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Offshore in Raritan Bay at NJ-NY line approx. 1 mi. E. of South Amboy 40°29′12″N 74°15′11″W / 40.486667°N 74.253056°W / 40.486667; -74.253056 ( Great Beds South Amboy
In 1911, a group of New Jersey businessmen including Thomas Edison petitioned for the establishment of a state chamber of commerce. They considered governor Woodrow Wilson was pushing policies seen as antagonistic towards business, and were also spurred into action by the 1911 Supreme Court decision ordering a breakup of Standard Oil of New ...
North Brunswick was first mentioned in Middlesex Freeholder Board minutes of February 28, 1779. North Brunswick Township was incorporated on February 21, 1798, by the New Jersey Legislature's Township Act of 1798 as one of the state's initial group of 104 townships. [26]
The development, Cedar Crossing, was originally approved unanimously by the Brunswick County Planning Board in December 2022. At that time, the project looked to bring 79 homes to just over 27 ...
Follows the Franklin Township, Somerset County-South Brunswick, Middlesex County line; also known as Somerset CR 607 [4] CR 619: 6.39 10.28 Disbrow Hill Road in Monroe Township: Butcher Road, Applegarth Road CR 612 in Monroe Township: Formerly extended north to CR 698: CR 620: 0.28 0.45 [5] Dead end in North Brunswick: Nassau Street Route 171 ...
Elm Ridge Cemetery is on Route 27 in North Brunswick, New Jersey. It is a historic cemetery of both the Colonial period (18th-century) and the Victorian period (19th-century). [ 1 ] Although located in Middlesex County , the majority of the burials are from Somerset County , which directly borders the cemetery.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Brunswick County, Virginia, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.
County Yard was originally part of the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) and is located where the Millstone Branch joined its mainline, now the NEC. It was named for Alexander T. County, a vice-president and treasurer who lived in New Brunswick. A new tower and interlocking at "COUNTY" were opened in 1900. [7] [8] Passenger service ended in 1930. [9 ...