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Senator Loretta Weinberg describing importance of HNBL at announcement of funding. RE Mayor Peg Watkins, Freeholder Lisa Randall, Assemblywoman Charlotte Vandervalk, Assemblywoman Valerie Vainieri Huttle, Assemblyman Gordon Johnson, DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson, HNBL Chairman Robert Griffin & HNBL Commissioner Mary Donohue. 11/02/06
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DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson vowing support of site.
Steuben House pictured behind. 11/02/06. Funding will enable study of Steuben House restoration. |
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Crowd appreciative of Senator Loretta Weinberg's
long-term support. 11/02/06 |
Assemblywoman Charlotte Vandervalk asking why site has failed to be mentioned as one of the 3 new urban parks in media. 11/02/06
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Crowd listening to DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson. 11/02/06
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Assemblywoman Valerie Vainieri Huttle speaking. 11/02/06
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| Crowd listening to DEP Commissioner Lisa Jackson. 11/02/06 |
Valerie Vainieri Huttle speaking. 11/02/06
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| Photos by Deborah Powell, higher resolution image available | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Announcement with 1889 restored bridge (by County of Bergen)
in background. 11/02/06 |
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Twin Boro News Article New Bridge earmarked for $100G 11/08/06 Bergen Record Article New Funding for Study 11/04/06 News 12 New Jersey New Funding for Study 11/04/06 Star Ledger Parks Budget & HNBL 04/28/06 Bergen Record Article about the Junkyard Acquisition 12/21/05 Bergen Record Article about the Junkyard Acquisition 12/20/05 PDF: Holiday Program See our fabulous event 2005 PDF: Article on HNBL receiving Trust Grant Twin Boro 11/24/04 PDF: Editorial on HNBL Bergen Record 5/6/04 PDF: DEP Testing at the Junkyard Bergen Record 4/26/04 PDF: Paddle for Open Space at HNBL Town News 5/04 PDF: Kids Petition County to Buy Junkyard Bergen Record 2/18/04 PDF: Visit of DEP Commissioner Campbell, Assemblywoman Loretta Weinberg & Bergen Co. Executive Dennis McNerney to HNBL Twin Boro 1/28/04 PDF: Visit of DEP Commissioner Campbell, Assemblywoman Loretta Weinberg & Bergen Co. Executive Dennis McNerney to HNBL Bergen Record 1/17/04 |
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| LOCAL MAP | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1. Steuben House
2. New Bridge (1888-89) 3. New Bridge Landing 4. Site of Zabriskie Tidemill |
5. Demarest House Museum
6. Campbell-Christie House 7. Westervelt-Thomas Barn 8. Out-kitchen |
Steuben House (201) 487-1739 Campbell-Christie House |
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Return to Main Page or scroll down to see more information on the above map. 1. Steuben House. Built as a five-room stone cottage in 1752 and enlarged to present size around 1767 by addition of the second story along the rear and the entire north block with its paneled parlor and bed chamber. Described in 1784 as a "Large Mansion House containing twelve rooms built with stone, with Outhouses consisting of a Bake House, Smoke House, Coach House, and two large Barns, and a Garden, Forty Acres of Land consisting of Meadow Land and two Orchards." The state of NJ presented the war-damaged house to Major-General Baron von Steuben in 1783. Steuben's aide-de-camp, Captain Benjamin Walker resided here, while Steuben made regular visits and summer retreats from his Manhattan lodgings. He sold it back to the Zabriskies in 1788. Link to history of house 2. New Bridge. A "New Bridge" with sliding draw was built here in 1744. Eye-witness Thomas Paine described this small bridge as "our first objective" in the American retreat from Fort Lee on November 20, 1776, memorializing the darkest hour in the hopes for American independence as the "times that try men's souls." The present Pratt-type Low Truss Swing Bridge, installed by the King Iron Bridge Co. of Cleveland using channel iron made by the Phoenix Iron Co. of Philadelphia, opened February 2, 1889. Joseph W. Stagg built the sandstone abutments. Closed to automobile traffic in 1956. Listed on NJ and National Registers as the oldest highway swing-bridge in State. 3. New Bridge Landing. A narrow mill landing, built of log cribbing in 1744, could accommodate 50-ton sloops. Iron was brought here from Ringwood and Long Pond for transshipment. Present bulkhead built shortly after completion of present bridge in 1889. It includes a V-shaped notch so that Captain D. A. Zabriskie could cradle his schooner when the tide ran out, its mast lashed to a tall pole set in the ground to keep it upright. 4. Zabriskie's Mills. Johannes Ackerman, who resided near the present intersection of Main Street and Elizabeth Court, about two blocks west, built a gristmill, 40 ft by 20 ft, containing two pairs of grinding stones in 1714. main Street was originall extended east towards the river as a mill lane. High tide was trapped in Cole's Brook behind a dam, creating an artificial pond twice daily to run the waterwheel during ebb tide. The date stone lozenge set in the south end of the Zabriskie-Steuben House depicts the tide-driven waterwheel. The mill burned down in 1852. 5. Demarest House Museum. 18th-century two-room sandstone dwelling with double front doors and distinctive spring-eave on front. Removed from original site beside French Burial Ground in New Milford in 1955-56. Displays collection of Demarest family and Bergen Dutch artifacts. Open for special events and by appointment. Owned by Blauvelt-Demarest Foundation. Link to history of house 6. Campbell-Christie House. Jacob Campbell, a mason, erected the oldest half of this gambrel, center-hall sandstone dwelling at the busy intersection of River Road and Henley Avenue, New Milford, in 1774. It was probably enlarged to its present dimensions just after the American Revolution (1783) , since the wooden trapezoidal lintels, painted to look like sandstone, are indicative of that time. John Christie, blacksmith, purchased this house in 1795 and continued its operation as a tavern. The paneled reveals and Dutch stoop at front entrance, together with the fireplace mantles date to around 1835, when a frame kitchen wing was added. Subordinate lateral wings, generally built of contrasting material to the main block of the dwelling, are a hallmark of Bergen Dutch architecture. Moved to River Edge in 1977 by County Freeholders, it is owned by the County of Bergen and operated by the Bergen County Historical Society. Open for special events. Gift shop and rest room. Link to history of house. 7. Westervelt-Thomas Barn. Built 1889 by Peter J. Westervelt on his farm on Ridgewood Road, Washington Township. Henry Thomas purchased farm in 1906. Donated to BCHS and relocated in 1958. 8. Out-Kitchen. Authentic out-kitchen built by BCHS in 1990, using antique materials, replicating John R. Demarest Out-Kitchen in Demarest. Includes beehive oven and smoke room. These separate kitchen structures kept the heat of cooking out of the main dwelling during summer and prevented oven fires (unfortunately all too frequent) from involving the loss of the family's residence. The smoke room at the rear sheltered the beehive oven, protecting its plastered brick dome from the elements, since it was prone to cracking from repeated heating and cooling. Heat retained by the bricks, after the wood fire was raked out, did the baking. As the oven slowly cooled, it was necessary to efficiently use the heat, first baking bread, then pies, cakes, pastries and puddings. |
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