Culture
Book ‘Down Neck’ native chronicles Newark’s Ironbound history in new book
One neighborhood that has been getting a lot of respect these days is the Ironbound, that Newark locale notable for some pretty tasty food and drink in the Spanish-Portuguese mode, among others.

FRENCHTOWN, NJ – One neighborhood that has been getting a lot of respect these days is the Ironbound, that Newark locale notable for some pretty tasty food and drink in the Spanish-Portuguese mode, among others.
That’s not exactly the way things used to be, as a new published history informs us about this place – otherwise known as “Down Neck” – that was long regarded as being on the wrong side of the tracks.
The book is entitled “The Ironbound: An Illustrated History of Newark’s Down Neck” ($21.99, Stone Creek Publications), the work of a veteran newspaperman whose roots in the neighborhood go all the way back to the 1930s.
The author, Edward A. Jardim, traces the path by which this section on Newark’s eastern edge developed as the city grew in leaps and bounds starting early in the 19th century, giving rise to factories, schools, churches, and various social organizations. Amid burgeoning industrial activity that shaped Newark’s destiny as an urban powerhouse, the Ironbound and its labor force were poised to make a mark as a stronghold of “ethnic” identity and loyalties.
Down Neck
Even those familiar with the neighborhood may be surprised to learn that the area tucked into the “Big Bend” of the Passaic River was once considered so wild and remote that local folks referred to it as “Texas;” or that a young Thomas Edison launched his inventing career at several Ironbound locations; or that, in the decades before Prohibition, the Ironbound was a major producer (and consumer) of beer, with some 18 breweries and 140 saloons, “not to mention the dance halls of dubious propriety.” A social worker reporting on the Ironbound in 1912 suggested that it might have been more correctly named “Beer Island.”
Jardim was raised in the Ironbound and later settled with his family in Long Hill Township, N.J. His father, Vasco de Sousa Jardim, was a printer and publisher whose own ethnic identity was Portuguese, one of the many nationalities that gives the neighborhood a multicultural ambience to this day. The senior Jardim was publisher of the Portuguese-language Luso-Americano newspaper for over four decades starting in 1939. The paper is still owned by the family and operates out of offices on Ferry and Union streets in Newark.
The Ironbound: An Illustrated History of Newark’s ‘Down Neck’ is available for sale at amazon.com, ironboundbook.com, and the Luso-Americano Bookstore at 88 Ferry Street, Newark, NJ 07105.
(User submitted)
Discover more from Unheard Voices Magazine
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
-
Crime & Justice2 weeks ago
Black couple survives alleged racist attack, car crash in rural Virginia
-
Black And Missing2 weeks ago
Body of missing North Carolina teen Giovanni Pelletier found in Florida retention pond, family confirms
-
Crime & Justice2 weeks ago
Florida teen arrested after allegedly killing parents
-
Crime & Justice3 days ago
Alabama mother sues state workers after 3-year-old son dies in scorching hot car
-
News2 weeks ago
Family seeks justice for San Antonio, TX woman fatally mauled by pitbull dog
-
Community5 days ago
New Jersey mourns Esiyah Dixon-Waheed, pageant queen, HBCU alumna, killed in Missouri drunk-driving crash
-
Crime & Justice1 day ago
Virginia man sentenced to life for murder of New Jersey councilwoman Eunice Dwumfour
-
Community2 weeks ago
A New York City hospital needs help identifying woman hospitalized over 100 days