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List of municipalities in Sussex County, New Jersey

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Index map of Sussex County municipalities (click to see index key)

There are twenty-four municipalities within the boundaries of Sussex County in the state of New Jersey. These include one municipality incorporated as a town, eight incorporated as boroughs, and fifteen incorporated as townships, organized in accordance with state law. In 2010 Federal decennial census, 149,265 persons resided in Sussex County, a gain of 3.5% from the 144,166 persons counted in the 2000 Federal decennial census.[1] Populations, as of 2010, range from the county's largest municipality, Vernon Township, with 23,943 residents, to Walpack Township, with 16 residents.[1] In size, municipalities range from Branchville borough, the smallest at 0.6 square miles (1.6 km2) to the largest, Vernon, at 70.59 square miles (182.8 km2).

When Sussex County was created on June 8, 1753 from the northern and western regions of Morris County it consisted of the land area of present-day Sussex County and Warren County (created in 1824) in northwestern New Jersey. That county, from 1753 to 1824, comprised roughly 898.60 square miles (2,327.4 km2),[a] was bounded by the Delaware River, Musconetcong River, New York-New Jersey border, and a line drawn northeast from Lake Hopatcong to the colony's northern border with New York.[2] In 1753, Sussex County consisted of four large "precincts": Walpack (created c. 1731), Greenwich (created c. 1738), Hardwick (created 1750), and Newtown (created 1751, dissolved 1864).[3] These four precincts would be divided to create the 24 municipalities presently extant in Sussex County and 22 municipalities presently extant in Warren County.[3]

By a legislative act on November 20, 1824, Warren County was created of the southern half of Sussex County divided on by partition line "beginning on the river Delaware, at the mouth of Flat brook, in the township of Walpack, and running from thence, a straight course to the corner of the Hardwick church [now in Yellow Frame], situated on the south side of the main road leading from Johnsonsburg to Newton and from thence in the same course to the middle of Muskonetcong creek".[4] This line divided Hardwick Township with its lands north of the line being ceded to create the townships of Green and Stillwater. The line also divided Walpack Township with the lands south of the line being ceded to create Pahaquarry Township in Warren County.[3]

Another line of partition, the Lawrence Line of 1743, is still extant in the boundaries of four Sussex County municipalities. This line was drawn by surveyor John Lawrence to provide final resolution after 67 years of disputes to the division of New Jersey into the two proprietary colonies of the Province of West Jersey and Province of East Jersey in accordance with the Quintipartite Deed (1676), divided the state in a straight line from "the Northernmost Branch of said Bay or River of De la Ware which is in forty-one Degrees and forty minutes of latitude...unto the most southwardly poynt of the East syde of Little Egge Harbour".[3][5][6] This line divides Walpack Township from Sandyston Township, and Stillwater Township from Hampton Township.[3]

