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Publications
Founded in 1952, the North Jersey Highlands Historical Society
takes as its mission the collection, preservation and interpretation of
the cultural history of the Highlands, a mountainous region in Northern
New Jersey that contains a portion of the Ramapo Mountains. The interests
of the Society range from prehistory through the present day. The NJHHS
publishes a yearly historical journal, The Highlander, as well
as books and pamphlets on regional history. The North Jersey Highlands
Historical Society also publishes books of local interest. The most recent
has been:
Indians in the Ramapos: Survival, Persistence & Presence
by Edward J. Lenik

Indians in the Ramapos is a cultural history of the Native American presence
within the Highlands region of Northern New Jersey and southeastern New
York. Indian peoples occupied this mountainous region for thousands of
years prior to European settlement, and their descendants continue to
do so today.
Some historical accounts indicate that Indians were gone from the area
by the early 1800s. Following the Treaty of Easton in 1758 at which the
Indians relinquished their remaining lands in New Jersey, many of them
moved westward traveling through and temporarily settling in Pennsylvania,
Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, Kansas Arkansas, and Texas, finally settling
in Oklahoma. Other Indians from the Highlands region moved north to counties
in upstate New York, to Wisconsin and to Ontario, Canada.
Many, however, stayed behind in the Highlands region. Early European
settlers in the region established farms and villages in the fertile valleys
along the many rivers. These new settlers harvested the forests for wood
for building, tools, and fuel and the bedrock itself for iron, but they
lived, farmed and built their homes, mills, forges and furnaces in the
lowlands. The remnant native groups retreated to the mountainous uplands
and established a community virtually invisible to the newcomers below.
These people took their identity from the mountains themselves, hiding
the Indian heritage lest they be removed to the west.
This book is about Indian people and their history in the Highlands.
It assembles in one volume information collected by the author and others
in many disciplines. Much of what is covered here is from the archaeological
record. This record reveals thousands of year of human occupation and
use of the mountains. It reveals that point at which a new group of people,
the European explorers and settlers, arrived with a new material cultural,
which included a written language. Also presented is material from the
written record and traditions handed down among the Ramapo Mountain People.
Published by the North Jersey Highlands Historical Society, the book
contains 124 pages and 21 illustrations.
Order Book
Edward J. Lenik is president of Sheffield Archaeological Consultants
of Butler, NJ and the author of many books and articles on topics from
petroglyphs to iron mines. He is past president of the Eastern States
Archaeological Federation, the Archaeological Society of New Jersey
and the North Jersey Highlands Historical Society.
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