What is Your Destination this Vacation:
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
Our Recomended Destination:


Today, New Jersey, an area of wide industrial diversification, is known as the Crossroads of the East. Products from over 20,000 manufacturers can be delivered overnight to 100 million people. The greatest single industry is chemicals; New Jersey is one of the foremost research centers in the world. Many large oil refineries are located in northern New Jersey. Other important manufactured items are pharmaceuticals, instruments, machinery, electrical goods, and apparel. Productive farmland covers about 790,000 acres, 16.7% of New Jersey's land area. The state ranks high in the production of almost all garden vegetables, as well as blueberries, cranberries, and peaches. Poultry, dairy products, and seafood are also top commodities. Tourism is the second-largest industry in New Jersey. The state has numerous resort areas on 127 mi of Atlantic coastline. In 1977, New Jersey voters approved legislation allowing legalized casino gambling in Atlantic City. Points of interest include the Delaware Water Gap, the Edison National Historic Site in West Orange, Princeton University, Liberty State Park, Jersey City, and the N.J. State Aquarium in Camden.
New Jersey's southern counties have sections so rural, there are no road signs; if you don't know where you are, you're not from around here. That's NJ culture, beneath the thick layers of accessibility that make the state so accommodating to immigrants still in the process of moving on from the ports, professionals working in and around New York or Philadelphia, and other transients. At its core, New Jersey is an old place, one of the original colonies, and there are families who go back that far. And there are families who don't, who came over from city neighborhoods in the 1960's or last year. And they know each other. The flat land, the low land, the water-riven land that leads every crick to a river or the ocean. New Jersey culture is attuned to water. Going down the shore, to Atlantic City, gazing longingly across the rivers at Philadelphia or New York, the long wet winters. It's all salt and dreaming, New Jersey. Film was born in New Jersey, flickering in Thomas Edison's laboratory and in early Fort Lee studios before heading west. One of the early stars of film and pop music, Frank Sinatra, was born in Hoboken in 1915; he also went west. In 1951, the American love of driving found its quintessential expression in the New Jersey Turnpike, a massive highway that is still the most heavily travelled toll road in the country. Travel, escape, driving away and leaving it all behind - all part of New Jersey culture. But coming home, too. Loyalty to an old place, a home that refuses to reveal its beauty and value to the browser. New Jersey is the nation's largest neighborhood, a place that doesn't impress anyone just passing through. The landscape must be lived in, demands habitation.
In Atlantic City, the average mean temperature is 12°C, ranging from –1°C in January to 24°C in July. Precipitation is plentiful, averaging 46 inches annually; snowfall totals about 16 inches. At Atlantic City, annual precipitation (1971–2000) was 40.6 inches. The annual average humidity is 81% at 7 AM, reaching a normal high of 87% in September. Statewide, the record high temperature is 43°C, set in Runyon on 10 July 1936; the record low is –37°C, set in River Vale on 5 January 1904. A 29.7-inches accumulation on Long Beach Island in 1947 was the greatest 24-hour snowfall in the state's recorded history. Occasional hurricanes and violent spring storms have damaged beachfront property over the years, and floods along northern New Jersey Rivers especially in the Passaic River basin, are not uncommon. A serious drought occurs, on average, about once every 15 years.
Atlantic City: At some point in your life, you "owned" real estate in Atlantic City. You just didn't know it. You passed Go, collected your $200, bought Boardwalk and built 4 hotels.

Newark: Newark is the largest city in New Jersey and the first one encountered by anyone flying into the Garden State. Newark is home to the Newark Liberty International Airport.

Princeton: Princeton is well-known for being home to the world famous Princeton University. The institution's incredible architecture has been featured in countless movies.

Cape May: Cape May is located at the southernmost tip of New Jersey. It is surrounded by both the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay.

Wildwood: Wildwood is one of New Jersey's most popular shore destinations. During the off season, the town sports about 6,000 residents; but during the summer, it can claim near 250,000 people.

