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Cranford is a census-designated place (CDP) [5] comprising the downtown part of Cranford Township, Union County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was first listed as a CDP prior to the 2020 census [ 2 ] with a population of population was 2,032.
The high school was recognized for its work in service learning and for being a national school of character. Cranford High School was ranked 51st among 328 public high schools in New Jersey in 2012 by New Jersey Monthly magazine after being ranked 13th in 2010 [139] and was among the top-ranked high schools in the state in 2020. [140]
Mountain Avenue, Broad Street, Central Avenue, Brant Avenue, Westfield Avenue, West Grand Avenue, East Grand Avenue US 1/9 in Rahway: CR 614: 0.92 1.48 Route 27 in Elizabeth: Pearl Street US 1-9 in Elizabeth: CR 615: 5.55 8.93 US 1-9 in Linden: South Stiles Street, North Stiles Street, Centennial Avenue, North Avenue East, Springfield Avenue CR ...
1919 map of original commission's study. The idea for the Rahway River Parkway started in 1919 when Union County Sheriff, James E. Warner began a movement to "save" the river by writing to the local paper, The Cranford Citizen, and urging that the river be made into a memorial to the young men who had died in the recent World War I.
Cranford is an active commuter railroad station in the township of Cranford, Union County, New Jersey. Trains operate between High Bridge and Newark Penn Station (with limited trains continuing to New York Penn Station and Hoboken Terminal) on New Jersey Transit's Raritan Valley Line. The next station east is Roselle Park while west is Garwood.
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Route 59 is the shortest state highway in New Jersey, United States, at 0.15-mile (0.24 km) long. [2] The route consists entirely of a short block of Lincoln Avenue from Union County Route 610 (known locally as South Avenue) in Cranford to New Jersey Route 28 (known locally as North Avenue) along the Cranford–Garwood border.