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Cresskill is a borough in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 9,155, [9] [10] an increase of 582 (+6.8%) from the 2010 census count of 8,573, [19] [20] which in turn reflected an increase of 827 (+10.7%) from the 7,746 counted in the 2000 census. [21]
Bergen County is the most populous county in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [8] Located in the northeastern corner of New Jersey, Bergen County and its many inner suburbs constitute a highly developed part of the New York City metropolitan area, bordering the Hudson River; the George Washington Bridge, which crosses the Hudson, connects Bergen County with Manhattan.
Cresskill High School; Cresskill Public Schools; D. Demarest–Atwood House; H. Peter Huyler House This page was last edited on 23 October 2013, at 19:25 ...
The husband of a Cresskill woman who was killed and dumped in Overpeck Park in June 2020, accused the Cresskill Police Department, public schools and the borough of failing to properly investigate ...
Camp Merritt was established in Cresskill for troop staging. [16] In 1916, an act of sabotage literally and figuratively shook the region when German agents set off bombs at the munitions depot in New York Bay at Black Tom. [17] Another act of sabotage known as the Kingsland Explosion occurred on January 11, 1917. [18]
Cresskill High School was the 39th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 328 schools statewide, in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2012 cover story on the state's Top Public High Schools. [7]
The Benjamin P. Westervelt House, located at 253 County Road in Cresskill, Bergen County, New Jersey, was the home of Benjamin P. Westervelt, a member of the local militia during the American Revolutionary War.
The Camp Merritt Memorial Monument is dedicated to the soldiers who passed through Camp Merritt, New Jersey on their way to fight in Europe in World War I, especially the 578 people – 15 officers, 558 enlisted men, four nurses and one civilian – who died at the camp due to the worldwide influenza epidemic of 1918, whose names are inscribed at the base of the monument. [1]