Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7230727> ?p ?o }
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- Q7230727 subject Q13287949.
- Q7230727 subject Q13360537.
- Q7230727 subject Q8353669.
- Q7230727 subject Q8515858.
- Q7230727 subject Q8518821.
- Q7230727 subject Q8762756.
- Q7230727 subject Q8784348.
- Q7230727 abstract "The Port Johnston Coal Docks were built on the Kill van Kull at Constable Hook in Bayonne, New Jersey in 1864 by the Central Railroad of New Jersey. The 2,750-foot (840 m) coal dock was named after the company's president John Taylor Johnston. (The former Johnston Yard and today's Johnston Avenue also bear his name). At the time of its completion in 1866, it was the largest coal dock in the world and employed 200 men, mostly Irish immigrants. Their job was to empty coal from railroad cars onto barges for shipment across Upper New York Bay to New York.On July 26, 1877, the first full scale strike occurred in Bayonne at the Port Johnston Coal Docks when workers walked off the job. The Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Company, who had bought the coal docks from the Central Railroad of New Jersey in 1876, had cut the wages of the workers in an effort to save money. The Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Company promptly fired all of the workers and brought in German immigrants from New York City to work. A threat of a riot was averted with the intervention of Bayonne Mayor Henry Meigs, Jr. and Father Thomas Killeen of St. Mary's Church. After working a day at the lower wages, the German immigrants decided it was not worthwhile and quit. By early August, Meigs had worked out a solution with the company that ended the strike peacefully.Port Johnston was the site of a prisoner-of-war camp for Italian soldiers during WW2.The tank farms and marine transfer operations around Port Johnston have been operated by Gordon Termina Service since 1966.".
- Q7230727 thumbnail BAYONNE,_NEW_JERSEY_AND_NEW_YORK_HARBOR._THE_RIVERS_WHICH_FLOW_THROUGH_THE_NEW_YORK_METROPOLITAN_REGION_CARRY_RAW_AND..._-_NARA_-_555773.jpg?width=300.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q1053974.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q1064776.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q1075293.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q13287949.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q13360537.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q141817.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q179637.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q3182579.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q5163471.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q5725779.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q592856.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q60.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q812589.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8353669.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8515858.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8518821.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8762756.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8784348.
- Q7230727 wikiPageWikiLink Q933832.
- Q7230727 point "40.651 -74.115".
- Q7230727 type SpatialThing.
- Q7230727 comment "The Port Johnston Coal Docks were built on the Kill van Kull at Constable Hook in Bayonne, New Jersey in 1864 by the Central Railroad of New Jersey. The 2,750-foot (840 m) coal dock was named after the company's president John Taylor Johnston. (The former Johnston Yard and today's Johnston Avenue also bear his name). At the time of its completion in 1866, it was the largest coal dock in the world and employed 200 men, mostly Irish immigrants.".
- Q7230727 label "Port Johnston Coal Docks".
- Q7230727 lat "40.651".
- Q7230727 long "-74.115".
- Q7230727 depiction BAYONNE,_NEW_JERSEY_AND_NEW_YORK_HARBOR._THE_RIVERS_WHICH_FLOW_THROUGH_THE_NEW_YORK_METROPOLITAN_REGION_CARRY_RAW_AND..._-_NARA_-_555773.jpg.