Trenton: Trenton has been the Capitol city of New Jersey since 1790. It is located along the Delaware River and in the Central region of NJ.

New Brunswick: New Brunswick is home to the main campus of Rutgers University, New Jersey's largest state school.

Surf City: Surf City is one of the quiet towns on Long Beach Island, which is sandwiched between the ocean and the bay. The touristier end of the LBI would be towards Beach Haven.
Light Dispelling Darkness Edison, New Jersey: WPA-era fountain sculpture depicts Evil in various forms, vanquished by American can-do spirit.

U.S.S. Ling, WWII Sub Hackensack, New Jersey: Floating in the Hackensack River. Make sure to continuously duck when you take the tour.

Hitler's Toilet Florence, New Jersey: The crapper from Hitler's personal yacht still flushes at Greg's Auto Repair.

Hindenburg Crash Site Lakehurst, New Jersey: Largest Nazi zeppelin lost it here in 1937. See the memorial and the museum.

Space Farms Zoo and Museum Beemerville, New Jersey: The stuffed carcass of Goliath is one of the treasures to be examined at this free museum of stuff.

World's Largest Light Bulb Edison - Menlo Park, New Jersey: More than you really need to know about the Wizard of Menlo Park, Thomas Edison, in a small museum next to the light bulb tower.

Northlands Flemington, New Jersey: Epic-proportioned miniature railroad attraction built by the guy who also plays the organs at the center of Northlands.

Sterling Hill Mining Museum Ogdensburg, New Jersey: Enter authentic zinc mine, see fake coal. Includes Thomas S. Warren Museum of Fluorescence.

Roadways: The New Jersey Turnpike is one of the best-known and most-trafficked roadways in the United States. This toll road carries interstate traffic between Delaware and New York, and the East Coast in general. Commonly referred to as simply "the Turnpike," it is known for its numerous rest-areas named after prominent New Jerseyans as diverse as inventor Thomas Edison; United States Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton; United States Presidents Grover Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson; writers James Fenimore Cooper, Joyce Kilmer, and Walt Whitman; patriot Molly Pitcher; Red Cross advocate Clara Barton; and football coach Vince Lombardi.

Airports: Newark Liberty International Airport is one of the busiest airports in the United States. Operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the other two major airports in the New York metropolitan area (John F. Kennedy International Airport and LaGuardia Airport), it is one of the main airports serving the New York City area. Continental Airlines is the facility's largest tenant, operating an entire terminal at Newark, which it uses as one of its primary hubs. FedEx Express operates a large cargo hub. The adjacent Newark Airport railroad station provides access to the trains of Amtrak and New Jersey Transit along the Northeast Corridor Line. Two smaller commercial airports, Atlantic City International Airport and Trenton-Mercer Airport, also operate in other parts of New Jersey. Teeterboard Airport, in Bergen County, is a general aviation airport popular with private and corporate aircraft, due to its proximity to New York City. Millville Municipal Airport, in Cumberland County, is a general aviation airport popular with private and corporate aircraft, due to its proximity to the shore.

Rail and Bus: Amtrak also operates numerous long-distance passenger trains in New Jersey to and from neighboring states and around the country. In addition to the Newark Airport connection, other major Amtrak railway stations include Trenton Rail Station, Metro Park, and the grand historic Newark Penn Station. Septa also has two lines that operate into New Jersey. The Trenton Line terminates at the Trenton Transit Center, and the West Trenton Line terminates at the West Trenton Rail Station in Ewing. Air Train Newark is a monorail connecting the Amtrak/NJ Transit station on the Northeast Corridor to the airport's terminals and parking lots. Some private bus carriers still remain in New Jersey. Most of these carriers operate with state funding to offset losses and state owned buses are provided to these carriers of which Coach USA companies make up the bulk. Other carriers include private charter and tour bus operators that take gamblers from other parts of New Jersey, New York City, Philadelphia, and Delaware to the casino resorts of Atlantic City.
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