of the Palisades cliffs 79 on Mountain Road 80 at 19th Street at the former site of the Abbey Inn just north of where a motorized vehicle elevator and a staircase called the Lossburg Steps were located The former was an angled ramp originally built for horse drawn carriages which along with the steps connected to Hackensack Plank Road beneath the cliffs 80 in the Shades section of Weehawken 81 According to the Hudson County Multiple Listing service between 2016 and 2018 the median list price of residential properties on the market in Union City fluctuated between 345 000 and 509 000 The most expensive home on the market in May 2018 was a four family building on sale for 1 6 million while the lowest was a studio apartment in Troy Towers for 148 000 A typical residential property was a six bedroom three family house in need of updating listed at 568 000 79 Development in the 21st century Edit nbsp The name of the city s first high rise condominium tower the Thread invokes its historical association with the embroidery industry Since its inception in 2000 the Cuban Day Parade of New Jersey became a major annual event in North Hudson beginning in North Bergen and traveling south to its end in Union City 82 83 84 Union City has historically been a family oriented city predominantly made up of brownstones two family homes and locally owned businesses 85 Another wave of modestly sized residences began development approximately in 2003 spurred by similar development in neighboring Hoboken and the city s attempt to attract developers to what had historically been a town unfriendly to them according to Mayor Brian P Stack Through approval of varied construction projects to address the needs of residents of different incomes improved rent control laws and community input on such issues 85 this Hobokenization resulted in positive comparisons with the redeveloped Hoboken of the mid to late 1990s with new restaurants bars and art galleries cited as evidence of renewal The city recorded 192 million in new construction in 2007 and 600 certificates of occupancy with 500 700 projected for 2008 2009 compared with previous years in which 50 certificates was considered a high amount 86 This development continued for several years reaching a milestone in 2008 with the completion of Union City s first high rise condominium tower The Thread whose name evokes the city s historical association with the embroidery industry 87 88 89 90 Other such buildings followed such as the Altessa 89 Park City Grand 91 and Hoboken Heights 92 In 2015 the AARP ranked Union City 6 on its list of the best small cities to live in 93 Geography EditAccording to the United States Census Bureau the city had a total area of 1 29 square miles 3 33 km2 all of which was land 4 5 Part of the New York metropolitan area 94 it is one of the municipalities which comprise North Hudson Located atop the ridge of the lower Hudson Palisades just south of the highest point in the county 95 many of its streets offer glimpses and views of the surrounding municipalities the New York City skyline and the New Jersey Meadowlands The city is bisected by New Jersey Route 495 a vehicular cut built in conjunction with the Lincoln Tunnel Soon after its construction many street names were abandoned in favor of numbering in most of North Hudson starting at 2nd Street just north of Paterson Plank Road which runs through the city s only major park and creates its border with Jersey City 49th Street is the northern boundary with West New York Apart from a small section between Bergen Turnpike and Weehawken Cemetery Kennedy Boulevard a major north south thoroughfare creates the western border with North Bergen A former colonial road and previous border between the merged municipalities takes three names as it diagonally crosses the city s urban grid Hackensack Plank Road 32nd Street and Bergen Turnpike Most of the city north of the street formerly Union Hill shares its eastern border along Park Avenue with Weehawken The southern section of the city formerly West Hoboken is indeed west of Hoboken 29 which it overlooks and is connected by the road which creates their shared border the Wing Viaduct 96 The city borders the Hudson County municipalities of Hoboken Jersey City North Bergen Weehawken and West New York 97 98 99 Unincorporated communities localities and place names located partially or completely within the city include Union Hill and West Hoboken 100 Demographics EditHistorical population CensusPop Note 18704 640 18805 84926 1 189010 64382 0 190015 18742 7 191021 02338 4 192020 651 1 8 193058 659184 0 194056 173 4 2 195055 537 1 1 196052 180 6 0 197057 3059 8 198055 593 3 0 199058 0124 4 200067 08815 6 201066 455 0 9 202068 5893 2 2022 est 65 366 12 14 15 4 7 Population sources 1870 1920 101 1870 102 103 1880 1890 104 1890 1910 105 1870 1930 106 1940 2000 107 2000 108 109 2010 24 25 2020 12 13 20th century Edit According to the 1910 United States census the population of West Hoboken and Union Hill the two towns that would later merge to form Union City was 37 000 and 23 000 respectively 110 By the late 20th century Union City emerged as a working class community 111 One of Hudson County s three homeless shelters Palisades Emergency Residence Corp PERC is located in Union City 112 The PERC facility which includes a soup kitchen food pantry and 40 bed shelter on 37th Street lost 100 000 in federal funding in 2011 and in January and August 2012 aided a record breaking number of guests 113 2000 Census Edit According to the 2000 United States Census Union City had a population of 67 088 making it the second most populous municipality in the county after Jersey City 114 115 The population density was 52 977 8 inhabitants per square mile 20 454 8 km2 in 2000 approximately twice as high as New York City as a whole but less than Manhattan alone Union City is the most densely populated city in the United States 116 117 though neighboring Guttenberg legally incorporated as a town was more densely populated 118 In 2000 the median age was 32 years For every 100 females there were 100 6 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 98 8 males 108 109 As of the 2000 Census 58 7 of the population was foreign born and 21 6 of residents were naturalized citizens while 13 9 only speak English at home whereas 80 7 reported that they spoke Spanish at home 108 2010 Census Edit Union City s 2010 population of 66 455 made it the state s 17th largest municipality having seen a decline of 633 residents 0 9 from its population of 67 088 in the 2000 census when it was the state s 16th most populous municipality 119 114 115 As of 2010 update it was still the country s second most densely populated incorporated municipality after the nearby Town of Guttenberg and the most densely populated U S city 28 120 The 2010 United States census counted 66 455 people 22 814 households and 15 514 families in the city The population density was 51 810 1 per square mile 20 004 0 km2 There were 24 931 housing units at an average density of 19 436 9 per square mile 7 504 6 km2 The racial makeup was 58 01 38 549 White 5 25 3 487 Black or African American 1 23 819 Native American 2 39 1 587 Asian 0 05 33 Pacific Islander 27 43 18 231 from other races and 5 64 3 749 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 84 71 56 291 of the population 24 As of 2010 update the city had the highest percentage of Hispanic residents in any municipality in New Jersey 121 Of the 22 814 households 34 2 had children under the age of 18 36 7 were married couples living together 21 8 had a female householder with no husband present and 32 0 were non families Of all households 23 8 were made up of individuals and 7 5 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 88 and the average family size was 3 39 24 23 7 of the population were under the age of 18 10 6 from 18 to 24 32 4 from 25 to 44 22 8 from 45 to 64 and 10 5 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 33 9 years For every 100 females the population had 100 4 males For every 100 females ages 18 and older there were 98 3 males 24 The Census Bureau s 2006 2010 American Community Survey showed that in 2010 inflation adjusted dollars median household income was 40 173 with a margin of error of 1 946 and the median family income was 43 101 2 185 Males had a median income of 31 987 1 696 versus 25 010 1 517 for females The per capita income for the city was 18 506 719 About 17 0 of families and 20 0 of the population were below the poverty line including 29 4 of those under age 18 and 20 8 of those age 65 or over 122 Hispanics remained the dominant ethnic group in the city and their percentage of the population increased from 82 3 in the 2000 Census to 84 7 in the 2010 Census Non Hispanic whites made up 15 3 of the city s population in 2010 up from 13 3 in the 2000 Census Blacks made up 5 2 of the city s population in 2010 up from 3 3 in the 2000 Census The rest of the racial makeup of the city was 0 70 Native American 2 15 Asian 0 08 Pacific Islander 28 19 from other races and 6 87 from two or more races 108 109 Though Native Americans comprise less than 1 of the city s population they doubled between the 2000 and 2010 Census and combined with West New York s Native Americans comprise 38 of the county s Native American population 115 Spanish was spoken at home by more than half of the residents of Union City according to U S Census Bureau data released in 2017 123 Demographics in the 2010s and 2020s Edit As of May 2017 the age breakdown of the city was as follows 22 5 of residents were under the age of 18 of which 6 6 were under the age of five and 10 9 who were 65 years of age or older 124 In 2019 the median age was 37 8 years 125 As of July 2019 Union City s employment breakdown was 7 8 Construction 9 6 Manufacturing 4 4 Wholesale trade 12 3 Retail 9 4 Transportation and warehousing 0 4 Utilities 1 8 Information 3 7 Finance and insurance 2 1 Real estate rental leasing 4 1 Professional scientific technical services 8 2 Administrative support waste management 5 2 Educational services 10 1 Health care and social assistance 2 1 Arts entertainment recreation 11 0 Accommodation food services 5 7 Other services and 2 1 Public administration 124 As of July 2019 71 5 of residents age 25 or older had completed high school or a higher level of education and 21 6 had a Bachelor s degree or higher degree of education 126 As of the 2000 Census 17 of the city s employed residents work in New York City 127 Of Union City s 24 931 housing units in 2010 up 1 190 from the 2000 Census 2 117 of them or 8 were vacant twice the vacancy rate of the 2000 Census 115 As of May 2017 the average income of a Union City resident was 19 834 a year and the compared to a national average of 28 555 a year The median household income of a Union City resident is 40 939 a year compared to the national median of is 53 482 124 By July 2019 the median household income was 48 992 126 In the 2000s the Brookings Institution studies ranked Union City among the 92 most economically depressed localities in the United States with 18 1 of the population and 27 5 of the children falling below the poverty line In 1997 the New Jersey Municipal Distress Index which is based on social economic fiscal and physical indicators ranked Union City as the third most distressed community in the state 67 By July 2019 19 6 of residents lived in poverty 126 The Latino and Hispanic community Edit nbsp Revelers during the 2010 Cuban Day Parade on Bergenline AvenueImmigration from Cuba to Union City began slowly in the late 1940s and early 1950s when jobs in the local embroidery and textile factories were abundant 128 By 1955 the city s Cuban population was large enough that Fidel Castro visited Union City to raise money for his revolt against Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista though a speech he gave one night at a bar on 26th Street Le Molino Rojo The Red Mill led to a brawl that resulted in Castro s arrest 129 130 131 Following the Cuban Revolution of 1959 large numbers of Cubans in professional occupations emigrated to Union City 128 resulting in Union City s status as the nation s second largest Cuban population behind Miami Florida leading to the nickname Little Havana on the Hudson 69 72 78 Aspects of the enclave are explored in the 2009 publication The Cubans of Union City Immigrants and Exiles in a New Jersey Community 132 In the ensuing decades Cuban residents spread out to other communities of North Hudson County West New York at 19 64 now has the highest percentage of Cubans in New Jersey with Union City in second place with 15 35 These two municipalities have the highest Cuban population percentage in the United States outside of Florida 133 Moreover Union City still boasts the largest Hispanic population percentage in New Jersey at 84 7 by the 2010 Census 115 By the early 2000s Union City had become a mix of the Latin and Asian diasporas with Dominicans cited as the fastest growing ethnic group and other groups including Colombians Ecuadoreans and Salvadorans 134 Despite the decline in the size of the Cuban population the major New York City television news outlets will often journey to Union City to interview citizens when developments in Cuba United States relations occur 78 129 As of the 2000 Census 5 94 of Union City s residents identified themselves as being of Ecuadorian ancestry which was the third highest of any municipality in New Jersey and the seventh highest percentage of Ecuadorian people in any place in the United States with 1 000 or more residents identifying their ancestry 135 That number increased to 12 6 according to December 2017 Census figures 136 Parks and recreation EditThe Hudson County Park System maintains Washington Park which covers 22 acre 8 9 ha straddling the border of the city and Jersey City Heights 137 The idea for the park likely originated in the late 1880s or early 1890s The two sets of residents most instrumental in its creation were the Suckley and Allen families The Suckleys owned the land on which the park was built for generations which came to be