Hotelswithall New Jersey Hotel Guide

Hotelswithall New Jersey Hotel Guide
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Hotelswithall is where you can find a clean, convenient, comfortable, spacious hotel room for booking at places to stay in New Jersey. Find luxury five-star affordable resorts, comfortable four-star inexpensive hotels, clean three-star economy inns, convenient two-star budget lodges, and discount cheap one-star motels, with rooms available for rental of lodging accommodations in New Jersey. Make reservations for a hotel room in New Jersey. Search for studio hotel rooms and one-bedroom suites by city in New Jersey. Book a hotel room by city in New Jersey, where you can shop and compare rates.

A hotel is an establishment that provides lodging on a short-term basis. Hotels often provide a number of additional guest services such as a restaurant, a swimming pool, child care. Some hotels have conference services and encourage groups to hold conventions and meetings at their location. The cost and quality of hotels are usually relatively indicative of the range and type of services available. Due to the enormous increase in tourism worldwide, during the last decades of the 20th century common standards, especially those of smaller establishments, have improved considerably.

For the sake of greater comparability, various hotel rating systems have been introduced, with the one to five stars classification being the most commonly used. Basic hotel accommodation consisting of a room with a bed, a cupboard, a small table and a washstand only have largely been replaced by rooms with en-suite bathrooms. Other features many travellers want today are a TV, a telephone, an alarm clock, a small refrigerator and coffee maker.

Find Hotel Rooms by City in New Jersey

  • Absecon
  • Atlantic City
  • Avalon
  • Avenel
  • Avon by the Sea
  • Basking Ridge
  • Bellmawr
  • Blackwood
  • Bordentown
  • Branchburg
  • Bridgewater
  • Brigantine
  • Brooklawn
  • Cape May
  • Carneys Point
  • Cherry Hill
  • Clifton
  • Colts Neck
  • Columbia
  • Cranbury
  • Cranford
  • East Brunswick
  • East Hanover
  • East Rutherford
  • East Windsor
  • Eatontown
  • Edison
  • Elizabeth
  • Fairfield
  • Fair Lawn
  • Flemington
  • Florham Park
  • Fort Lee
  • Freehold
  • Galloway
  • Gibbstown
  • Gloucester City
  • Hackensack
  • Hammonton
  • Harrison
  • Hasbrouck Heights
  • Hazlet
  • Hillsborough
  • Iselin
  • Jersey City
  • Lawrenceville
  • Lebanon
  • Ledgewood
  • Linden
  • Livingston
  • Long Branch
  • Lyndhurst
  • Mahwah
  • Maple Shade
  • McAfee
  • Monmouth Junction
  • Montvale
  • Morristown
  • Mount Arlington
  • Mount Holly
  • Mount Laurel
  • Mount Olive
  • Neptune
  • Newark
  • New Brunswick
  • North Bergen
  • North Brunswick
  • North Plainfield
  • North Wildwood
  • Paramus
  • Park Ridge
  • Parsippany
  • Penns Grove
  • Piscataway
  • Plainsboro
  • Pompton Plains
  • Princeton
  • Ramsey
  • Raritan
  • Red Bank
  • Rochelle Park
  • Rutherford
  • Saddle Brook
  • Saddle River
  • Secaucus
  • Short Hills
  • Somerset
  • Somers Point
  • South Plainfield
  • Summit
  • Teaneck
  • Tinton Falls
  • Toms River
  • Trenton
  • Vineland
  • Voorhees
  • Wall
  • Wayne
  • Weehawken
  • West Atlantic City
  • West Orange
  • Whippany
  • Wildwood
  • Wildwood Crest
  • Wrightstown
  • The long, skinny state of New Jersey has been at the heart of US history since the Revolution, when a battle was fought at Princeton, and George Washington spent two bleak winters at Morristown. As the Civil War came, the state's commitment to an industrial future ensured that, despite its border location along the Mason-Dixon line, it fought with the Union.

    That commitment to industry has doomed New Jersey in modern times. Most travelers only see ''the Garden State'' (so called for the rich market garden territory at the state's heart) from the stupendously ugly New Jersey Turnpike toll road which, heavy with truck traffic, cuts through a landscape of gray smokestacks and industrial estates. Even the songs of Bruce Springsteen, Asbury Park's golden boy, paint his home state as a gritty urban wasteland of empty lots, gray highways, lost dreams and blue-collar tragedy. The majority of the refineries and factories hug only a mere fifteen-mile-wide swath along the turnpike, but bleak cities like Newark, home to the major airport, and Trenton, the capital, do little to improve the look of the place and the state suffers from a major image problem.

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    But there is more to New Jersey than factories and pollution. Alongside its revolutionary history, Thomas Paine and Walt Whitman both wrote nostalgically of the happy years they spent there; while the northwest corner near the Delaware Water Gap is traced with picturesque lakes, streams and woodlands. Best of all, the Atlantic shore offers many bustling resorts, from the tattered glitz of Atlantic City to the glorious kitsch of Wildwoods and the old-world charm of Cape May.

    With a car, New Jersey is easily accessible from New York City, via I-95, while the New Jersey Turnpike sweeps from the northeast down to Philadelphia. The Garden State Parkway runs parallel to the Atlantic from New York to Cape May (with a 35¢ toll every twenty miles), and gives easy access to the shoreline resorts. One nice route in the north of the state is NJ-29, from Trenton along the Delaware River. In general, driving in the Garden State is not pleasurable, though, as New Jersey must have the worst and most confusing set of roadsigns in the States.

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    Numerous Amtrak trains pass through Newark, Princeton and Trenton, en route between Philadelphia, New York and Washington, DC. There's also a service that links Philadelphia and Atlantic City. Greyhound covers most of the state, while New Jersey Transit also provides a good train and bus service, extending to Philadelphia and New York as well as out to the coast. New Jersey's south coast is connected to Delaware by the Cape May-Lewes ferry.


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    This article was derived fully or in part from the New Jersey article from Travelnow.™ Fullfillment services by Hotels.com.™
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