The Honga River is actually the widened, southern end of a strait that also includes Slaughter Creek, Upper Keene Broad, Dunnock Island Creek, and Lower Keene Broad.
The river was sometimes called "tunger" or even "Hungary" River,[3] Historians hold, however, that the name is derived from the Powatan word kahunge meaning "goose".[4][5] The Honga was a historic center of the oyster fishery in the bay and continues to be popular with sport fishermen.
References
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^ abGriffes, Peter L. (2004). Atlantic Boating Almanacs: Sandy Hook, Nj To St. John River, Fl & Bermuda. Vol. 3. Annapolis, Maryland: ProStar Publications. p. 323.
^for example, George Fox refers to a stop at house on the "Hunger River". Penney, Norman, ed. (1924). The Journal of George Fox. New York: Cosimo. p. 306. Retrieved 2012-01-27.
^Kenny, Hamill (1984). The Place Names of Maryland: Their Origin and Meaning. Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society. p. 116.