called the Suckley estate The family however did not pay much attention to the plot which was just a flat expanse of dirt and eventually came to be used to host visiting carnivals circuses and Wild West shows including Buffalo Bill s Wild West show which put on its performance there in 1908 when the plot was called the North Street Grounds On January 12 1909 a joint committee representing various Hudson County groups was formed to petition the relevant government agencies such as the Hudson County freeholders for the money needed to purchase the Suckley estate and other smaller properties that were part of the site Assemblyman William R Davidson argued at the committee s first meeting that the 14th Street viaduct being constructed at the time in Hoboken which the park site overlooked would be a significant transportation corridor which would increase property values The Suckley Park Association was founded that same year for the purpose of turning the plot into a park Its co founder and first president was doctor and civic leader Ulamor Allen who has been called the Father of Washington Park On June 8 that year Allen addressed the Hudson County Park Commission to argue for the park joining with others who lobbied for the purchase the Curries Woods site for a county park which would later straddle the Bayonne Jersey City border The County Park Commission agreed that both border line parks deserved to be developed though bureaucratic red tape would delay the endeavor for years In July 1914 the Suckley Park Association asked the Park Commission to requisition the County Board of Freeholders for 500 000 for the park The following month the commissioners passed a resolution asking the Freeholders to borrow that money In 1917 the county reached an agreement to purchase the land from the property owners for a total of 562 435 The park took its current shape in the 1930s partially as a result of the input of the Works Progress Administration 138 Reservoir Park located around Hackensack Reservoir on Palisade Avenue between 20th and 22nd Streets opened on September 25 2015 The passive park at the city border in Weehawken was created on the 14 4 acre 5 8 ha site of a reservoir that had been owned by United Water but had not been used since 1996 139 140 Commerce and economy Edit nbsp Bergenline Avenue then and now Facing south toward 32nd Street c 1900 left and in 2010 right Originally Bergenline Avenue was the width of a cowpath and was not regarded as a business center Street car tracks were expected to be laid on Palisade Avenue where the Town Hall was located However an influential citizen named Henry Kohlmeier who had just built his residence on Palisade Avenue did not wish to be disturbed by the noise of the passing cars and proposed that the tracks be laid on Bergenline Avenue two blocks to the west and before those who would have objected to this became aware of this change the motion was approved 141 The continuous line of retail stores that appeared on Bergenline Avenue by the time the town of Union Hill was incorporated 142 made it not only the city s main commercial thoroughfare 50 54 but a major shopping thoroughfare for North Hudson County one of the leading shopping centers and commercial strips in Northern New Jersey 142 and the longest commercial avenue in the state 143 Among the Cuban Americans in the area it has earned the nickname La Avenida 68 Bergenline runs through not only the entire length of Union City from north to south but also through West New York Guttenberg and North Bergen Also known as the Miracle Mile Bergenline s largest concentration of retail and chain stores begins at the intersection of 32nd Street and continues north until 92nd Street in North Bergen and while it is a narrow one way southbound street throughout most of Union City it becomes a four lane two way street at 48th Street one block south of the town s northern boundary Bergenline Avenue is also used as the route for local parades such as the annual Memorial Day Parade 142 144 nbsp Transfer Station was once an interchange for trolleys and buses The trapezoidal building at 707 Summit Avenue was home to a bank and later the headquarters of Teamsters Local 560 when it was led by mobster Anthony Tony Pro Provenzano before being purchased in by the city in 2023 to convert into affordable housing 145 146 At Union City s southern end Bergenline is primarily a residential street with the shopping district concentrated at Summit Avenue and Transfer Station 142 144 so called because it was a transfer point for buses 147 and three trolley lines 32 A prominent landmark of Transfer Station is its five corner intersection of Summit Avenue Paterson Plank Road and 7th Street on which sits a five story trapezoid shaped brick building at 707 Summit Avenue originated in 1910 as the National Bank of North Hudson It later became the First National Bank of Union City By the 1960s it had become the headquarters of Teamsters Local 560 which was controlled by mobster Anthony Tony Pro Provenzano 145 146 a reported caporegime in the Genovese crime family and a top associate of Jimmy Hoffa 148 On July 30 1975 Hoffa intended to meet Provenzano Bloomfield Township a suburb of Detroit but Hoffa famously disappeared that afternoon According to Time Provenzano was seen fraternizing with local union members in Hoboken 149 although Provenzano according to the Associated Press told investigators that he was playing cards with Stephen Andretta in Union City New Jersey the day Hoffa disappeared 150 and denied having arranged any meeting with Hoffa 151 In 2023 when the building went on sale the city planned to purchase it for 3 1 million and convert it into 24 affordable housing units 145 Transfer Station was also the site in 1912 of the first lunch wagon built by Jerry and Daniel O Mahoney and John Hanf which was bought for 800 and operated by restaurant entrepreneur Michael Griffin who chose the location for its copious foot traffic The wagon helped spark New Jersey s so called golden age of diner manufacturing which in turn made the state the informal diner capital of the world In the decades that followed nearly all major U S diner manufacturers including Jerry O Mahoney Inc started in New Jersey 32 During World War II the area was a 24 hour hotspot for U S servicemen who patronized the dozens of nightclubs located there 147 In later decades Summit Avenue was not as busy a shopping area as upper Bergenline so the city implemented a series of improvements in 2009 to improve business there such as improved sidewalks landscaping and street lights from Seventh Street to 13th Street 144 In terms of business Union City is notable for being the location where Mallomars were first sold Nabisco sold them to a grocer in the southern half of the town when it was West Hoboken 152 Union City is one of several cities in Hudson County that contains a state established Urban Enterprise Zone UEZ under a program that was implemented in 1983 by the New Jersey Department of Commerce and Economic Development assist businesses and revitalize economically distressed communities in New Jersey 153 One of 32 zones covering 37 municipalities statewide Union City was selected in 1994 as one of a group of 10 zones added to participate in the program and one of four of those chosen based on a competition 154 In addition to other benefits to encourage employment and investment within the UEZ shoppers can take advantage of a reduced 3 3125 sales tax rate half of the 6 5 8 rate charged statewide at eligible merchants 155 Established in April 1995 the city s Urban Enterprise Zone status expires in April 2026 156 There are approximately 180 UEZ certified businesses in the city which includes Bergenline Avenue from 49th to 15th Streets 32nd Street from Bergenline Avenue to Kennedy Boulevard Summit Avenue from 18th to Fifth Street and Paterson Plank Road from Fifth to Seventh Streets In addition to providing an incentive for shoppers and for business owners to invest in the area without raising taxes up to 30 000 in annual UEZ revenue is also used for area upkeep and safety projects marketing campaigns and holiday decorations 143 According to the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics Union City s unemployment rate as of September 2009 was 15 the highest in the state compared with the lowest Hoboken at 6 3 and a statewide rate of 9 8 157 By 2018 the city s unemployment rate was 4 5 compared to a rate of 3 9 in Hudson County 158 Government EditLocal government Edit nbsp City HallUnion City s City Hall is located at 3715 Palisade Avenue The oldest municipal building in North Hudson it was built in the 1890s as the town hall for Union Hill Prior to the 1914 opening of Union Hill High School classes were also held in the building After the 1925 consolidation of West Hoboken and Union Hill into Union City the town hall for the former was converted into the new fire headquarters for the city It also served as the second police precinct for many years 159 The governing body is comprised of a five member Board of Commissioners as per the city s Walsh Act form of government which has been in place since 1930 The members of the commission are elected at large on a non partisan basis in the May municipal election At a reorganization meeting held after the election each commissioner is assigned a department to oversee The mayor of Union City also serves as a commissioner 9 160 161 The city is one of 30 municipalities of the 564 statewide that use this form 162 nbsp Mayor Brian P Stack also serves as state senator As of 2023 update the mayor of Union City is Brian P Stack 6 who became mayor in 2000 after a recall election forced the resignation of then mayor Raul Rudy Garcia 163 The five members of the Union City Board of Commissioners serve in both administrative and legislative capacities with each commissioner acting as the director of one of the five major departments of the city administering the daily operations of a designated department The five commissioners and their departmental assignments are Mayor Brian P Stack Commissioner of Public Safety Lucio P Fernandez Commissioner of Public Affairs Wendy A Grullon Commissioner of Public Works Maryury A Martinetti Commissioner of Revenue and Finance and Celin J Valdivia Commissioner of Parks and Public Property all serving concurrent terms ending on May 15 2026 164 165 166 167 168 The budget adopted by the city in 2021 was 151 million which remained balanced during the COVID 19 pandemic 169 Federal state and county representation Edit Union City is located in the 8th Congressional District 170 and is part of New Jersey s 33rd state legislative district 171 172 173 For the 118th United States Congress New Jersey s Eighth Congressional District is represented by Rob Menendez D Jersey City 174 175 New Jersey is represented in the United States Senate by Democrats Cory Booker Newark term ends 2027 176 and Bob Menendez Englewood Cliffs term ends 2025 177 178 For the 2022 2023 session the 33rd Legislative District of the New Jersey Legislature is represented in the State Senate by Brian P Stack D Union City and in the General Assembly by Annette Chaparro D Hoboken and Raj Mukherji D Jersey City 179 Hudson County is governed by a directly elected County Executive and by a Board of County Commissioners which serves as the county s legislative body As of 2023 update Hudson County s County Executive is Thomas A DeGise D Jersey City whose term of office expires December 31 2023 180 Hudson County s Commissioners all serving concurrent terms that end on December 31 2023 are 181 182 183 District 1 184 Kenneth Kopacz Bayonne and parts of Jersey City 185 District 2 186 William O Dea western parts of Jersey City 187 District 3 188 Jerry Walker southeastern parts of Jersey City 189 District 4 190 Yraida Aponte Lipski northeastern parts of Jersey City 191 District 5 192 Vice Chair Anthony L Romano Jr Hoboken and adjoining parts of Jersey City 193 District 6 194 Fanny J Cedeno Union City 195 District 7 196 Caridad Rodriguez West New York Weehawken Guttenberg 197 District 8 198 Chair Anthony P Vainieri Jr North Bergen West New York Secaucus 199 and District 9 200 Albert Cifelli East Newark Harrison Kearny and Secaucus 201 Hudson County s constitutional officers are Clerk E Junior Maldonado D Jersey City 2027 202 203 Sheriff Frank Schillari D Jersey City 2025 204 Surrogate Tilo E Rivas D Jersey City 2024 205 206 and Register Jeffery Dublin D Jersey City 2024 207 206 Political demographics Edit As of March 2011 there were a total of 28 503 registered voters in Union City of which 18 589 65 2 were registered as Democrats 1 839 6 5 were registered as Republicans and 8 062 28 3 were registered as Unaffiliated There were 13 voters registered to other parties 208 In the 2012 presidential election Democrat Barack Obama received 82 1 of the vote 14 569 cast ahead of Republican Mitt Romney with 17 2 3 050 votes and other candidates with 0 8 134 votes among the 17 893 ballots cast by the city s 30 841 registered voters 140 ballots were spoiled for a turnout of 58 0 209 210 In the 2008 presidential election Democrat Barack Obama received 74 6 of the vote 13 657 cast ahead of Republican John McCain with 23 9 4 366 votes and other candidates with 0 8 150 votes among the 18 305 ballots cast by the city s 32 030 registered voters for a turnout of 57 1 211 In the 2004 presidential election Democrat John Kerry received 64 8 of the vote here 10 894 ballots cast outpolling Republican George W Bush with 32 0 5 375 votes and other candidates with 0 3 90 votes among the 16 811 ballots cast by the city s 27 727 registered voters for a turnout percentage of 60 6 212 In the 2013 gubernatorial election Republican Chris Christie received 58 1 of the vote 6 653 cast ahead of Democrat Barbara Buono with 40 6 4 651 votes and other candidates with 1 3 148 votes among the 12 583 ballots cast by the city s 31 515 registered voters 1 131 ballots were spoiled for a turnout of 39 9 213 214 In the 2009 gubernatorial election Democrat Jon Corzine received 76 8 of the vote here 8 611 ballots