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Lincoln Park is a station on NJ Transit's Montclair-Boonton Line in the borough of Lincoln Park, Morris County, New Jersey. The station is located near the Comly Road overpass, accessible from Main Street, Station Road and Park Avenue.
The Lincoln Park Public Library opens the doors of its new building in 1969 and the Beavertown Historical Society take over operation of the old wooden library as a history museum. By 2005, the Beavertown Historical Society suffers from low membership, with some members moving away from the area as they retire and between 2006 and 2008 the ...
Lincoln Park contains the easternmost point in Morris County, which is located along the Pompton River.. According to the United States Census Bureau, the borough had a total area of 6.91 square miles (17.91 km 2), including 6.40 square miles (16.57 km 2) of land and 0.52 square miles (1.34 km 2) of water (7.47%).
Located at 117 Main Street in Lincoln Park, the Terhune Benjamin House was a Federal Period house with a Dutch gambrel roof which predated the American Revolutionary War. [1] Records from the Preakness Reformed Church show that the home passed in ownership from owner Albert Terhune to the Morris Canal Company sometime after 1820. [2]
Lincoln Park is the largest urban park located in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It was known historically as Lincoln Square . From 1862 to 1865, it was the site of the largest hospital in Washington, DC: Lincoln Hospital .
Fort Pierce - Lincoln Park, Lincoln Park Main Street; Haines City, Haines City Main Street; High Springs, High Springs Community Development Corporation;
The main body of Lincoln Park is bounded by Broad Street and contains several statues including Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen, Planting the Standard of Democracy by Charles Henry Niehaus, [5] and Captive's Choice, [6] an historic statue erected in 1884 by Chauncey Ives, an American sculptor living in Rome, Italy. It depicts a young English ...
Chicago Pride Parade in Lincoln Park in 1985 on Clark Street. Lincoln Park was home to a number of important historic figures including: J. J. Bittenbinder (1942–2023), police officer, television host, and author. He was a childhood resident of the DePaul neighborhood in Lincoln Park. [42]