List of municipalities

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Municipality Location Type Incorporated[3] Created from[3] Area[1] Population (2010)[1] Population (2000)[1] % change[1]
Andover Borough - Borough March 25, 1904
by legislative act[7]
Andover Township 1.47 square miles (3.8 km2) 606 658 -7.9%
Andover Township Township April 11, 1864
by legislative act[8]
Newton Township 20.68 square miles (53.6 km2) 6,319 6,033 +4.7%
Branchville Borough Borough March 9, 1898
by legislative act[9]
Frankford Township 0.6 square miles (1.6 km2) 841 845 -0.5%
Byram Township Township
(council–manager)
April 9, 1798
by legislative act[2]
Newton Township 22.26 square miles (57.7 km2) 8,350 8,254 +1.2%
Frankford Township Township April 10, 1797
by legislative act[2]
Newton Township 35.44 square miles (91.8 km2) 5,565 5,420 +2.7%
Franklin Borough Borough April 23, 1913
by legislative act and referendum[10]
Hardyston Township 4.57 square miles (11.8 km2) 5,045 5,160 -2.2%
Fredon Township Township February 24, 1904
by legislative act[11]
from Andover, Green, Hampton and Stillwater townships 18.00 square miles (46.6 km2) 3,437 2,860 +20.2%
Green Township Township December 27, 1824
by legislative act[12]
Hardwick and
Independence townships
16.26 square miles (42.1 km2) 3,601 3,220 +11.8%
Hamburg Borough Borough April 24, 1920
by legislative act and referendum[13]
Hardyston Township 1.165 square miles (3.02 km2) 3,277 3,105 +5.5%
Hampton Township Township April 11, 1864
by legislative act[8]
Newton Township 25.30 square miles (65.5 km2) 5,196 4,943 +5.1%
Hardyston Township Township
(Special Charter)
February 25, 1762
by royal charter[14]
Newton Township 32.64 square miles (84.5 km2) 8,213 6,171 +33.1%
Hopatcong Borough Borough March 24, 1898
by legislative act[b][15]
Byram Township 12.25 square miles (31.7 km2) 15,147 15,888 -4.7%
Lafayette Township Township April 14, 1845
by legislative act[16]
Frankford and Newton townships 18.05 square miles (46.7 km2) 2,538 2,300 +10.3%
Montague Township Township March 26, 1759
by colonial county courts[17]
Walpack Township 45.38 square miles (117.5 km2) 3,847 3,412 +12.7%
Newton Town
(council–manager)
April 11, 1864
by legislative act[8]
Newton Township[c] 3.17 square miles (8.2 km2) 7,997 8,244 -30%
Ogdensburg Borough Borough March 31, 1914
by legislative act and referendum[18]
Sparta Township 2.33 square miles (6.0 km2) 2,410 2,638 -8.6%
Sandyston Township Township February 26, 1762
by royal charter[19]
Walpack Township 43.26 square miles (112.0 km2) 1,998 1,825 +9.5%
Sparta Township Township
(council–manager)
April 14, 1845
by legislative act[20]
Byram, Frankford, Hardyston, and Newton townships 38.97 square miles (100.9 km2) 19,722 18,080 +9.1%
Stanhope Borough Borough March 24, 1904
by legislative act[21]
Byram Township 2.19 square miles (5.7 km2) 3,610 3,584 +0.7%
Stillwater Township Township December 27, 1824
by legislative act[12]
Hardwick Township 28.39 square miles (73.5 km2) 4,099 4,267 -3.9%
Sussex Borough Borough October 14, 1891
by referendum[d]
Wantage Township 0.62 square miles (1.6 km2) 2,130 2,145 -0.7%
Vernon Township Township
(council–manager)
April 8, 1793
by legislative act[2]
Hardyston Township 70.59 square miles (182.8 km2) 23,943 24,686 -3.0%
Walpack Township Township c. 1731[e] unincorporated wilderness 24.70 square miles (64.0 km2) 16 41 -61.0%
Wantage Township Township May 30, 1754
by colonial county courts[17]
Newton Township 67.48 square miles (174.8 km2) 11,358 10.387 +9.3%

Defunct municipalities

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Municipality Location Incorporated[3] Dissolved[3] Area Notes
Newton Township - March 27, 1751
by colonial county courts
April 11, 1864
by division
approx. 360 square miles (930 km2)[f] Created by the colonial courts in Morris County from New Jersey's last unorganized wilderness areas;[23] one of original four precincts ceded to create Sussex County in 1753.[3] From 1754 to 1864 was divided on six occasions to create 9 municipalities (direct and indirect parent of 18 of Sussex County's present-day 24 municipalities).[3] Dissolved after its final division in 1864 into the Town of Newton, Andover Township, and Hampton Township.[3][8]