cast ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 20 2 2 265 votes Independent Chris Daggett with 1 4 152 votes and other candidates with 0 8 89 votes among the 11 218 ballots cast by the city s 27 373 registered voters yielding a 41 0 turnout 215 Public safety Edit The Union City Police Department consists of over 200 officers 216 Union City s Chief of Police is Nichelle Luster the city s first female Police Chief who replaced former Chief Richard Molinari Luster had been a captain since 2013 when she became the first female to attain that position 217 Until 1999 the Union City Fire Department consisted of 100 firefighters and four fire stations 218 In January 1999 219 Union City and four other cities in North Hudson merged their fire departments into North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue The other municipalities include Guttenberg North Bergen Weehawken and West New York 220 Three of the NHRFR s fire stations are located in Union City 221 Battalion 1 Squad 2 Ladder 1 1600 New York Avenue Deputy 1 Engine 4 541 29th Street Battalion 2 Rescue 1 Squad 1 4300 Kennedy Boulevard 221 Transportation EditRoads and highways Edit nbsp View east along Route 495 in Union CityAs of 2010 update the city had a total of 41 67 miles 67 06 km of roadways of which 37 46 miles 60 29 km were maintained by the municipality 3 42 miles 5 50 km by Hudson County and 0 64 miles 1 03 km by the New Jersey Department of Transportation and 0 15 miles 0 24 km by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority 222 Several major roadways traverse Union City 223 New Jersey Route 495 is the most significant highway passing through connecting directly to the Lincoln Tunnel into New York City 224 To the west it connects with Interstate 95 the New Jersey Turnpike 225 U S Route 1 9 226 and New Jersey Route 3 227 228 County Route 505 also passes through the city 229 Within the city Bergenline Avenue and the marginal highway of Route 495 are major public transportation corridors 96 Public transportation Edit nbsp The Hudson Bergen Light Rail station on Bergenline Avenue at 48th StreetThe Bergenline Avenue station of the Hudson Bergen Light Rail is located at 49th Street near the city line with West New York and North Bergen 96 230 New Jersey Transit bus service transportation is available to points in Hudson Bergen and Passaic counties and to the Port Authority Bus Terminal in Midtown Manhattan Routes which stop in the city are the 111 121 123 124 125 127 129 154 156 159 144 190 and the 107 108 160 161 163 167 191 192 by passenger request for travel to the Port Authority Bus Terminal only and the 195 Saturdays only The George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal is served by the 181 Jersey City can be reached on the 22 82 83 84 85 86 88 and 89 routes 231 232 233 234 OurBus routes link Union City to Washington D C 235 Additional public transportation service is augmented by privately operated dollar vans that link Union City to various points throughout the New York metropolitan area 236 such as the Hudson County Courthouse Newport Mall 42nd Street in Manhattan and Paterson New Jersey 237 The minibuses locally known by their Spanish language name guagua 238 have come subject to greater scrutiny due to alleged safety issues 239 240 241 In 2021 Union City was among the municipalities in Hudson County that formally codified regulations governing the use of electric bicycles and scooters 169 Newark Liberty International Airport is located 12 5 miles 20 1 km south in Newark Elizabeth LaGuardia Airport in Queens New York is 12 3 miles 19 8 km away John F Kennedy Airport is also in Queens The Colombian airline Avianca operates a private bus service from to Union City and Elizabeth for passengers on Avianca flights departing from and arriving to JFK 242 Education Edit nbsp The city s Board of Education buildingThe student population was 9 730 as of November 2009 243 In 2021 its 14 public schools served 11 893 students 244 Historically Union City schools have ranked among the highest in Hudson County in reported incidents of violence compared to the size of the student population more than once most recently in a November 2009 report by the New Jersey Department of Education which annually records incidents of violence vandalism weapons and substance abuse or possession According to the report such incidents declined statewide between the 2006 2007 and the 2007 2008 school years but rose slightly in Hudson County with Union City schools having the second highest number of reported incidents behind the Jersey City Public Schools 243 University of California Berkeley Professor David L Kirp in his 2011 book Kids First and his 2013 book Improbable Scholars praised Union City s education system for bringing poor mostly immigrant kids three quarters of whom live in homes where only Spanish is spoken and a quarter of which are thought to be undocumented and fearful of deportation into the educational mainstream Kirp who spent a year in Union City examining its schools notes that while in the late 1970s Union City schools faced the threat of state takeover they now boast achievement scores that approximate the statewide average Kirp also observes that in 2011 Union City boasted a high school graduation rate of 89 5 percent roughly 10 percentage points higher than the national average and that in 2012 75 percent of Union City graduates enrolled in college with top students winning scholarships to the Ivy League Kirp singles out the city s practice of enrolling almost every 3 and 4 year old in kindergarten and the leadership of Union City High School principal John Bennetti for the positive educational atmosphere in that school 245 246 247 248 Public schools Edit nbsp Union City High SchoolThe Union City School District operates public schools in Union City serving students in pre kindergarten through twelfth grade The district is one of 31 former Abbott districts statewide that were established pursuant to the decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Abbott v Burke 249 which are now referred to as SDA Districts based on the requirement for the state to cover all costs for school building and renovation projects in these districts under the supervision of the New Jersey Schools Development Authority 250 251 As of the 2018 19 school year the district comprised of 14 schools had an enrollment of 13 768 students and 837 2 classroom teachers on an FTE basis for a student teacher ratio of 16 4 1 252 Schools in the district with 2018 19 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics 253 are Eugenio Maria de Hostos Center for Early Childhood Education 254 298 grades Pre K K 253 Thomas A Edison Elementary School 255 1 019 Pre K 6 253 Sara Gilmore Academy School 256 399 1 8 253 Henry Hudson Elementary School 257 367 Pre K 2 253 Jefferson Elementary School 258 329 Pre K 4 253 Colin Powell Elementary School 259 260 833 K 5 253 Theodore Roosevelt School 261 1 010 K 6 253 Veteran s Memorial Elementary School 262 606 Pre K 5 253 George Washington Elementary School 263 796 Pre K 6 253 Robert Waters Elementary School 264 1 084 Pre K 6 253 Emerson Middle School 265 1 023 6 8 253 Union Hill Middle School 266 885 7 8 253 Jose Marti STEM Academy 267 700 9 12 253 Union City High School 268 2 882 9 12 253 269 270 271 Union City Middle School 827 est 7 9 272 The city s single public high school Union City High School opened September 3 2009 273 and was built on the site of the former Roosevelt Stadium 274 The 178 million school whose signature feature is an athletic field on its second floor roof replaced the former Emerson High School and Union Hill High School which converted to middle schools 275 Hudson County Community College s 28 1 million North Hudson Higher Education Center opened in September 2011 The seven story 92 250 square foot 8 570 m2 Center is located on Kennedy Boulevard adjacent to the Bergenline Avenue Light Rail station It incorporates green technology such as photovoltaic electrical systems rainwater harvesting tanks daylight and occupancy sensors low flow fixtures and high efficiency mechanical equipment The NHHEC also houses offices for the Hudson County Career Development Center and the County Clerk 276 277 nbsp Mother Seton Interparochial School left and Miftaahul Uloom Academy a Pre K to 12th grade Islamic school right are both located on 15th Street Colin Powell Elementary School opened in September 2012 and was dedicated on February 7 2013 It is the seventh educational facility created over the course of a decade and the 14th school in the city 278 For the 2013 2014 school year students from Gilmore and Hudson Schools were relocated to Colin Powell so that the former schools both of which are over 100 years old could undergo renovations 279 The K 5 school which is located on New York Avenue and 15th Street was visited by its namesake former Secretary of State Colin Powell in June 2013 280 Woodrow Wilson School was awarded the Blue Ribbon School Award of Excellence by the United States Department of Education the highest award an American school can receive during the 2004 2005 school year 281 The Blue Ribbon School Award of Excellence was awarded again to Woodrow Wilson for the 2014 2015 school year 282 283 The Sarah M Gilmore Elementary School which is located on Kerrigan Avenue between 16th and 17th Streets opened in September 2017 The school which cost 29 million opened with 350 students 284 The city s newest school is Union City Middle School which began construction in September 2023 The 15th school in the city the six story 93 7 million project which is located at 518 36th Street between Kennedy Boulevard and Bergenline Avenue was conceived to ease overcrowding in the city s classrooms It will house students that otherwise would have attended Emerson and Union Hill Middle Schools as well as some ninth graders that would have otherwise attended Union City High School and enable the city to move all sixth graders into its elementary schools It is expected to open for the 2025 Fall semester Although it will be able to host 936 students the city will limit it to 827 Its specialized classrooms will include a robotics lab a hydroponics lab and a dance studio 272 Private schools Edit St Francis Academy is a K 8 Catholic school operated under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark 285 In September 2013 St Francis Academy was one of 15 schools in New Jersey to be recognized by the United States Department of Education as part of the National Blue Ribbon Schools Program an award called the most prestigious honor in the United States education system and which Education Secretary Arne Duncan described as honoring schools that represent examples of educational excellence 286 287 In the wake of declining enrollment and lingering financial issues Mother Seton Interparochial School which had been formed in 2006 from the merger of St Michael s and St Anthony of Padua and St Augustine s School were closed by the Newark Archdiocese after the 2019 20 school year and merged into Academy of St Joseph of the Palisades in West New York New Jersey 288 Other schools in Union City include two Islamic schools Miftaahul Uloom Academy 289 290 and Rising Star Academy 291 a Jewish school Mesivta Sanz 292 293 and Union City Daycare Program School 294 Notable landmarks Edit nbsp Hudson Presbyterian Church nbsp Jose Marti STEM Academy and Union City Public LibraryThe former Monastery and Church of Saint Michael the Archangel on West Street once the largest Roman Catholic church in Hudson County is the one landmark on the National Register of Historic Places in Union City 295 and one of several locations which have been designated by New Jersey Register of Historic Places 296 It is now known as the Hudson Presbyterian Church 297 In 2002 Jose Marti Middle School and the southern branch of the Union City Public Library were built on the southern side of the Monastery grounds on 18th Street They opened in 2004 298 299 When Union City High School opened in September 2009 the middle school converted to Jose Marti Freshman Academy to house most of town s ninth graders In 2019 that school converted again to Jose Marti STEM Academy in order to expand the city s STEM instructon 300 The Park Performing Arts Center was originally built in 1931 by the German congregation the Catholic parish of Holy Family Church and still owned by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark to house their cultural and educational programs Its outstanding feature is the Park Theater which seats 1 400 Incorporated in 1983 the non profit arts center presents works of local national and international artists as well as permanent and rotating exhibitions 301 Union City High School and Athletic Complex opened in September 2009 on the site of the former Roosevelt Stadium demolished in 2005 to make way for it The sports field is located on the second floor roof of the building which also houses the Union City Performing Arts Center and a community health center 302 303 Emerson Middle School was opened in April 1915 as West Hoboken High School and was home to the Bulldogs It was renamed Emerson High School for the writer Ralph Waldo Emerson when the two towns merged Located on New York Avenue at 18th Street the original building is connected with the gym building built in the 1980s by a second story enclosed bridge that runs over New York Avenue The school became the South campus of Union City High School in September 2008 before converting to a middle school in September 2009 with the opening of the new Union City High School proper The mascot of Union City was also changed to the Soaring Eagles Alumni of the school include DJ and music producer Erick Morillo 304 and former Green Bay Packers center Frank Winters 305 Union City is home to two Carnegie Libraries funded by the donations of steel magnate Andrew Carnegie Both are considered historically and architecturally significant by the city 306 The first was built in 1903 by the Cranwell family builders who were active in the construction of many of the city