Weehawken - The Red Water Tower
Date
2025-01-27
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Abstract
Description
The Weehawken Water Tower on Park Avenue was built in 1883 as part of the Hackensack Water Company Complex.
It was designed by Frederick Clarke Withers and modeled after the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, Italy.
The tower was capable of holding 165,000 gallons of water and stands 175 feet high, 300 feet above sea level at the Hudson River.
The tower was connected to Reservoir No.1 atop the Hudson Palisades to which water was pumped from the Hackensack River, approximately 14 miles away. While the reservoir at the site could provide adequate pressure for water users in Hoboken, located just above sea level, water pressure was inadequate for customers atop the Palisades.
The Tower is cited on the Federal Maritime Chart as the "Red Tower" and serves as a warning to ships traveling south along the Hudson that they are approaching New York Bay.
Original file name Hackensack Water Tower (1).jpg
Original file name Hackensack Water Tower (1).jpg
Keywords
Hackensack Water Tower, The Red Tower, U.S. National Register of Historic Places, New Jersey Register of Historic Places, Weehawken, Hudson County, Gateway, The Gateway Region, New Jersey, NJ, The Garden State
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