andykazie

  • Home
  • Popular Stock Images
  • Search
  • Seasons
  • Land and Sea
  • Architecture & City
  • People
  • Concert Photos
  • Portfolio
  • Contact
  • Photo of the Day
  • Andy K's K-Dirt
  1. Land and Sea

The Story of Snake Hill

"The Story of Snake Hill"
Growing up in Secaucus, New Jersey, the story of Snake Hill has fascinated me. Once a small self contained city of 50 Hudson County buildings including a lunatic asylum, a penitentiary, the almshouse, hospitals for contagious diseases, a potters field with cemetery, three churches and a quarry. The area was active from about 1855 through 1962. More recently Snake Hill was the subject of the award winning "Snake Hill" documentary about the disinterment of 4,571 human remains by the NJ Turnpike Authority from the old cemetery, of which 4,569 were moved to Maple Grove Park Cemetery in Hackensack. For more information, visit this link: http://www.hudsonreporter.com/view/full_story/2414109/article--Hudson-County-Lunatic-Asylum--held-1-872-patients-From-1873-1939--people-signed-their-relatives-in---and-they-didn-t-get-out
About 5,000 bodies are still said to be buried at the site in unidentified graves. This is a only brief summary so hopefully the photos will tell a little more about Snake Hill, enjoy!
Read More
  • Photo Sharing
  • About SmugMug
  • Browse Photos
  • Prints & Gifts
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • Owner Log In
© 2022 SmugMug, Inc.

    Buy this photo

    "Snake Hill Panorama"
A panoramic look from the ground of the cliffs and remaining smoke stack from the laundry building of the old lunatic asylum run by Hudson County in Secaucus, NJ. The village of 50 buildings has been gone now, 50 years past 1962!
    "Snake Hill Pond Panorama"
A panoramic view of a large pond at the base of Snake Hill near the NJ Turnpike. The pond may have formed when the Turnpike was built in 1952. Could this be a flooded area of one of the former cemetery's at Snake Hill?
    "Snake Hill Potters Field"
A Spring view of what is believed to be part of the potters field at Snake Hill where there are believed to be about 5,000 unidentified graves still remaining there.