s buildings 307 with a 25 000 donation by Carnegie in what was once West Hoboken on 15th Street between Bergenline Avenue and New York Avenue The second was built in 1905 at the corner of 43rd Street and New York Avenue in what was once Union Hill 308 309 and is the main branch The 15th Street library retains its original stained glass but was closed in 2004 upon the completion of a new library on the corner of Summit Avenue and 18th Street housed in the same building as Jose Marti Middle School 310 It was converted into the William V Musto Cultural Center 33 311 which opened in June 2011 It houses the Union City Museum of Art the Union City Police Museum the Union City Art Gallery amp Concert Hall the Union City Museum of History and a senior citizen center 307 312 nbsp Celia Cruz Park was constructed in tribute to Cuban American salsa singer Celia Cruz and other Latin stars Celia Cruz Park On June 4 2004 nearly a year after the death of Cuban American salsa singer Celia Cruz who lived in nearby Fort Lee Union City heralded its annual Cuban Day Parade by dedicating a park to Cruz which is also known as Celia Cruz Plaza at 31st Street and Bergenline Avenue with Cruz s widower Pedro Knight present The park featured a sidewalk star in Cruz s honor and an 8 10 mural by Union City s Edgardo Davila a collage of Cruz s career throughout the decades There are four other similar dedications to Cruz around the world 313 The Latin American Kiwanis Club refurbished the park in early June 2006 replacing the mural with a backlit photograph of Cruz Cruz s star has expanded into Union City s Walk of Fame 314 as new marble stars are added each spring to honor Latin entertainment and media personalities People so honored at the park include merengue singer Joseito Mateo salsa singer La India Cuban musician Israel Cachao Lopez Cuban tenor Beny More 315 Tito Puente Spanish language television news anchor Rafael Pineda salsa pioneer Johnny Pacheco 316 singer bandleader Gilberto Santa Rosa and music promoter Ralph Mercado 317 nbsp Spectators viewing the aftermath of the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks from Doric Park The park was later turned into Firefighter s Memorial Park 9 11 Memorials The city s first memorial to honor the five Union City citizens who died in the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks 318 was a sculpture placed in Doric Park in whose courtyard citizens gathered on September 11 2001 to view the attacks aftermath 319 On September 11 2007 the city dedicated its Liberty Plaza to commemorate the event The Plaza which serves as a transit hub through which commuters pass on their way to and from Manhattan includes two memorial markers 320 321 Doric Park was later rebuilt as Firefighters Memorial Park which opened in August 2009 The park includes a public swimming pool and a new memorial to local fallen firefighters that stands at the entrance 322 323 Its popularity has attracted visitors from Manhattan and Staten Island 323 The Monastery of the Perpetual Rosary known as The Blue Chapel was constructed between 1912 and 1914 as the first monastery dedicated to the recitation of the Perpetual Rosary in the United States Although the monastery was well maintained for many decades after the number of resident nuns and finances dwindled the chapel deteriorated and was vacated in mid 2009 Plans were announced later that year to renovate and expand the monastery in order to create housing units and underground parking but negative public reaction squelched those plans In 2010 the chapel was included on Preservation New Jersey s annual 10 Most Endangered Historic Sites list which is intended to draw attention to historical sites in need of preservation The site s caretakers have previously indicated that it will likely be abandoned or sold 324 but the city Board of Commissioners passed a November 3 2010 resolution designating it as a historic site as part of efforts to protect it 325 326 nbsp The city s COVID 19 pandemic memorialHistorical markers In 2009 Union City began installing a series of historical markers to commemorate the lives of its noteworthy natives 327 328 The first marker was dedicated to the memory of boxer Joe Jeanette on April 17 2009 and placed at the corner of Summit Avenue and 27th Street on April 17 2009 where Jeanette s former residence and gym once stood 327 328 329 330 331 The marker lies two blocks from a street located between Summit Avenue and Kennedy Boulevard that was named Jeanette Street in his honor 331 Present at the dedication ceremony was Jeanette s grandniece Sabrina Jennette 332 Another historical marker was dedicated September 26 2009 to Peter George Urban a 10th degree karate grandmaster writer and teacher who founded an American karate system American Goju Do Present at the dedication ceremony was Urban s daughter Julia Urban Kimmerly 333 On May 22 2010 the city dedicated a marker to novelist and screenwriter Pietro di Donato and placed at Bergenline Avenue and 31st Street where di Donato once lived That area was named Pietro di Donato Plaza in his honor Present at the dedication ceremony was di Donato s son Richard 334 335 The fourth marker was dedicated to painter William Tylee Ranney on September 18 2010 336 In addition to those honoring people subsequent markers were erected to honor particular sites As of December 2012 the city had eight historic markers 329 COVID 19 Victims Memorial On March 25 2022 the city dedicated a memorial in Ellsworth Park in tribute to the citizens who died and suffered as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic 337 A plaque on the forward side of the pedestal reads In memory of all those who perished from the COVID 19 Pandemic You will always be in our hearts 338 339 Media and culture EditUnion City is located within the New York media market with most of its daily papers available for sale or delivery Until its closing in 1991 the Hudson Dispatch a morning daily newspaper that once had a circulation of 39 132 was based in Union City for 117 years 340 It later relaunched as a free bilingual weekly 341 Local county and regional news is covered by the daily Jersey Journal The Union City Reporter was part of the Hudson Reporter group of local weeklies 342 until that chain closed in January 2023 343 Other publications that cover local news include the River View Observer 344 and El Especialito which is as of 2016 is headquartered in Union City 345 Among the films set or shot in the city are Union City 1980 which was released in conjunction with the Blondie song Union City Blue Out of the Darkness 1985 346 Bloodhounds of Broadway 1989 111 346 347 and Far from Heaven 2002 346 The low budget film directed by former Guttenberg mayor Peter Lavilla Oak Hill features local institutions including Union City s Palisades Emergency Residence Corporation homeless shelter and a synagogue in North Bergen 348 nbsp Artwork at the Union City Multi Arts FestivalIn the late 2000s Union City West New York Weehawken and North Bergen came to be dubbed collectively as NoHu a North Hudson haven for local performing and fine artists many of whom are immigrants from Latin America and other countries in part due to lower housing costs compared to those in nearby art havens such as Hoboken Jersey City and Manhattan 349 The Union City area is a major training ground for actors in the county 350 In September 2008 Union City held its first annual month long Art Month which originated with the September 2006 Celebrate Art show at St John s Episcopal Church Art Month includes events such as the Union City Arts and Crafts Festival held the second week of every September Group shows are also arranged by organizations such as La Ola 349 351 a group formed to help unite local artists and Federacion Mercantil which provides support to artists in the form of bank loan assistance and help avoiding foreclosure and puts on an annual show of work by Spanish American painters 349 Another is the Union City Artists Collective founded in 2007 by a group of artists and public officials that includes painter sculptor Amado Mora 352 who was named Union City s first Art Curator 353 responsible for the Union City Art Gallery at City Hall 352 Locations in which artists reside or have put on tours or shows include the Yardley Building a former Yardley of London soap factory on Palisade Avenue that overlooks Hoboken and the old R H Simon Silk Mill on 39th Street which has been dubbed the Union Hill Arts Building The Park Performing Arts Center is also a popular arts venue in the city as it houses Hudson Theatre Works a theatre company founded in 2011 350 It was also the first venue for the Park Players an acting troupe founded in the early 1980s by local teacher Joseph Conklin 354 and formerly hosted the NoHu Visions show and the annual two day Multi Arts Festival 349 355 until 2010 when the latter moved to Union City High School which houses the Union City Performing Arts Center 356 357 In 2009 poet musician Graciela Barreto was named Union City s first poet laureate 356 By April 2010 she was succeeded by Ben Figueroa 358 During the late 2000s the city also named a City Historian and organized a Historical Committee 353 The 2010 independent gothic horror art film Vampire in Union City was filmed entirely in Union City and was directed by entertainer and Union City Commissioner Lucio Fernandez Produced by MeLu Films it premiered on September 3 2010 at the Summit Theater marking the city s first movie premiere 359 360 and the 2010 Celebrate Art Month which included art exhibits jazz dance and opera performances a film festival and the public release of Francisco Rivadeneira s book Los Amos del Planeta Tomo II 361 362 On April 20 2018 Union City s Performing Arts Center hosted the official premiere of Union City U S A a documentary on the city s history and culture It was written directed and produced by Fernandez who began research for the film in 2008 with city historian Gerard Karabin conducting interviews with numerous past and current residents of the city The film was edited by director of photography Mauro De Trizio and narrated by Tom Colavito 363 364 The Multi Arts Festival is an exhibition of artwork musical performances and workshops held every May since 1981 Students and alumni of the various schools of Union City display their artwork put on musical performances and put on free demonstrations of sculpture portraiture and caricature for attendees It was created by Agnes Dauerman a Union Hill High School art teacher who coordinated the program for 25 years before she retired in 2005 355 The Union City Museum of Art the Union City Police Museum the Union City Art Gallery and Concert Hall and the Union City Museum of History are housed in the William V Musto Cultural Center formerly the 15th Street library 307 312 The Musto Center hosts a number of events including various concerts and theatrical performances 365 Specific events it has hosted include the Union City Artist Awards 366 the NoHu International Film Festival 367 and Artists Assemble a comics festival first held in February 2013 368 The first annual Union City International Film Festival began in December 2010 with the short film X which was written and directed by Josh Brolin as the opening film 369 370 371 Later that month Union City unveiled the Union City Plaza of the Arts on Bergenline Avenue between 30th and 31st Streets as a venue for artists to congregate and showcase their work The location which sees copious traffic to and from Midtown Manhattan was chosen in order to showcase the city in a positive light to commuters and so that the plaza could represent fine arts alongside the adjacent Pietro Di Donato Plaza and Celia Cruz Plaza which represent literature and music respectively 372 373 On June 11 2014 the city s Board of Commissioners passed a resolution adopting Union City as the city s official song The song was composed by Union City native Phil Gallo and Weehawken native Mike Boldt and performed by the group Dez Manku which features Boldt and Gallo An accompanying music video was produced and edited by Mauro DeTrizio for Action Productions and released on YouTube and iTunes The guitar driven rock song s lyrics make references to local streets such as Bergenline Avenue and Monastery Place and landmarks such as the Roosevelt Theater the Hudson Burlesque and the former high schools Emerson and Union Hill 353 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Union City New JerseySee also Edit nbsp New Jersey portalNotes Edit a Nearby Guttenberg New Jersey is more densely populated but is incorporated as a town not as a city Municipal Code City of Union City Accessed May 17 2023 Robbins Liz November 29 2016 In Havana on the Hudson Few Are Left to Celebrate Fidel Castro s Death The New York Times Archived from the original on November 29 2016 a b c d e Bartlett Kay Little Havana on the Hudson Pittsburgh Post Gazette June 28 1977 Archived at Google News Accessed March 31 2011 a b c d e 2019 Census Gazetteer Files New Jersey Places United States Census Bureau Accessed July 1 2020 a b US Gazetteer files 2010 2000 and 1990 United States Census Bureau Accessed September 4 2014 a b Mayor Brian P Stack Union City New Jersey Accessed November 28 2022 2023 New Jersey Mayors Directory New Jersey Department of Community Affairs updated February 8 2023 Accessed February 10 2023 City Clerk City of Union City Accessed April 10 2022 a b 2005 New Jersey Legislative District Data Book Edward J Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy p 144 ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 11 2022 City of Union City Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved March 14 2013 a b c d e f QuickFacts Union City city New Jersey United States Census Bureau Accessed January 15 2023 a b c Total Population Census 2010 Census 2020 New Jersey Municipalities New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed December 1 2022 a b c d Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places of 50 000 or More Ranked by July 1 2022 Population April 1 2020 to July 1 