The Sopranos: Paterson Falls

By Joe Berk

Another one of the stops on my New Jersey Sopranos tour was Paterson Falls.  Although only about 40 miles or so from where I grew up, I’d never been there.

I knew of the town, though.  It’s an old industrial village with waterfalls, which meant that in the early days of our country it was perfect for industrial development. The falls provided hydraulic power, and that could be used to drive machinery.  Indeed, it’s where Samuel Colt built his first run of revolvers, which are known (not surprisingly) as Paterson Colts.  Paterson was established as the nation’s first planned industrial city in 1792, with its readily-available hydraulic power and close proximity to New York City and the Atlantic Ocean.  Paterson manufactured silk cloth, steam locomotives, textiles, paper, firearms, and aircraft engines.    It is centered on the Passaic River, which flows into Newark Bay and from there to the Atlantic Ocean.

The Passaic Falls are contained within the Paterson Great Falls National Historic Park, which is (as the name implies) part of the U.S. National Park system.  All this was news to me, which is kind of amazing when you consider that I grew up a short 40 miles to the south.  I’d never known any of this, and to learn about it at my age was surprising.  I’ll give the credit for that to David Chase (the guy who created The Sopranos).  Had that show not sparked my interest, I’d still be ignorant.

So, let’s move on to the scene in The Sopranos that caught my attention.  It’s the episode in which Mikey Palmici (Uncle Junior’s driver and bodyguard) throws a drug dealer off the bridge over the Passaic Falls:

That episode you see above occurred later in The Sopranos.  There was another scene in the very first Sopranos episode on the same bridge shown above in which Hesh Rabkin and Big Pussy Bompensiero (two of The Sopranos characters) threaten to throw a health insurance company executive (a guy named Alex Mahaffey, played by Michael Gaston) off the same bridge if he didn’t cooperate with a Sopranos scam to defraud the insurance company.

When threatened with a swan dive off the bridge, Mahaffey gave in to the Soprano family’s demands, but alas, his Sopranos career was over; Michael Gaston never appeared in another episode.  But that didn’t mean Sue and I wouldn’t see him again.  In one of our trips to New Jersey, we rode the Air Trans shuttle between the airport and the rental car facility.  Just before we boarded the shuttle, Michael Gaston was leaving the car we entered.  We didn’t bug him, but we made eye contact and he knew we knew who he was.

Michael Gaston, an actor we bumped into on the Newark Airport Air Trans.

There’s a lot more to Paterson, though, then simply having been a location for a couple of The Sopranos scenes.  Here’s another video that describes Paterson’s history:

Today, Paterson is undergoing a renaissance, as the old factory buildings are being converted to loft apartments.  Yup, Paterson is being yuppified.  It looks like an interesting place to spend more time, but my schedule didn’t permit doing so on this visit.  For us it was roll into town, grab a few photos, and bail.

A view of Passaic Falls. This is a beautiful area.
The wood-surfaced foot bridge featured in two different Sopranos episodes.
Another view of the bridge. It’s closed to the public. On the Internet, it says it’s for safety reasons. One of my police buddies told me it’s because there were too many suicides from this bridge.
Another view of the Passaic River and its Falls in Paterson.
While we were visiting the Paterson Great Falls National Historic Park, this rather plump groundhog was doing the same. My Dad used to hunt these in New Jersey with his .243 Model 70 Winchester and the farmers loved having him do so. These woodchucks may look cute, but they destroy a lot of crops.

One thing I know for sure:   I’ll return to Paterson.  I’d like to explore the city, its museums, and more in greater detail.


Want to see our other visits to The Sopranos locations?  Here they are:

The Sopranos Mansion


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16 thoughts on “The Sopranos: Paterson Falls”

  1. lol! WOW!
    I was just talking about Patterson with my good friend Bill. He stopped by to say hello on his roundabout way home from , you guessed it, Patterson .
    He is a federal historical architect currently working on restoration the falls park and whatever related government property , canals? I don’t recall since I didn’t know this blog was coming and really didn’t note the details. I do remember he said Alexander Hamilton as treasury secretary brought together the financiers that put together the industrial plan for Patterson .
    My only other Patterson experience is my son boxed up there . It was definitely not a yuppie experience . 100degrees in this building packed with people whom maybe spoke English as a second language . Maybe ! As close as I get to Paterson these days is a sub from Jersey Mike’s .

    I can’t say I saw Soprano episodes featuring that bridge or not.
    Interesting blog .

    1. Thanks, Floyd. Good inputs.

      Speaking of boxers from New Jersey, we watched Cinderalla Man a couple of nights ago. Outstanding movie, definitely worth watching.

  2. It’s funny how we miss things just around the corner. The oldest timber frame house in the US, the Fairbanks House, is less than five miles from my house yet I’ve never visited. I’ve driven by it a million times, it looks like an old saggy house in dire need of paint.

    1. I hear ya, Marcus. I grew up living about 40 miles from the Statue of Liberty and the Empire State Building; I was in my 50s before we ever visited. I live about 5 miles from the Maloof house, and we only visited that last year.

      1. When I was a kid, my cousin and I raced up the stairway to the top of the Statue Of Liberty. We went as fast as we could, non-stop. I won but it was close. We never got tired, just maybe sometimes our legs burned for a minute. That run would literally kill me today.

  3. Wow, it’s nice to see Paterson doing well again. I lived in New Jersey for many years, and when I did, Paterson was a dump – not a safe place by any stretch of the imagination. For a portion of my time in NJ, I lived in Fair Lawn which was very close to Paterson, and sometimes you had to drive through it for various reasons. It was always dicey.

    Great article as always. Thanks for the good read.

  4. NJ is a small state with big places to visit and all within about 2 hours of each other from the middle of the state.

    1. It’s amazing how many things I didn’t see when I was growing up there. We were having too much fun fishing in Deans Pond and traipsing through the forests and fields in our neck of the woods.

  5. Joe, I was born in Paterson, and raised in Little Falls, another falls on the Passaic River. I live on the west coast now, so I love your reports from New Jersey. Bill

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