Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A conceptual design of the future Long Branch pier. The city is using a $3.5 million grant from New Jersey's Boardwalk Preservation Fund to build a new pier at the beach.
Seven Presidents Park is an oceanfront park in the city of Long Branch, New Jersey, USA, maintained by the Monmouth County Park System. It is named after U.S. Presidents Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, and Woodrow Wilson, all of whom spent time in the area's resorts. [1]
A conceptual design of the future Long Branch pier. The city is using a $3.5 million grant from New Jersey's Boardwalk Preservation Fund to build a new pier at the beach.
Pier Village at Long Branch, NJ. Pier Village consists of 536 rental residences sitting atop more than 100,000 square feet (9,300 m 2) of retail space.A public grassy area called Festival Plaza is the site of regular events, including concerts, arts & crafts fairs, outdoor movies, and holiday events.
Manasquan hosts a busy 1 mile long asphalt boardwalk in Monmouth County, New Jersey. The borough maintains an aggressive cleaning protocol for both the boardwalk and the beach. The boardwalk runs from Ocean Avenue in the north to Manasquan Inlet in the south and is primarily lined by private residences. The boardwalk, originally built in the ...
The mile-long boardwalk has an assortment of quaint shops, restaurants, arcades, and other attractions including an amusement park, Funland. The bandstand hosts more than 50 free concerts on ...
Long Branch station, 1873 The Beach at Long Branch, an 1869 wood cut illustration by Winslow Homer Long Branch Beach. Long Branch emerged as a beach resort town in the late 18th century, named for its location along a branch of the South Shrewsbury River. [23] In the 19th century, theatrical performers of the day often gathered and performed there.
The pier was popular among fishermen and club goers who enjoyed late nights at "The Pier Pub" night club. From the late 1950s -- all through the 1960s and into the 1970s, it was the home of Leon's Amusements, a popular "penny" arcade that was dominated inside by a merry-go-round along with numerous skee-ball, pin ball and "spin and win" machines.