2022 United States Census Bureau released May 2023 Accessed May 18 2023 Note that townships including Edison Lakewood and Woodbridge all of which have larger populations are excluded from these rankings a b Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Minor Civil Divisions in New Jersey April 1 2020 to July 1 2022 United States Census Bureau released May 2023 Accessed May 18 2023 a b Population Density by County and Municipality New Jersey 2020 and 2021 New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed March 1 2023 Look Up a ZIP code for Union City NJ United States Postal Service Accessed September 19 2011 ZIP codes State of New Jersey Accessed August 19 2013 Area Code Lookup NPA NXX for Union City NJ Area Codes com Accessed September 14 2014 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Accessed September 4 2014 Geographic Codes Lookup for New Jersey Missouri Census Data Center Accessed April 1 2022 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey Accessed September 4 2014 Table1 New Jersey Counties and Most Populous Cities and Townships 2020 and 2010 Censuses New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed December 1 2022 a b c d e DP 1 Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics 2010 for Union City city Hudson County New Jersey United States Census Bureau Accessed January 24 2012 a b Table DP 1 Profile of General Demographic Characteristics 2010 for Union City city Archived 2012 04 02 at the Wayback Machine New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed January 24 2012 Table 7 Population for the Counties and Municipalities in New Jersey 1990 2000 and 2010 New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development February 2011 Accessed May 1 2023 Maciag Mike Population Density for U S Cities Statistics Governing November 29 2017 Accessed December 4 2020 The following are the most densely populated cities with populations exceeding 50 000 Union City N J 54 138 persons sq mile a b De Avila Joseph Tightly Packed Union City Welcomes More The Wall Street Journal August 27 2011 Accessed August 28 2017 Union City is a tiny city measuring just over one square mile with about 66 000 residents making it the most densely populated city in the country according to the latest U S Census a b c d e f g Snyder John P The Story of New Jersey s Civil Boundaries 1606 1968 Archived June 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bureau of Geology and Topography Trenton New Jersey 1969 p 148 Accessed January 24 2012 Hutchinson Viola L The Origin of New Jersey Place Names New Jersey Public Library Commission May 1945 Accessed October 14 2015 Shortell Tom Passion Play continues Lenten tradition in Union City The Jersey Journal April 1 2019 updated April 1 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 John Penn Lewis the Park Performing Arts Center s executive director said the show is believed to be the longest running Passion Play in America and possibly on this continent a b c Gabriele Michael C May 2018 Jersey Gems New Jersey Monthly p 43 a b c d Karabin Gerard Brief History of Union City Union City New Jersey Accessed August 28 2017 Eighty five years ago on June 1 1925 the Town of Union colloquially known as Union Hill and the Township of West Hoboken joined together and became one the city of Union City Trigger Bruce G Delaware languages Handbook of North American Indians Vol 15 Northeast page 215 Smithsonian Institution Press Washington D C 1978 ISBN 0 16 004575 4 Day Gordon M The Indian as an Ecological Factor in the Northeastern Forests Ecology Vol 34 No 2 April 329 346 New England and New York areas 1580 1800 Notes that the Lenni Lenape Delaware tribe in New Jersey and the Massachuset tribe in Massachusetts used fire in ecosystems 1953 Russell Emily W B Vegetational Change in Northern New Jersey Since 1500 A D A Palynological Vegetational and Historical Synthesis PhD dissertation New Brunswick PA Rutgers University Author notes on page 8 that Indians often augmented lightning fires 1979 Russell Emily W B Indian Set Fires in the Forests of the Northeastern United States Ecology Vol 64 No 1 Feb 78 88 1983a Author found no strong evidence that Indians purposely burned large areas but they did burn small areas near their habitation sites Noted that the Lenna Lenape Tribe used fire A Brief Description of New York Formerly Called New Netherlands with the Places Thereunto Adjoining Likewise a Brief Relation of the Customs of the Indians There New York NY William Gowans 1670 Reprinted in 1937 by the Facsimile Text Society Columbia University Press New York Notes that the Lenni Lenape Delaware tribe in New Jersey used fire in ecosystems Karnoutsos Carmela Pavonia Lower Jersey City New Jersey City University Accessed October 14 2015 Robinson Walter F 1964 New Jersey Tercentenary 1664 1964 Hudson County Tercentenary Committee for this information p 190 a b c d e f g h Fernandez Lucio Karabin Gerard 2010 Union City in Pictures Book Press NY pp 11 13 50th Anniversary of the Incorporation of the Town of West Hoboken N J 1911 Datz Co Karnoutsos Carmela 350th Anniversary of the Dutch Settlement of Bergen Colonial Jersey City New Jersey City University Accessed August 28 2017 a b Kaulessar Ricardo 350 years of history Fair commemorates founding of Jersey City will honor the oldest families in Hudson County The Hudson Reporter October 3 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Before there was a Jersey City or a Hudson County the village of Bergen the first European settlement in New Jersey founded in 1660 by Dutch settler Peter Stuyvesant had its origins in what is now the Journal Square area of Jersey City near Academy Street Bergen Town and Township Nov 1660 Sept 22 1668 1957 Genealogical Society of New Jersey a b Harvey Cornelius Burnham Genealogical History of Hudson and Bergen Counties New Jersey p 20 The New Jersey Genealogical Publishing Company 1900 Accessed October 14 2015 Winfield Charles H History of the County of Hudson New Jersey p 525 Kennard amp Hay Stationary 1874 Accessed October 14 2015 a b c Northern Part of the Town of Union 1873 Gleason s Old Maps East Templeton Massachusetts a b c Business Directory Of North Hudson North Hudson Hospital Association Town of Union N J 1905 p 331 a b c Union City 2000 Calendar 2000 culled from History of West Hoboken and Union Hill by Ella Mary Ryman 1965 and The Historical Background of Union City by Daniel A Primont William G Fiedler and Fred Zuccaro 1964 Rules and Regulations of the Police Department of the Town of Union N J Adopted July 13 1881 West Hoboken A E Gregory Printer Palisade Avenue 1881 Van Winkle Daniel 1924 History of the Municipalities of Hudson County NJ 1630 1923 Lewis Historical Publishing Company Inc New York amp Chicago pp 463 464 Union Hill Middle School Archived 2016 09 19 at the Wayback Machine Accessed August 27 2013 a b c d Perez Stable Marifeli December 3 2009 That other Cuban community The Miami Herald Archived from the original on August 29 2017 Retrieved August 22 2019 History Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine Schiffli Lace and Embroidery Manufacturers Association Accessed February 18 2011 Cunningham John 2004 This is New Jersey 4 ed Yonkers New York Rutgers University Press Hudson River Museum p 100 ISBN 0 8135 2141 6 a b Popik Barry Little Havana Miami amp Little Havana on the Hudson Union City New Jersey BarryPopkik com August 15 2006 Accessed July 6 2017 Pristin Terry January 3 1998 In New Jersey a Delicate Industry Unravels The New York Times Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved July 6 2020 Conte Michaelangelo Union City dedicates plaza that honors history as Embroidery Capital of the World The Jersey Journal May 31 2014 Accessed October 14 2015 Union City named a portion of New York Avenue Embroidery Plaza last night to commemorate the city s once thriving embroidery industry Keller Susan Jo At Schuetzen Park a Bit of Germany and a Tradition of Charity The New York Times October 6 1996 Accessed November 14 2019 Around the turn of the century in Union Hill a town later absorbed into Union City the minutes of town meetings were written in German a reflection of the number of German immigrants in Hudson County Today little of that German influence remains with the exception of Schuetzen Park a three acre enclave in North Bergen where polka music sometimes still sets feet tapping The Cultural Thread El Hilo Cultural Archived 2011 07 27 at the Wayback Machine Park Performing Art Center Accessed June 25 2007 Romano Jay Union City Journal 2 Passion Plays Thrive On a Friendly Rivalry The New York Times March 5 1989 Accessed October 14 2015 Fernandez 2010 p 15 Grace Allen Biography TV Guide Accessed April 14 2014 Weider Joe Weider Ben and Steere Mike Brothers of Iron p 115 Sports Publishing LLC 2006 ISBN 9781596701243 Accessed August 28 2017 In January 1957 the guys loaded one last moving van and then I locked the doors forever on Hopkins Avenue About a mile of there we celebrated the opening of a brand new headquarters at 801 Palisade Avenue Union City New Jersey Sandomir Richard December 24 2021 Dave Draper Bodybuilding s Blond Bomber Dies at 79 The New York Times Archived from the original on February 8 2022 Retrieved August 30 2023 a b c The Union City Public Schools Technology Plan 2004 2007 Archived 2006 02 18 at the Wayback Machine Union City Board of Education approved April 29 2004 p 4 of 25 Accessed June 25 2007 According to the 1997 New Jersey Municipal Distress Index which is based on social economic fiscal and physical indicators of the 566 municipalities in New Jersey Union City is considered to be the 3rd most distressed community in the state In the 1940s Union City attracted the first Cuban immigrants These early Cubans learned of Union City s famed embroidery factories and came in search of work a b Gettleman Jeffrey February 5 2006 ON POLITICS A Cuban Revolution Only It s in New Jersey The New York Times Archived from the original on February 23 2021 Retrieved January 12 2023 a b c Hope Bradley Havana on Hudson Reverberates After Castro s Operation The New York Sun August 2 2006 Accessed July 6 2017 Several of the group s leaders sat in chairs around the union hall on a quiet street in Union City N J a town minutes away from Manhattan that was once known as Havana on the Hudson Gettleman Jeffrey William Musto 88 a Mayor Re elected on His Way to Jail Is Dead The New York Times March 1 2006 Accessed November 14 2019 Mr Musto a Democrat was a pioneer in affirmative action flinging open the doors to City Hall to his growing Cuban American constituency He was mayor from 1962 to 1970 and 1974 to 1982 an era when the city perched on the sandstone palisades across the Hudson from New York City dramatically changed from an old line Italian enclave to a little Little Havana Grenier Guillermo J Miami Now Immigration Ethnicity and Social Change Archived at Google Books Accessed March 31 2011 a b Rosero Jessica Most liquor licenses Bumpiest town Local municipalities hold unusual distinctions The Hudson Reporter September 5 2006 Accessed November 14 2019 At one time Union City had its own claim to fame as being the second largest Cuban community in the nation after Miami During the wave of immigrant exiles of the 1960s the Cuban population that did not settle in Miami s Little Havana found its way to the north in Union City However throughout the years the growing Cuban community has spread out to other regions of North Hudson Evelyn Nieves August 29 1994 Cubans Kin Are Anxious In Union City The New York Times Accessed December 15 2016 Sietsema Robert December 13 2016 A Food Crawl Through Havana on the Hudson Eater Accessed July 6 2017 Cuban cigar tradition fades Taipei Times September 4 2005 Martin Lydia Cuban cool The Star Ledger August 9 1995 pp 41 and 54 Juri Carmen Jersey s Cuban flavors The Star Ledger August 9 1995 pp 41 and 54 a b c Applebome Peter In Little Little Havana Not Quite as Much of a Cuban Feel The New York Times February 21 2008 Accessed October 14 2015 a b Capuzzo Jill P May 9 2018 Union City N J Close to the City but Still Affordable The New York Times Archived from the original on May 9 2018 Retrieved October 7 2020 a b Troy Towers Going Up New Look for Mountain Road The Jersey Journal December 9 1965 p 26 Kids Still Use Perilous Lossberg Steps The Jersey Journal November 13 1963 p 16 Rosero Jessica Celebrating Cuban Pride Fifth annual Cuban Day Parade draws residents and honored guests The Hudson Reporter June 11 2004 Accessed November 14 2019 Miller Jonathan Judge Decides Against a Mayor Who Banned Cuban Parade The New York Times May 31 2007 Accessed July 7 2016 Rosero Jessica The parade marches on Eighth annual Cuban Day Parade of New Jersey keeps traditional route The Hudson Reporter June 17 2007 Accessed November 14 2019 Superior Court Judge Maurice Gallapoli ruled in favor of the committee and allowed the parade to run its traditional course along Bergenline Avenue last Sunday from 79th Street in North Bergen to 31st Street in Union City In addition since Union City Mayor Brian Stack had granted an extension through 22nd Street as an alternate route to the parade the committee let the parade run nine additional blocks West New York Mayor Silverio Sal Vega refused to sign the permit for the parade to go through the township saying that people needed to remember the plight of the Cuban people a b Martin Antoinette October 2 2005 Residential Up and Comer Union City The New York Times Archived from the original on August 29 2017 Retrieved February 4 2020 Amoroso Mary Now it s Union City s Turn Archived 2012 11 03 at the Wayback Machine The Record April 20 2008 Accessed July 6 2017 The Union City Reporter March 28 2008 p 9 Carroll Timothy J Housing in Hudson In slow economy smaller better spaces lure buyers from across the river The Hudson Reporter March 1 2009 Accessed November 14 2019 a b Martin Antoinette Hoboken Comes to Union City The New York Times March 9 2008 Accessed July 6 2017 Martin Antoinette Defining the Buyer of the Future The New York Times February 6 2009 Accessed