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Minisink: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 41°05′36″N 74°59′32″W / 41.093454°N 74.992247°W / 41.093454; -74.992247
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{{About|the geographic region}}
{{About|the geographic region}}
[[File:Delaware Water Gap cliffs.jpg|thumb|300px|Fog surrounds cliffs looming over the Delaware River whose valley is the core of the historic Minisink region]]

The '''Minisink''' or (more recently) '''Minisink Valley''' is a loosely defined geographic region of the Upper [[Delaware River]] valley in northwestern [[New Jersey]] ([[Sussex County, New Jersey|Sussex]] and [[Warren County, New Jersey|Warren]] counties]]), northeastern [[Pennsylvania]] ([[Pike County, Pennsylvania|Pike]] and [[Northampton County, Pennsylvania|Northampton]] counties]]) and New York ([[Orange County, New York|Orange]] and [[Sullivan County, New York|Sullivan]] counties]]). The name was derived by Dutch colonists from the [[Lenape]] name for the area, as they named bands of their people after geographic places which they inhabited as territory throughout the mid-Atlantic area.
The '''Minisink''' or (more recently) '''Minisink Valley''' is a loosely defined geographic region of the Upper [[Delaware River]] valley in northwestern [[New Jersey]] ([[Sussex County, New Jersey|Sussex]] and [[Warren County, New Jersey|Warren]] counties]]), northeastern [[Pennsylvania]] ([[Pike County, Pennsylvania|Pike]] and [[Northampton County, Pennsylvania|Northampton]] counties) and New York ([[Orange County, New York|Orange]] and [[Sullivan County, New York|Sullivan]] counties]]). The name was derived by Dutch colonists from the [[Lenape]] name for the area, as they named bands of their people after geographic places which they inhabited as territory throughout the mid-Atlantic area.


The term "Minisink" is not used often today. It is preserved because of its historical relevance concerning the early European settlement of the region during the American colonial period ad for its role in early "first contact" between Native Americans and colonial settlers.
The term "Minisink" is not used often today. It is preserved because of its historical relevance concerning the early European settlement of the region during the American colonial period ad for its role in early "first contact" between Native Americans and colonial settlers.

Revision as of 04:11, 2 January 2013

Fog surrounds cliffs looming over the Delaware River whose valley is the core of the historic Minisink region

The Minisink or (more recently) Minisink Valley is a loosely defined geographic region of the Upper Delaware River valley in northwestern New Jersey (Sussex and Warren counties]]), northeastern Pennsylvania (Pike and Northampton counties) and New York (Orange and Sullivan counties]]). The name was derived by Dutch colonists from the Lenape name for the area, as they named bands of their people after geographic places which they inhabited as territory throughout the mid-Atlantic area.

The term "Minisink" is not used often today. It is preserved because of its historical relevance concerning the early European settlement of the region during the American colonial period ad for its role in early "first contact" between Native Americans and colonial settlers.

Originally inhabited by Munsee-speakers of the Lenape or Delaware Indians, this area was first settled in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries by Dutch and French Huguenot families from colonial New York's Hudson River Valley.

Much of the historical Minisink region has been incorporated into the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area.

See also


41°05′36″N 74°59′32″W / 41.093454°N 74.992247°W / 41.093454; -74.992247