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ This is figure is an addition of Sussex County's 535.74 square miles, and Warren County's 362.86 square miles, per United States Census Bureau data.[1]
  2. ^ In 1898, Byram township ceded territory to create Brooklyn Borough which was renamed Hopatcong Borough on March 22, 1901.[3]
  3. ^ Newton Township was dissolved after its final division into Newton (town), Andover Township, and Hampton Township in 1864.[3]
  4. ^ Wantage Township ceded territory to create Deckertown borough after a public referendum on October 14, 1891. It was renamed Sussex Borough after a referendum on March 2, 1902.[3]
  5. ^ Walpack Precinct's date of creation or instrument of creation is unknown. The earliest mention was as "Walpake" in colonial court and government records dated October 26, 1731. [22]
  6. ^ Newton Township, at its creation in 1751, encompassed an area of all of present-day Sussex County excluding Montague, Sandyston, Walpack, Stillwater, Fredon and Green township--presently 176 square miles (460 km2). The calculation of the 360 square miles (930 km2) figure is approximate as, in 1904, a small tract of land of unknown size in Hampton and Andover township, previously part of old Newton Township, was ceded at the creation of Fredon Township. The actual figure might be slightly, but not substantially, larger when factoring in this unknown quantity.[3]

Citations

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g United States Census Bureau, "Table 6. Rank of Counties by Percent Change in Population: 2000 to 2010" (page 8), "Table 8. Population and Housing Units: 1990 to 2010; and Area Measurements and Density: 2010" (page 20-21) CPH-2-32. New Jersey: 2010 - Population and Housing Unit Counts; 2010 Census of Population and Housing (April 2012) (backed up by the Internet Archive as of July 31, 2013). Retrieved October 2, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d William Paterson (compiler), Laws of the State of New Jersey (Newark: Matthias Day, 1800), 15 (creating Sussex County), 118 (creating Vernon Township), 240 (creating Frankford Township), 264 (creating Byram Township).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p John Parr Snyder, The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606–1968: Bulletin 67, (Trenton: Bureau of Geology and Topography, 1969; reprint, New Jersey Geological Survey, 2004), 34, 36, 229–235, 245–249.
  4. ^ P.L. 1824, page 146–147, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  5. ^ Aaron Leaming and Jacob Spicer, The Grants, Concessions and Original Constitutions of the Province of New-Jersey(Philadelphia: W. Bradford, 1758), 10.
  6. ^ John E. Pomfret, The Province of East New Jersey, 1609-1702 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1962), 277, 297-298; William Whitehead, Documents Relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Volume 2 (Newark, NJ: Daily Journal Establishment, 1880), 135-136.
  7. ^ P.L. 1904, page 95, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  8. ^ a b c d P.L. 1864, page 196, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  9. ^ P.L. 1898, page 60, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  10. ^ P.L. 1913, page 128, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey. NOTE: Bill enacted March 18, 1913; referendum held April 23, 1913.
  11. ^ P.L. 1904, page 17, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  12. ^ a b P.L. 1824, page 126, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  13. ^ P.L. 1920, page 36, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey; NOTE: Bill enacted March 19, 1920; referendum held April 24, 1920.
  14. ^ "Royal Charter creating Hardyston Township", Commissions, Liber C-2, page 257, Bureau of Archives and History, New Jersey State Archives, Trenton, New Jersey.
  15. ^ P.L. 1898, page 208; P.L. 1901, page 400, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  16. ^ P.L. 1845, page 137, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  17. ^ a b Court records creating Montague Township (page 421) and Wantage Township (page 420). Sussex County Clerk's Office (Newton, New Jersey), Sussex County Records, Division B, page 420-421
  18. ^ P.L. 1914, page 16, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey. NOTE: Bill enacted February 26, 1914; referendum held March 31, 1914.
  19. ^ "Royal Charter creating Sandyston Township", Commissions, Liber C-2, page 258, Bureau of Archives and History, New Jersey State Archives, Trenton, New Jersey.
  20. ^ P.L. 1845, page 42, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  21. ^ P.L. 1904, page 93, State of New Jersey, "Session Laws", Acts of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey.
  22. ^ Hunterdon County Clerk's Office (Flemington, New Jersey), Hunterdon County Court Records (October 26, 1731), page 97.
  23. ^ Morris County Clerk’s Office (Morristown, New Jersey). General Sessions of the Peace Court of Common Pleas, 1740–1754, 377.
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