July 6 2017 Wright E Assata March 7 2010 Ups and downs in residential real estate Thrifty buyers return to slowly improving housing market The Hudson Reporter Archived from the original on February 17 2020 Retrieved February 17 2020 West Teri February 14 2020 Site work begins for cliffside luxury condo complex in Union City The Jersey Journal Jersey City Archived from the original on February 17 2020 Retrieved February 17 2020 via NJ com 30 Most Livable Cities AARP Bulletin AARP April 14 2015 NEW JERSEY Core Based Statistical Areas CBSAs and Counties United States Census Bureau Accessed August 28 2017 Hudson County Highest Point peakbagger com Accessed January 8 2010 a b c Hudson County New Jersey Street Map Hagstrom Map Company Inc 2008 ISBN 978 0 88097 763 0 Areas touching Union City MapIt Accessed March 14 2020 Hudson County Map Archived April 30 2020 at the Wayback Machine Coalition for a Healthy NJ Accessed March 14 2020 New Jersey Municipal Boundaries New Jersey Department of Transportation Accessed November 15 2019 Locality Search State of New Jersey Accessed May 21 2015 Compendium of censuses 1726 1905 together with the tabulated returns of 1905 New Jersey Department of State 1906 Accessed August 7 2013 Raum John O The History of New Jersey From Its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time Volume 1 p 278 J E Potter and company 1877 Accessed August 11 2013 The town of Union contains a population of 4 640 Staff A compendium of the ninth census 1870 p 259 United States Census Bureau 1872 Accessed August 11 2013 Porter Robert Percival Preliminary Results as Contained in the Eleventh Census Bulletins Volume III 51 to 75 p 98 United States Census Bureau 1890 Accessed August 11 2013 Thirteenth Census of the United States 1910 Population by Counties and Minor Civil Divisions 1910 1900 1890 United States Census Bureau p 337 Accessed August 11 2013 Fifteenth Census of the United States 1930 Population Volume I United States Census Bureau p 712 Accessed January 25 2012 Table 6 New Jersey Resident Population by Municipality 1940 2000 Workforce New Jersey Public Information Network August 2001 Accessed May 1 2023 a b c d Census 2000 Profiles of Demographic Social Economic Housing Characteristics for Union City city Archived 2014 08 11 at the Wayback Machine United States Census Bureau Accessed July 21 2013 a b c DP 1 Profile of General Demographic Characteristics 2000 Census 2000 Summary File 1 SF 1 100 Percent Data for Union City city Hudson County New Jersey United States Census Bureau Accessed July 21 2013 New Jersey Towns May Consolidate PDF The New York Times June 18 1911 Archived PDF from the original on July 20 2021 Retrieved March 10 2022 a b Fleeman Michael Madonna Brings A Touch Of Hollywood Glamor To Union City AP News Archive January 10 1988 Accessed October 14 2015 Union City N J AP On a snowy street corner in this predominantly Hispanic working class city there s a touch of Hollywood glamor a very small touch Wright E Assata Three deaths raise concerns The Union City Reporter July 31 2001 Pope Gennarose Use of homeless shelter breaks records Fed funding decreases UC facility requests aid from community The Hudson Reporter December 16 2012 Accessed November 14 2019 a b Smith Ray What s new in residential development More housing available and rentals are hot in Hudson The Hudson Reporter Progress Report March 6 2011 p 3 Accessed July 7 2016 a b c d e Cullen Deanna Growing influence UC and WNY house 6 percent of state s Hispanics The Hudson Reporter February 13 2011 Accessed November 14 2019 Hispanics account for 42 percent of the Hudson County s overall population of 634 266 residents and almost 36 percent of the county s Hispanics reside in Union City and West New York Union City and West New York are each over three quarters Hispanic In New Jersey Union City has the highest percentage of people in that group 84 7 percent West New York is 78 1 percent Hispanic coming in at third The Transformation of Union City 1989 to Present Center for Children and Technology August 15 2000 Accessed August 28 2017 The following facts describe the demographics of Union City NJ It is the most densely populated city in the U S Gerut Amanda Clifton to consider allowing town houses on river permanent dead link The Record June 6 2003 Accessed October 14 2015 Passaic is the third most densely populated city in America after Union City and New York City and public officials usually decry any new home building especially projects that involve multifamily dwellings GCT PH1 Population Housing Units Area and Density 2000 for New Jersey Place and County Subdivision Archived February 13 2020 at archive today United States Census Bureau Accessed October 14 2015 The Counties and Most Populous Cities and Townships in 2010 in New Jersey 2000 and 2010 New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed October 14 2015 Pope Gennarose Lost in the crow UC school program provides refuge for students in need Archived 2017 08 28 at the Wayback Machine The Hudson Reporter December 4 2011 Accessed March 12 2012 Union City was identified as the most densely populated city in New Jersey in 2010 with 66 455 residents living in an area of only 1 27 square miles according to the U S Census Bureau Mascarenhas Rohan Census data shows Hispanics as the largest minority in N J The Star Ledger February 3 2011 Accessed August 7 2013 DP03 Selected Economic Characteristics from the 2006 2010 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates for Union City city Hudson County New Jersey United States Census Bureau Accessed January 24 2012 Carla Astudillo December 10 2017 The 41 N J towns where English is not the dominant language New Jersey On Line LLC Retrieved December 14 2017 a b c Economy in Union City New Jersey Best Places Archived from the original on May 29 2021 Retrieved May 28 2021 Union City School District NJ Census Reporter 2019 Archived from the original on May 29 2021 Retrieved May 29 2021 a b c Quick Facts United States Census Bureau July 1 2019 Archived from the original on October 24 2020 Retrieved May 28 2021 2000 Census Worker Flow Files United States Census Bureau a b Patterson Mary Jo Cuban Americans Union City New Jersey Archived August 29 2017 at the Wayback Machine United States Foreign Service Accessed August 28 2017 a b Dwyer Jim In a Cuban Enclave in New Jersey Skeptics View a Moment With Open Minds The New York Times March 22 2016 Accessed December 15 2016 Torres Agustin C Political Insider The chief who cracked down on Castro The Jersey Journal February 20 2010 Accessed July 6 2017 Worth Richard Hispanic America 1950s to 1960s Cavendish Square Publishing p 38 Archived at Google Books Accessed March 24 2016 The Cubans of Union City Immigrants and Exiles in a New Jersey Community Temple University Accessed August 28 2017 Cuban Ancestry Archived November 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine EPodunk Accessed June 16 2006 Cave Damien Union City Journal A Park s Dominican Name Reflecting Quirky Diversity The New York Times August 15 2004 Accessed July 6 2017 Ecuadorian Communities Archived November 10 2006 at the Wayback Machine EPodunk Accessed June 28 2006 Union City New Jersey Demographics Data Towncharts com December 2017 Archived from the original on January 16 2020 Retrieved May 29 2021 Washington Park New Jersey City University June 23 2020 Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved May 28 2021 J J Shamburg December 11 1980 Washington Park History The Jersey Journal Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved May 29 2021 via Washington Park Association of Hudson County Fedschun Travis Weehawken and Union City will have new park where defunct reservoir purchased for 11 million has been idle for 15 years The Jersey Journal December 29 2011 Accessed August 14 2016 Weehawken and Union City have purchased the dormant Hackensack Reservoir No 2 from United Water the state Department of Environmental Protection announced The 14 4 acre reservoir property which hasn t been in operation since 1996 will be transformed into a passive park with a trail around it officials said Grand Opening of Union City Weehawken Reservoir Park City of Union City Accessed August 14 2016 Please join us on Friday September 25 2015 for a Block Party from 6 to 9 p m to celebrate the grand opening of the Union City Weehawken Reservoir Park with rides hot dogs and music The park is located at 20th to 22nd Palisade Avenue Twentieth Anniversary 1919 1939 West Hoboken Post No 14 Union City New Jersey The American Legion Department of New Jersey p 31 a b c d Galland Frank 1947 North Hudson Kiwanis Club History and Directory Silver Anniversary 1922 1947 Hudson County New Jersey North Hudson Kiwanis Club p 67 a b Cullen Deanna March 6 2011 Is end near for biz districts and 3 5 sales tax The Hudson Reporter Archived from the original on March 21 2022 Retrieved March 21 2022 a b c Staab Amanda May 10 2009 Attracting shoppers to Summit Ave UC talks street improvements suspends liquor license The Hudson Reporter Archived from the original on May 4 2022 Retrieved November 14 2019 a b c Koosau Mark September 8 2023 Union City Teamsters building associated with infamous mobsters to be converted into affordable housing NJ com Archived from the original on September 10 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 a b United States v Loc 560 Intern Bro of Teamsters United States District Court for the District of New Jersey March 8 1984 Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 via Casetext a b Schwartz Art Jersey diner served GIs when things were wild The Hudson Reporter March 6 2014 Accessed November 14 2019 McFadden Robert D December 13 1988 Anthony Provanzano 71 Ex Teamster Chief Dies The New York Times Archived from the original on January 4 2019 Retrieved September 13 2023 Investigations Hoffa Search Looks Bad Right Now Time August 18 1975 p 3 Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 McBride Jessica November 27 2019 Anthony Provenzano Real Story Who Was Tony Pro Heavy com Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 FBI Tip on Jimmy Hoffa prompts search Atlanta Georgia CNN May 18 2006 Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Retrieved September 13 2023 Barron James The Cookie That Comes Out in the Cold The New York Times December 8 2005 Accessed July 6 2017 Mallomars origins are in New Jersey Kraft whose Nabisco division markets Mallomars says the first buyer was a grocer in West Hoboken which was consolidated to form Union City in 1925 Sanabria Santo Keeping Bergenline and Tonnelle pumping Shopkeepers look at future of urban business program The Hudson Reporter July 3 2011 Accessed November 14 2019 Urban Enterprise Zone Tax Questions and Answers New Jersey Department of Community Affairs May 2009 Accessed October 28 2019 In 1994 the legislation was amended and ten more zones were added to this successful economic development program Of the ten new zones six were predetermined Paterson Passaic Perth Amboy Phillipsburg Lakewood Asbury Park Long Branch joint zone The four remaining zones were selected on a competitive basis They are Carteret Pleasantville Union City and Mount Holly Urban Enterprise Zone Program New Jersey Department of Community Affairs Accessed October 27 2019 Businesses participating in the UEZ Program can charge half the standard sales tax rate on certain purchases currently 3 3125 effective 1 1 2018 Urban Enterprise Zones Effective and Expiration Dates New Jersey Department of Community Affairs Accessed January 8 2018 Tirella Tricia The business of business Hudson stores companies cope with economy The Hudson Reporter Year in Review December 27 2009 Accessed November 14 2019 Hudson County s average unemployment rate was 11 6 percent for the month of September according to the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics The state s unemployment rate in September was 9 8 percent Union City had the highest unemployment rate at 15 percent and Hoboken had the lowest rate at 6 3 percent 2018 NJ Annual Average Labor Force Estimates by Municipality 2018 Benchmark New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development April 12 2019 Accessed November 14 2019 Anlian Haig February 28 1984 Union City boasts oldest municipal site The Jersey Journal The Commission Form of Municipal Government Archived 2015 06 05 at the Wayback Machine p 53 Accessed June 3 2015 Forms of Municipal Government in New Jersey p 8 Rutgers University Center for Government Studies Accessed June 1 2023 Inventory of Municipal Forms of Government in New Jersey Rutgers University Center for Government Studies July 1 2011 Accessed June 1 2023 Strunsky Steve Politics And Government For Two Young Mayors It Was A Difficult Week The New York Times October 29 2000 Accessed July 7 2016 In Union City a political minefield in the heart of Hudson County Mayor Rudy Garcia handed in his resignation on Tuesday afternoon and was replaced the same evening by three of his former allies on the city Board of Commissioners Mr Garcia s antagonist was a savvy grass roots politician named Brian Stack who saw in the city s budget deficit the chance to unseat Mr Garcia and install himself with help from Representative Robert Menendez whom Mr Garcia had clashed with in recent years Directory Union City New Jersey Accessed March 1 2023 Reorganization Meeting Transcript May 17 2022 City of Union City Accessed November 28 2022 The Department of Public Safety Brian P Stack Department of Public Affairs Commissioner Lucio Fernandez Department of Public Works Commissioner Wendy Grullon Department of Parks and Public Property Commissioner Celin Valdivia Department of Revenue and Finance Commissioner Maryury Martinetti 2022 Municipal Data Sheet Union City New Jersey Accessed May 4 2022 Elected Officials Hudson County New Jersey Clerk Accessed March 1 2023 2022 Municipal Election May 10 2022 Official Results Hudson County New Jersey updated June 1 2022 Accessed November 28 2022 a b 2021 The year in review The Hudson Reporter January 7 2022 Archived from the original on