Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cherry Hill work will be part of a $13.8 million state-funded project that is also tp repave about four miles of Interstate 295 in both directions between Bordentown and I-195/Route 29 in ...
View north at the south end of Route 154 at CR 561 in Cherry Hill. Route 154 begins at an intersection with CR 561 (Haddonfield-Berlin Road) in the township of Cherry Hill. The site of the former Cherry Hill Arena, now occupied by a shopping center, lies on the route's east side at its beginning. The highway progresses northward as Brace Road ...
Cherry Hill was a 19th-century farm on Kaighn Avenue (), owned by Abraham Browning.The farm property, named Cherry Hill because of the cherry trees growing on the property, later became the Cherry Hill Inn (now an AMC Theatres Cherry Hill 24 movie theater complex), as well as an RCA office campus (now a shopping center with big-box retailers and Target), and today's Cherry Hill Towers and ...
Brace Road in Cherry Hill Township — — Concurrent with Route 41 its entire length CR 575: 20.96: 33.73 Somers Point-Mays Landing Road in Egg Harbor Township: New York Road in Port Republic — — CR 577: 13.10: 21.08 East Broad Street / Springfield Avenue in Westfield: Bloomfield Avenue in Verona — — CR 579: 37.24
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
County Route 561 (CR 561) is a county highway in the U.S. state of New Jersey.The highway extends 50.95 miles (82.00 km) from New York Road (U.S. Route 9 or US 9) in Galloway Township to Federal Street in Camden.
Springdale Farms was founded in 1949 when Alan Ebert purchased the land. At the time, three quarters of Cherry Hill was farmland. Alan's widow, Mary, along with her children, took over operations of the 100-acre (40 ha) farm after his death. A fire in 1988 destroyed the farm's 3,800 square feet (350 m 2) retail building. [4]
The J.A. Sweeton Residence was built in 1950 in Cherry Hill, in Camden County, New Jersey, United States. At 1,500 square feet (140 m 2), it is the smallest of the four Frank Lloyd Wright houses in New Jersey. [1] This Usonian scheme house was constructed of concrete blocks and redwood plywood.