Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aug. 2—A proposed active-adult community off Jim Crow Road in South Hall is among several items on a busy Flowery Branch City Council agenda Thursday, Aug. 4. ... single-story homes starting at ...
Contents: Counties and communities in New Jersey Atlantic – Bergen ( Closter , Franklin Lakes , Ridgewood , Saddle River , Wyckoff ) – Burlington – Camden – Cape May – Cumberland – Essex – Gloucester – Hudson – Hunterdon – Mercer – Middlesex – Monmouth – Morris – Ocean – Passaic – Salem – Somerset – Sussex ...
In 1842 Richard Salter Hartshorne, Jr. purchased the farm and in 1850 he added the Italianate porch to the front of the house. [9] The farmstead remained successful under the ownership of the Hartshornes during the Gilded Age, in 1911 it was sold for $32,000.00 to the last family of ownership, the Oakley family. Charles Oakley Jr. made some ...
Seabrook Farms is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) [7] located within Seabrook, which is in turn located in Upper Deerfield Township, in Cumberland County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [8] It is part of the Vineland-Bridgeton metropolitan statistical area for statistical purposes. [9]
The farm was inaugurated on Thanksgiving Day in 1912. [1] 263 acres (1.06 km 2) of active farmland was purchased by Ernest H. Liebel from J. C. Letson in Stelton and each member was leased 1-acre (4,000 m 2) of land. The project was supervised by G. E. Littlefield of Massachusetts. [4]
Ailsa Farms, also known as Haledon Hall and Hobart Manor, is a historic house located at 300 Pompton Road in the township of Wayne in Passaic County, New Jersey, United States. It was purchased by the state of New Jersey in 1948 from the family of Garret Hobart , 24th vice president of the United States and is now located on the campus of ...
The Case-Dvoor Farmstead, or simply the Dvoor Farm, is a farm located on a 40-acre (16 ha) farm at 111 Mine Street in Raritan Township, near Flemington, of Hunterdon County, New Jersey. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 11, 2009, for its significance in agriculture and architecture. [ 3 ]
[4] [5] The home is associated with Judge Hugh Hartshorne Bowne. [4] The Squire Hartshorne House and the Robinson Plantation House are other homes from the 18th century located in Clark. [6] In May 2009, the Union County Board of Chosen Freeholders announced its support of preservation of the building site. [7] [8]