January 7 2022 Retrieved January 22 2022 Plan Components Report New Jersey Redistricting Commission December 23 2011 Accessed February 1 2020 Municipalities Sorted by 2011 2020 Legislative District New Jersey Department of State Accessed February 1 2020 2019 New Jersey Citizen s Guide to Government New Jersey League of Women Voters Accessed October 30 2019 Districts by Number for 2011 2020 New Jersey Legislature Accessed January 6 2013 Directory of Representatives New Jersey United States House of Representatives Accessed January 3 2019 Biography Congressman Albio Sires Accessed January 3 2019 Congressman Sires resides in West New York with his wife Adrienne U S Sen Cory Booker cruises past Republican challenger Rik Mehta in New Jersey PhillyVoice Accessed April 30 2021 He now owns a home and lives in Newark s Central Ward community Biography of Bob Menendez United States Senate January 26 2015 Menendez who started his political career in Union City moved in September from Paramus to one of Harrison s new apartment buildings near the town s PATH station Home sweet home Bob Menendez back in Hudson County nj com Accessed April 30 2021 Booker Cory A D NJ Class II Menendez Robert D NJ Class I Legislative Roster for District 33 New Jersey Legislature Accessed January 11 2022 Thomas A DeGise Hudson County Executive Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Message From The Chair Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 County Officials Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 2017 County Data Sheet Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 1 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Kenneth Kopacz Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 2 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 William O Dea Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 3 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Gerard M Balmir Jr Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 4 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 E Junior Maldonado Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 5 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Anthony L Romano Jr Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 6 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Tilo Rivas Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 7 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Caridad Rodriguez Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 8 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Anthony P Vainieri Jr Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Freeholder District 9 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 Albert J Cifelli Hudson County New Jersey Accessed August 17 2017 E Junior Maldonado Archived September 2 2018 at the Wayback Machine Hudson County Clerk Accessed January 30 2018 Members List Clerks Archived October 23 2017 at the Wayback Machine Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey Accessed January 30 2018 Home page Hudson County Sheriff s Office Accessed August 17 2017 Hudson County Surrogate Hudson County New Jersey Accessed March 26 2021 a b Surrogates COANJ Retrieved March 26 2021 1 Hudson County New Jersey Accessed March 26 2021 Voter Registration Summary Hudson New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections March 23 2011 Accessed November 13 2012 Presidential General Election Results November 6 2012 Hudson County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections March 15 2013 Retrieved December 24 2014 Number of Registered Voters and Ballots Cast November 6 2012 General Election Results Hudson County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections March 15 2013 Retrieved December 24 2014 2008 Presidential General Election Results Hudson County New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections December 23 2008 Accessed November 13 2012 2004 Presidential Election Hudson County New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections December 13 2004 Accessed November 13 2012 Governor Hudson County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections January 29 2014 Retrieved December 24 2014 Number of Registered Voters and Ballots Cast November 5 2013 General Election Results Hudson County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections January 29 2014 Retrieved December 24 2014 2009 Governor Hudson County Archived August 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections December 31 2009 Accessed November 13 2012 Luster Nichelle Welcome to the Union City Police Department Union City Police Department Archived from the original on November 15 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 Conte Michaelangelo Female captain named acting chief of police in Union City The Hudson Reporter November 21 2018 updated January 21 2019 Accessed November 14 2019 Hudson County is one step closer to having its first female police chief Union City police Capt Nichelle Luster has been named acting chief of the department following the retirement of Chief Richard Molinari who held the post since 2013 and named Luster as his temporary replacement Trevelise Steve January 19 2021 UNION CITY FIRE DEPARTMENT REMEMBERED WITH T SHIRTS New Jersey 101 5 Archived from the original on January 20 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 DeMarco Jerry March 28 2012 North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue has first chief from North Bergen The Daily Voice Archived from the original on November 16 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 About North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue Accessed August 28 2017 In 1999 North Bergen Union City West New York Weehawken and Guttenberg combined their fire departments into an award winning and nationally recognized fire protection unit called North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue a b NHRFR Locations North Hudson Regional Fire and Rescue Archived from the original on August 18 2021 Retrieved August 18 2021 Hudson County Mileage by Municipality and Jurisdiction New Jersey Department of Transportation May 2010 Accessed July 18 2014 Hudson County Highway Map New Jersey Department of Transportation Accessed March 1 2023 Route 495 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated June 2014 Accessed March 1 2023 Interstate 95 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated August 2014 Accessed March 1 2023 U S Route 1 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated May 2018 Accessed March 1 2023 Route 3 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated March 2017 Accessed March 1 2023 Enlarged View 47 Secaucus Town North Bergen Township and Union City Hudson County New Jersey Department of Transportation March 2019 Accessed November 14 2019 County Route 505 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated December 2012 Accessed March 1 2023 Bergenline Avenue Archived September 15 2014 at the Wayback Machine NJ Transit Accessed September 14 2014 Hudson County System Map Archived April 16 2017 at the Wayback Machine New Jersey Transit Accessed August 28 2017 Hudson County Bus Rail Connections NJ Transit backed up by the Internet Archive as of May 22 2009 Accessed August 28 2017 Hudson County System Map Archived November 12 2019 at the Wayback Machine NJ Transit Accessed November 12 2019 2018 Hudson County Transit Map Hudson Transportation Management Association Accessed November 12 2019 Routes Guide OurBus Accessed February 25 2022 Reiss Aaron New York s Shadow Transit The New Yorker Accessed July 6 2017 Hudson County Bus Circulation and Infrastructure Study PDF file Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine prepared for Hudson County Division of Planning November 2007 Hudson Transportation Management Association Accessed May 6 2016 Best Things to do in Secaucus NJ New Jersey Hotel Planner Accessed August 7 2010 Tirella Tricia Fierce competition surrounds jitney buses Frequent violations may put riders in danger officials say The Hudson Reporter July 25 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Hague Jim Erratic driving lack of licensing Prosecutor s Office cracks down on commuter vans The Hudson Reporter May 22 2007 Accessed November 14 2019 Hudson County Master Plan Chapter IV Circulation Plan HudsonCountyNJ org Accessed August 7 2010 Board in New Jersey and Get off in Latin America Avianca Accessed January 27 2009 a b Rappaport Melissa Small school district big problem The Union City Reporter November 1 2009 pp 1 and 15 Union City School District Public School Review 2021 Archived from the original on May 29 2021 Retrieved May 29 2021 Kirp David L The Secret to Fixing Bad Schools The New York Times February 9 2013 Accessed July 6 2017 Kirp David L 2011 Kids First Five Big Ideas for Transforming Children s Lives 1st edition Public Affairs pp 88 90 92 111 112 137 ISBN 158648947X DeChiaro Dean Tortoise beats hare Berkeley professor celebrates UC in new book The Hudson Reporter March 31 2013 Accessed November 14 2019 Kirp David L How Union City Is Shifting the Arc of Immigrant Kids Lives Archived September 15 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Nation April 8 2013 Accessed October 14 2015 What We Do History New Jersey Schools Development Authority Accessed March 1 2022 In 1998 the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled in the Abbott v Burke case that the State must provide 100 percent funding for all school renovation and construction projects in special needs school districts According to the Court aging unsafe and overcrowded buildings prevented children from receiving the thorough and efficient education required under the New Jersey Constitution Full funding for approved projects was authorized for the 31 special needs districts known as Abbott Districts What We Do New Jersey Schools Development Authority Accessed March 1 2022 SDA Districts New Jersey Schools Development Authority Accessed March 1 2022 District information for Union City School District National Center for Education Statistics Accessed April 1 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o School Data for the Union City School District National Center for Education Statistics Archived from the original on August 29 2023 Retrieved August 29 2023 Eugenio Maria de Hostos Center for Early Childhood Education Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Thomas A Edison Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Sara Gilmore Academy School Archived July 21 2020 at the Wayback Machine Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Henry Hudson Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Jefferson Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Colin Powell Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 McDonald Terrence T Gov Christie visits Union City school opening hears Democratic mayor praise him NJ com February 8 2013 Accessed May 9 2020 Theodore Roosevelt School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Veteran s Memorial Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 George Washington Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Robert Waters Elementary School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Emerson Middle School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Union Hill Middle School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 West Teri June 3 2020 Union City s Jose Marti STEM Academy makes a mark in its first year NJ com Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved April 11 2022 Union City High School Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Schools Union City School District Accessed May 9 2020 Jersey School Directory for the Union City School District New Jersey Department of Education Accessed December 29 2016 Schwartz Art Back to school in Union City Kids teachers gear up this week The Hudson Reporter September 1 2013 Accessed July 6 2017 a b West Teri September 12 2023 Union City finds solution to overcrowded classrooms New 93 7 million middle school NJ com Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 Rappaport Melissa Back to school New buildings new amenities for 2009 The Hudson Reporter August 30 2009 Accessed November 14 2019 Hu Winnie After 88 Years of Rivalry the Last as Us and Them The New York Times November 22 2007 Accessed July 6 2017 But today s so called Turkey Game signals the end of the tradition Next fall the two schools will merge in a new 176 million building The new Union City High School will take up 4 5 acres 18 000 m2 in the center of the city squeezed between row houses and commercial strips It will have a football field and bleachers built on the roof so that players will no longer have to share the facilities at Jose Marti Middle School Thorbourne Ken Eagles ready to soar at new Union City High School The Jersey Journal August 30 2009 Accessed July 6 2017 Diaz Lana Rose College for the community HCCC previews new North Hudson Higher Education Center The Hudson Reporter September 19 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Clark Amy Sara Hudson County Community College s building spree continues with North Campus in Union City The Jersey Journal February 18 2009 Accessed July 6 2017 McDonald Terrence T Gov Christie visits Union City school opening hears Democratic mayor praise him The Jersey Journal February 8 2013 Accessed July 6 2017 Schwartz Art Back to school in Union City Kids teachers gear up this week The Hudson Reporter September 1 2013 Accessed November 14 2019 Ambrosio John June 5 2013 Seeing Union City school with his name a special thrill for Colin Powell NJ com Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 U S Department of Education Blue Ribbon Schools Program Schools Recognized 1982 Through 2013 PDF United States Department of Education Accessed December 31 2014 Goldman Jeff Which N J schools were named to national Blue Ribbon list NJ Advance Media for NJ com October 2 2014 Accessed December 31 2014 Eleven New Jersey schools have been named to the annual National Blue Ribbon list the U S Department of Education