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Isaac Edge's Windmill

Near Montgomery and Greene Streets,
Bordering the Hudson River at the time and near the present Exchange Place

The Edge Windmill
Source: H. Eaton: Jersey City and Its Historic Sites

Isaac Edge Sr.
Courtesy of Jersey City Free Public Library

Isaac Edge Jr. (1801-1859)
Courtesy of Jersey City Free Public Library

Isaac Edge, the son of an English miller, settled in Paulus Hook (now Jersey City) in 1806. Wishing to continue his father's trade on the waterfront area, Edge bought property from the Associates of the Jersey Company to establish his own gristmill, near the present-day Exchange Place. It became one of Jersey City's first manufacturing businesses.

Edge's father sent him the machinery and the millstones with instructions for assembly. The parts of the windmill were patterned after his father's mill in Dorsettshire, England. The contacting firm of Burmley and Oakes constructed a seven-story octagonal brownstone tower upon a one-hundred foot long pier that jutted out into the Hudson River. The windmill, completed in 1815, was build on top of this foundation. It served as a landmark for ships approaching the Hudson River from the Upper Bay.

Edge's quality milling process and efficient business practices attracted a burgeoning clientele. Farmers from as far south as Bergen Point (Bayonne), northern parts of Bergen County, Manhattan, Staten Island and Long Island brought their grain by sloops to be processed at Edge's mill. For a time, Edge also operated a bakery at the southwest corner of Greene and York Streets. After a storm, on September 3, 1821, destroyed the canvas fans on the wings of the mill, Edge replaced the canvas sails with those made of iron; he also rebuilt the dock damaged by the storm.

In 1839, the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Co. (later the Pennsylvania Railroad) bought Edge's property and covered the pier with landfill to build its terminal at Exchange Place; it also resulted in the layout for Hudson Street, and straight line bulkhead at the waterfront. The mill was dismantled, parts labeled, shipped and reassembled at Mill Hill in Southhold, Long Island. It was destroyed by fire on June 25, 1870.

Isaac Edge, Jr., opened a fireworks plant, which became a training center for pyrotechnics. His fireworks displays, for which he was internationally known, depicted figures and scenes. Besides pyrotechnics, Edge experimented with rocketry. Because of the hazardous nature of his business, Edge had to relocate his facilities to the outskirts of the rapidly growing municipality of Jersey City.

Dr. Benjamin Edge, a descendant of Isaac Edge, bought the Cornelius Van Vorst mansion at 89 Wayne Street in 1874, which was demolished circa 1925. The mansion was the twin building of the Barrow Mansion at 83 Wayne Street.

Members of the Edge family are buried in a brownstone vault in the Jersey City Cemetery on Newark Avenue behind Dickinson High School.

Reference:
Grundy, J. Owen. The History of Jersey City, 1609-1976. Jersey City: Progress Printing Co., Inc. 1976.
Wagen, Irv. "Waterfront Park Would Brighten Exchange Place." Jersey Journal 23 April 1981.

 

By: Carmela Karnoutsos
Project Administrator: Patrick Shalhoub