Paterson Great FallsBrochure |
Official Brochure of Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park (NHP) in New Jersey. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Paterson Great Falls
National Historical Park
New Jersey
Great Falls of the Passaic River, Paterson, New Jersey.
© MARK HILLRINGHOUSE
Waterpower Drove America's Early Industry
Called "Silk City" in the heyday of its
textile industry, Paterson's 100-plus
factories employed thousands of
skilled and unskilled laborers. Mills
processed cotton, flax, paper, hemp,
and jute fibers. Waterpower fueled
Samuel Colt's first firearms factory.
Union Pacific locomotive #119, built
here, took part in the "Golden Spike"
ceremony in Utah to open the transcontinental railroad in 1869. Paterson
remained a hub for building aircraft
engines through World War II.
Alexander Hamilton
by Charles Willson Peale
about 1790-1795
INDEPENDENCE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARR
The Great
Falls of the
Passaic
River—77
feet high and
260 feet w i d e are the heart of
historically industrial Paterson, New
Jersey. Their great power and raw
energy—as up to two billion gallons
of water a day plunge into the gorge—
inspired Alexander Hamilton's vision
to harness waterpower to manufacture
goods in the infant United States.
in Paterson to pursue their versions of
Hamilton's vision and to weave their
threads into the city's fabric.
The Great Falls of Paterson became
a National Natural Landmark in 1967,
and part of Paterson was designated as
a National Historic Landmark District
in 1976. The Great Falls raceway and
power systems became a Historic Civil
Engineering Landmark the next year.
Established in 2011, Paterson Great
Falls National Historical Park preserves and protects the heritage of
this area along the Passaic River.
Labor and management would clash
in Paterson over long hours and harsh
working conditions. An 1835 textile
workers' strike, one of the nation's
earliest labor actions, reduced the
workday for children from 13 Vi to 11
hours. A six-month silk strike in 1913
focused on the threat of emerging
technology and sought an eight-hour
workday, but Paterson's silk workers
would not win an eight-hour workday
until 1919.
Secretary of the Treasury Hamilton
knew America could not be economically independent while depending on
British manufactured goods. In 1792,
his investment group, the Society for
Useful Manufactures (SUM), began to
develop Paterson, a planned industrial
city. Canals, raceways, and spillways
were built to drive its factories and
build a US market economy.
A succession of waves of immigrant
workers drove Paterson's early growth
and industrial might. Their talents and
traditions created a diverse, vibrant
culture. Immigrants still settle today
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Interior of a dye house. Skeins of silk thread
were dipped in the vats of hot water and
chemicals.
Workers in a silk mill, around 1910.
Strikers rally at the Botto House, 1913.
Birdseye view of Paterson, NJ, 1897.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
A Brand New Historical Park
Paterson Great Falls is a new national park area "in
progress" with limited services and programs. Here
you encounter a park in its infancy—and you can
return in coming years to watch it mature.
Don't miss seeing the Great Falls. Their beauty and
power are central to Paterson's story. Trace the
paths of the Passaic River and millraces. Take in the
mill buildings' architecture in the National Historic
Landmark District around the park. Or relax and
reenergize by enjoying the natural features at the
heart of this historic industrial city. Some structures,
like the 1813 Phoenix Mill, Paterson's oldest mill,
and the Rogers Locomotive buildings, have been
rehabilitated for new uses as affordable housing
and office space.
The Paterson Museum at 2 Market Street next to
the park (see map) is a partner site of the National
Park Service. Museum exhibits on Paterson history
include textile machines, Colt revolvers, t w o steam
locomotives, and the first modern submarine's
prototype, which was tested in the Passaic River.
For a Safe Visit
Be aware of your surroundings at all times. Be
careful crossing busy streets. Lock all valuables
out of sight in your car.
Getting to the Park
From the Garden State Parkway
North: Take exit 155P t o Route 19 North. Go t w o
miles and take I-80 West/Grand Street exit.
Stay to right for Grand Street exit ramp. Turn left
at light onto Grand. At second light on Grand
turn right onto Spruce Street. At second light on
Spruce bear right onto McBride Avenue Extension,
then make immediate left into Great Falls
Overlook parking area.
South: Take Exit 159 (Saddlebrook) onto I-80
West. Follow the I-80 West directions below.
From 1-80
West: Take Exit 57 B-A. Follow the Downtown
Paterson signs. Turn left at second light onto Cianci
Street, and left at first light onto Market Street
for % mile. Turn right onto Spruce. Go one block
and turn right onto McBride Avenue Extension,
then immediately left into Great Falls Overlook
parking area.
East: Take Exit 57B, circle onto Grand Street exit.
A t end of exit ramp turn left onto Grand. At
second light on Grand turn right onto Spruce
Street. At second light on Spruce bear right onto
McBride Avenue Extension, then turn immediately
left into the Great Falls Overlook parking area.
More Information
Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park
72 McBride Avenue Extension, Paterson, NJ 07501
www.nps.gov/pagr
Paterson Great Falls is one of over 390 parks in
the National Park System. To learn more about
parks and National Park Service programs in
America's communities visit www.nps.gov.
C;GPO:2011 — 540-090
Printed on recycled paper.