announced Tuesday 2014 National Blue Ribbon Schools All Public and Private United States Department of Education Accessed December 31 2014 Strunsky Steve August 31 2017 Union City to open new school in time for start of classes NJ com Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved September 13 2023 Hudson County Elementary Schools Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark Accessed March 1 2023 Rundquist Jeanette 15 N J schools named as national Blue Ribbon winners The Star Ledger September 24 2013 Accessed September 25 2013 Five Catholic schools six county vocational technical schools and a Yeshiva are among the list of honored schools in New Jersey Also named as 2013 Blue Ribbon Schools were Dover Harrison and Wildwood high schools 2013 National Blue Ribbon Schools All Public and Private pp 15 17 United States Department of Education National Blue Ribbon Schools Program Accessed September 25 2013 Zeitlinger Ron Three North Hudson Catholic schools to consolidate archdiocese announces The Jersey Journal August 4 2020 Accessed March 1 2023 Two Union City Catholic schools will merge with Academy of St Joseph of the Palisade in West New York the Newark Archdiocese announced Tuesday afternoon Saint Augustine at 39th Street and New York Avenue and Mother Seton Interparochial School at 15th and New York Avenue will not reopen in September because of dwindling enrollment and financial problems that have been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic officials said Cullen Deanna Kids in the courtroom The Union City Reporter February 20 2011 pages 1 and 14 History Miftaahul Uloom Academy Accessed February 18 2011 Rising Star Academy Private School Review Accessed August 28 2017 The Mesivta Mesivta Sanz of Hudson County Accessed November 14 2019 The vibrant institutions of Sanz Zvill in Union City New Jersey stand in an uplifting tribute to the great Sanz Klausenberger Rebbe Zatzal Mesivta Sanz in Union City NJ Archived 2014 05 11 at the Wayback Machine high schools com Accessed January 21 2013 Reyes Daniel Sen Menendez visits Union City daycare with women officials to underline his commitment to improving women s lives The Jersey Journal July 17 2012 Accessed July 6 2017 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places in Hudson County New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Historic Preservation Office as of August 17 2017 Accessed August 28 2017 Staab Amanda A saint from UC Former resident may join the holy ranks The Hudson Reporter March 1 2009 Accessed November 14 2019 Union City Hudson Co Jose Marti M S State of New Jersey Schools Development Authority Retrieved January 21 2016 dead link Library Information Union City Public Library Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 21 2016 West Teri June 3 2020 Union City s Jose Marti STEM Academy makes a mark in its first year NJ com Archived from the original on June 12 2020 Retrieved November 9 2021 Passion Play at Park Performing Arts Center Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Hu Winnie A Fine New Field Lifts Spirits The New York Times September 11 2009 Accessed November 14 2019 Endangered Historic Site Hudson County Roosevelt Stadium 2004 Archived 2005 03 15 at the Wayback Machine Preservation New Jersey Accessed June 8 2006 1989 Altruist A Classic Year The Emerson High School yearbook for 1989 Frank Winters Archived 2010 02 05 at the Wayback Machine DatabaseFootball com Accessed December 2 2012 Recreation permanent dead link Union City s official site Accessed January 19 2010 a b c Abby Levine and Craig Radhuber A Visit to the Museum Archived 2012 03 30 at the Wayback Machine The Hudson Independent News August 2011 page 4 Archilla Dylan M Pop goes the donation Cola giant lends a hand to UC literacy The Hudson Reporter January 24 2003 Nardone Christine Closing the books Plans for a central library may close other two The Hudson Reporter 2002 Accessed January 19 2010 Nardone Christine All fired up UC residents protest outside City Hall The Hudson Reporter July 11 2002 Fernandez 2010 Page 22 a b Sanabria Santo New UC center holds museums senior center But some controversy as it honors convicted former Mayor Musto The Hudson Reporter June 19 2011 Accessed November 14 2019 Reporter Hudson June 2 2004 Homage to Celia Cruz UC to pay tribute to Queen of Salsa with events park dedication Fernandez 2010 Page 74 Rosero Jessica Viva la comunidad Cubano North Hudson celebrates at the annual Cuban Day Parade The Hudson Reporter June 18 2006 Accessed November 14 2019 Rosero Jessica La vida es un carnaval North Hudson celebrates 6th annual Cuban Day Parade The Hudson Reporter May 26 2006 Accessed November 14 2019 Staab Amanda UC first stop for Latin Grammies Music icons join residents officials for celebration The Hudson Reporter November 6 2008 Accessed November 14 2019 Pope Gennarose Unbreakable spirit The Union City Reporter September 16 2012 pp 1 and 9 Rosero Jessica Remembering 9 11 UC WNY hold commemoration ceremonies for victims The Hudson Reporter September 21 2004 Accessed November 14 2019 9 11 commemorations begin tomorrow morning Jersey Journal NJ com September 8 2007 Lucio Fernandez and Gerard Karabin Union City in Pictures Book Press NY 2010 Pages 24 and 25 Rappaport Melissa Now open Firefighters Memorial Park The Union City Reporter August 16 2009 Pages 1 and 8 a b Zeitlinger Ron Union City limits use of Firefighters park pool Hudson Dispatch July 15 2010 Pages 1 and 3 UC site considered endangered by Preservation NJ The Hudson Reporter May 18 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Staff Blue Chapel receives municipal designation as historic site The Hudson Reporter November 4 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Mestanza Jean Pierre Union City mounts effort to save chapel Archived 2016 03 07 at the Wayback Machine NJ com November 11 2010 Accessed October 14 2015 a b The Union City Reporter April 26 2009 Page 2 a b Joe Jeanette NJSports com 2021 Archived from the original on December 5 2021 Retrieved March 2 2023 a b DeChiaro Dean December 16 2012 Brewers boxers and book scribes Historic markers tell of renowned Union City residents The Hudson Reporter Archived from the original on March 2 2023 Retrieved March 2 2023 Joe Jeanette New Jersey Boxing Hall of Fame Archived from the original on June 27 2018 Retrieved March 2 2023 a b Native sons and daughters North Hudson native and 20th century boxing sensation Joe Jeanette The Hudson Reporter February 26 2006 Archived from the original on March 2 2023 Retrieved March 2 2023 Jeanette was one of the four great black boxers of the early 1900s and he owned a boxing gym on 26th Street and Summit Avenue said Kathie Pontus a private historian Jeanette Street between Summit Avenue and Kennedy Boulevard is named for him Fernandez 2010 Page 82 Fernandez 2010 Page 83 UC recognizes history with dedication and marker The Hudson Reporter May 23 2010 Archived from the original on February 27 2012 Retrieved October 14 2015 Fernandez 2010 Page 84 Union City marca su historia El Especialito October 1 2010 p 16 Israel Daniel March 28 2022 Union City dedicates COVID 19 Victims Memorial The Hudson Reporter Archived from the original on March 28 2022 Retrieved April 11 2022 Antelo Marcos March 26 2022 COVID 19 Memorial Unveiled In Union City Hudson TV Archived from the original on April 11 2022 Retrieved April 11 2022 via YouTube Henig Jeffrey March 26 2022 COVID 19 Memorial Unveiled In Union City HudsonTV Archived from the original on April 11 2022 Retrieved September 14 2023 Good Philip Recalling the Glory Days of The Hudson Dispatch The New York Times October 27 1991 Accessed August 11 2013 Hudson Dispatch Weekly May 13 2010 Riker Melissa June 8 2018 Newspaper Media Group acquires the Hudson Reporter newspaper chain The Sun Newspapers Archived from the original on February 18 2023 Retrieved February 18 2023 Zeitlinger Ron January 20 2023 Hudson Reporter newspaper chain closes down The Jersey Journal Archived from the original on January 21 2023 Retrieved January 20 2023 via NJ com River View Observer A lifestyle and entertainment publication serving A lifestyle and entertainment publication serving the Jersey City Hoboken Bayonne Weehawken West New York North Bergen Cliffside Park Edgewater Secaucus and Guttenberg Waterfront Communities River View Observer Retrieved February 18 2023 Lopez Erica Y October 30 2016 N J businessman publisher of largest Spanish language weekly newspaper master of reinvention Daily News Archived from the original on February 18 2023 Retrieved February 18 2023 Distributed free in four New York boroughs six New Jersey counties and in Miami the Union City N J based paper boasts a circulation of 320 000 and readership of 1 3 million according to a Certified Audit of Circulations a b c Karabin Gerard Union City Film History Archived March 8 2014 at the Wayback Machine Union City NJ History June 1 2012 Accessed February 18 2023 Via Blogger Harmetz Aljean A Director s Race With AIDS Ends Before His Movie Opens The New York Times November 1 1989 Accessed October 14 2015 But The Bloodhounds of Broadway is not entirely the movie that Mr Brookner created on the streets of Union City Newark and Jersey City beginning in December 1987 Tirella Tricia Movie filmed at U C shelter The Union City Reporter November 25 2008 pp 1 and 6 a b c d Paul Amry and Matzner Caren Scores of artists find a place in N Hudson WNY Union City Weehawken and North Bergen becoming NoHu The Hudson Reporter May 6 2008 Accessed November 14 2019 Local artists are currently thriving in Union City and the neighboring immigrant towns on this side of the river buoyed both by a need to preserve their native culture and a realization that housing prices are slightly lower here than in nearby arts havens like Hoboken Jersey City and Manhattan a b Cullen Deanna New performers on the block Hudson Theatre Works holds inaugural show Monday The Hudson Reporter February 27 2011 Accessed November 14 2019 La Ola Archived 2008 10 12 at the Wayback Machine Accessed November 20 2010 a b Mestanza Jean Pierre Union City artist spreads word about city Archived 2016 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Secaucus Weekly November 18 2010 Accessed May 6 2016 a b c Union City now rocks to its own song The Hudson Reporter June 15 2014 p 3 Accessed November 14 2019 LaMarca Stephen Providing Hudson County with theater Park Players to take on Agatha Christie in NB restaurant The Hudson Reporter July 24 2011 Accessed November 14 2019 a b Rosero Jessica May 21 2005 Silver Anniversary of the Multi Arts Union City celebrates 25th annual Multi Arts Festival at the ParkPAC The Hudson Reporter p 9 Archived from the original on June 24 2020 Retrieved June 24 2020 a b Rappaport Melissa Live UC inaugurates performing arts center Archived 2017 08 29 at the Wayback Machine The Hudson Reporter October 25 2009 Accessed July 6 2017 Home page Union City Performing Arts Center Accessed June 18 2014 Kaulessar Ricardo Town that gives poetic license Jersey City inspires writers and a reading series The Hudson Reporter April 8 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 UC to host first ever film premiere in the city The Union City Reporter August 22 2010 p 5 World Premiere of Vampire in Union City MeLu Films Accessed August 19 2010 Celebrate Art The Union City Reporter September 5 2010 p 2 Diaz Lana Rose Celebrate art UC honors and supports local artists with month of events Archived 2016 08 16 at the Wayback Machine The Hudson Reporter September 12 2010 Accessed October 14 2015 Mosca David Union City on the big screen The Jersey Journal April 20 2018 updated December 1 2018 Accessed November 14 2019 Vereau Gery A Documentary about NJ s Most Populated Latino City Voices of NY CUNY Graduate School of Journalism April 1 2018 Accessed November 14 2019 Briefs Archived 2017 08 28 at the Wayback Machine The Hudson Reporter February 10 2013 Briefs Archived 2017 08 28 at the Wayback Machine The Hudson Reporter May 27 2012 Zietlinger Ron Union City International Film Festival The Jersey Journal October 4 2012 Accessed July 6 2017 DeChiaro Dean Superheroes and fanboys unite Local comic buff hosts city s mini Comic Con The Hudson Reporter February 10 2013 Accessed November 14 2019 UC International Film Festival to be held this weekend The Hudson Reporter December 2 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Mestanza Jean Pierre December 3 2010 Film festival opening Film Festival in Union City The Jersey Journal Archived from the original on June 4 2016 Retrieved May 6 2016 The UCIFF will take place on today and tomorrow with the opening short film being X by Academy Award nominated actor and first time director Josh Brolin Union City International Film Festival To Open With Josh Brolin s Acclaimed Short Film X NecioTV November 18 2010 Archived from the original on July 14 2011 Cullen Deanna Local artists communal grounds UC Plaza of the Arts to be unveiled Dec 8 The Hudson Reporter December 5 2010 Accessed November 14 2019 Around Hudson County Hudson Dispatch Weekly December 16 2010 p 1 References EditRyman Ella May History of West Hoboken and Union Hill 1965 Primont Daniel A Fiedler William G and Zuccaro Fred The Historical Background of Union City A Monograph Prepared for the Commemoration of New Jersey s Tercentenary 1664 1964 and As a Teaching Material and Aid in the Union City School System by 1964 The City of Union City A 1996 calendar External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Union City New Jersey nbsp Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article Union N J Union City s official website Union City Board of Education School Performance Reports for the Union City Board of Education New Jersey Department of Education Data for the Union City Board of Education National Center for Education Statistics Park Performing Arts Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Union City New Jersey amp oldid 1179882555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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