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The Marlboro Township Historic Commission placed a sign, now lost, on Pleasant Valley Road near the Hop (now called "Winding") Brook. The sign stated, "This was the site of a home built by John Reid, an early settler. As a New Jersey surveyor, Reid drew the dividing line between East and West New Jersey, an early important geographical boundary.
It is a rural area covering approximately 1,700 acres (6.9 km 2), most of it in Marlboro Township, Monmouth County, New Jersey. During the 1950s and early 1960s, many unlined lagoons were used for storage of waste oil .
June 21, 1984 (New Bedford Road: Wall Township: Old Wall Historical Society museum 10: Arburtus Cottage: Arburtus Cottage: August 18, 2015 (508 4th Avenue
The Old Scots Burying Ground is a historic cemetery located on Gordon's Corner Road in the Wickatunk section of Marlboro Township, in Monmouth County, New Jersey.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 15, 2001, for its significance in history and religion. [3]
The Old Brick Reformed Church was established in Marlboro Township, New Jersey c.1699. Many of the original church families migrated from Long Island.Initially, services were conducted in Dutch by Ministers who rotated from Brooklyn.
Monmouth County Historical Association & Monmouth County Park System: Permission (Reusing this file) Public Domain - County / State / Federal Government project: Other versions: Included in this pdf is maps from the USGS and Monmouth County Planning Board as well as a page from the Atlas of Monmouth County 1873.
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Oldest church in New Jersey that is continuously used for its original purpose. [65] Dirck Gulick House: Montgomery Township: 1752 Museum Operated by the Van Harlingen Historical Society Covenhoven House: Freehold, New Jersey: 1752-53 Museum Bishop–Irick Farmstead: Vincentown: 1753 House