Jutland, New Jersey

Jutland is an unincorporated community located within Union Township in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, United States.[2]

Jutland, New Jersey
Jutland, New Jersey
Location of Jutland in Hunterdon County Inset: Location of county within the state of New Jersey
Jutland, New Jersey
Jutland, New Jersey (New Jersey)
Jutland, New Jersey
Jutland, New Jersey (the United States)
Coordinates: 40°37′22″N 74°57′52″W
Country United States
State New Jersey
CountyHunterdon
TownshipUnion
Elevation328 ft (100 m)
GNIS feature ID877508[1]

Jutland is located approximately 1.2 mi (1.9 km) south of Interstate 78. Jutland Lake and Jutland Dam are located east of the settlement.[3][4]

History

The Lehigh Valley Railroad completed the New Jersey part of its main line through Jutland using its Easton and Amboy Railroad subsidiary in 1875 (the line for its majority of its existence traveled between Buffalo, New York and New York City) and in the early 1900s, a depot was erected in Jutland. The Lehigh Valley Railroad main line is now called the Lehigh Line now owned and operated by the Norfolk Southern Railway.

Jutland was a center for produce marketing, and fruit and milk were the most popular items transported to New York City. The Hunterdon County Fruit Exchange was located in Jutland, and in 1889, about 16,000 baskets of peaches were processed there. Jutland had a post office, farm equipment store, blacksmith, large fertilizer and feed store, school (now a day-care center), and town hall.[5][6]

gollark: I haven't heard of passwords being a thing *here*, but it's a somewhat better system.
gollark: Credit card abuse is maybe not very common, but if the system works it's DEFINITELY not because of any technical merits of it.
gollark: All the information you need, as far as I know, is literally written *on the card*.
gollark: "If they start doing stuff you don't want with it, you just have to hope someone notices and stops it, but it might stop transactions you actually want to make randomly anyway."
gollark: "Ah yes, you need to give someone these numbers to make a transaction, and they're literally all written on the card anyway, and if they have the numbers they can arbitrarily make any amount of transactions they want."

References


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