“Major Employer's List”. Hudson County Economic Developmen Corporation. 2011年7月18日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2011年3月20日閲覧。
hudsonreporter.com
Hoboken's earliest days: Before becoming a city, 'Hobuck' went through several incarnationsArchived 2007年9月27日, at the Wayback Machine., Hudson Reporter, January 16, 2005. "On October 2, 1609, Henry Hudson anchored his ship, the Half Moon, in what is now Weehawken Cove. Robert Juet, Hudson's first mate, wrote in the ship's log, "[W]e saw a good piece of ground ... that looked of the color of white green." The rock of which Juet wrote makes up Castle Point in Hoboken; nowhere else along the Hudson River exists a white-green rock formation."
Holusha, John. "Commercial Property / The Jersey Riverfront; On the Hudson's West Bank, Optimistic Developers", The New York Times, October 11, 1998. Accessed May 25, 2007. "That simply is out of the question in midtown, he said, adding that some formerly fringe areas in Midtown South that had previously been available were filled up as well. Given that the buildings on the New Jersey waterfront are new and equipped with the latest technology and just a few stops on the PATH trains from Manhattan, they become an attractive alternative. It's the sixth borough, he said."
Kannapell, Andrea. "On the Waterfront", The New York Times, On the Waterfront
Hoboken's earliest days: Before becoming a city, 'Hobuck' went through several incarnationsArchived 2007年9月27日, at the Wayback Machine., Hudson Reporter, January 16, 2005. "On October 2, 1609, Henry Hudson anchored his ship, the Half Moon, in what is now Weehawken Cove. Robert Juet, Hudson's first mate, wrote in the ship's log, "[W]e saw a good piece of ground ... that looked of the color of white green." The rock of which Juet wrote makes up Castle Point in Hoboken; nowhere else along the Hudson River exists a white-green rock formation."