Pascack Brook

History

At least one late 18th-century map calls the brook "Great Pascack River." Its tributary Musquapsink Brook is shown as "Little Pascack River."[1] The name "Pascack River" also occurs in an 1876 map of the area.[2]

Course and watershed

Pascack Brook forms a region known as the Pascack Valley. The brook is dammed to form the Woodcliff Lake Reservoir in the town of Woodcliff Lake. The Pascack formerly flowed directly into the Hackensack River, but now ends at the Oradell Reservoir short of its historical juncture with the Hackensack.

A dam on Pascack Brook in Spring Valley, New York, impounded Lake Hyenga until it collapsed during Hurricane Floyd in September 1999. Heavy flooding resulted downstream. The dam was not rebuilt.

Tributaries

(Listed from mouth to source)

See also

References

  1. Leiby, Adrian C. (1962). The Revolutionary War in the Hackensack Valley. Rutgers University Press. inset, "Carte d'une partie de la Province de Newyork et des Jerseys, circa 1781" (Karpinski collection, New York Public Library).
  2. Walker, A.H. (1876). Topographical Illustrated Atlas of Bergen County, New Jersey 1776-1876. C. C. Pease, Reading Publishing Company, PA. 110 (Digital History Collection, Hillsdale, NJ, Free Public Library).

40.984045°N 74.003649°W / 40.984045; -74.003649



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