Highland Park is a borough in Middlesex
County
, New
Jersey
, United
States
. As of the
United States 2000 Census, the
borough population was 13,999.
Highland
Park was formed as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 15,
1905, when it broke away from the then Raritan Township
(present-day Edison
).
Geography
Highland Park is located at (40.500254, -74.425700).
According to the
United
States Census Bureau, the borough has a total area of
1.8 square miles (4.8 km
2), all of it
land.
Highland Park received its name for its "Park like" setting, on the
highland of the banks of the
Raritan
River, overlooking New Brunswick.
Highland
Park borders Edison
, New Brunswick
, and Piscataway
.
Demographics
As of the
census of 2000, there were 13,999
people, 5,899 households, and 3,409 families residing in the
borough. The
population density
was 7,614.1 people per square mile (2,937.5/km
2). There
were 6,071 housing units at an average density of
3,302.0/sq mi (1,273.9/km
2). The racial makeup of
the borough was 72.06%
White,
7.94%
African
American, 0.11%
Native
American, 13.63%
Asian,
0.09%
Pacific
Islander, 3.59% from
other races, and 2.59% from two
or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 8.18%
of the population. 8.9% were of
Italian,
6.6%
Russian, 6.5%
Irish, 6.1%
Polish and
5.3%
German ancestry according to
Census 2000. 69.3% spoke
English, 7.5%
Spanish, 6.3%
Chinese, 2.3%
Hebrew, 1.9%
Russian,
1.2%
Hungarian and 1.1%
Hindi as their first language.
There were 5,899 households out of which 27.6% had children under
the age of 18 living with them, 46.2% were married couples living
together, 8.2% had a female householder with no husband present,
and 42.2% were non-families. 31.5% of all households were made up
of individuals and 9.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years
of age or older. The average household size was 2.37 and the
average family size was 3.06.
In the borough the population was spread out with 21.7% under the
age of 18, 8.8% from 18 to 24, 37.1% from 25 to 44, 20.4% from 45
to 64, and 11.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age
was 35 years. For every 100 females there were 93.3 males. For
every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 90.4 males age 18 and
over.
The median income for a household in the borough was $53,250, and
the median income for a family was $71,267. Males had a median
income of $47,248 versus $36,829 for females. The
per capita income for the borough was
$28,767. About 5.3% of families and 8.4% of the population were
below the
poverty line, including 7.7%
of those under age 18 and 9.6% of those age 65 or over.
The borough supports several active Jewish communities, and in 1978
was one of the first communities in New Jersey to gain an
Eruv. Through an arrangement with New Jersey Bell (now
Verizon), a continuous wire
was strung from pole to pole around the borders of the borough. The
wires are inspected every Friday to ensure that the connections are
complete. When intact, this Eruv, or symbolic wall, satisfies most
Orthodox Jewish religious requirements allowing residents to
treat the entire borough as their home during the
Sabbath.
(The eruv now extends into parts of Edison, New
Jersey
.)
Highland
Park has at times been a bedroom community for nearby Rutgers University
and Johnson & Johnson
in New Brunswick, with a resulting academic flair
to the community. Nobel laureate
Selman Waksman (
Medicine, 1952) lived
in the borough until he moved to Piscataway in 1954, and laureate
Arno Penzias (
Physics, 1978) lived in the borough
until the 1990s.
Government
Local government
Highland Park is governed under the
borough form of New Jersey municipal
government. The government consists of a Mayor and a Borough
Council comprising six council members, with all positions elected
at large. The mayor is elected directly by the voters to a
four-year term of office. The Borough Council consists of six
members elected to serve three-year terms on a staggered basis,
with two seats coming up for election each year.
The borough operates through Committees of the Council:
Administration, Finance, Public Works, Public Safety, Community
Affairs, Public Utilities, and Health, Welfare, and Recreation. The
various departments, boards and commissions report to the Council
through these committees.
The
Mayor of
Highland Park is Meryl Frank.
The Borough Council consists of Council President
Elsie
Foster-Dublin,
Jon Erickson, Padric Millet,
Gary
Minkoff,
Jeffrey Morris and Lew Pinchinson.
Federal, state and county representation
Highland Park is in the Sixth Congressional District and is part of
New Jersey's 17th Legislative District.
Education
The
Highland Park
Public Schools
serve students in prekindergarten through twelfth
grade. Schools in the district (with 2005-06 enrollment data
from the
National Center for
Education Statistics) are
Irving
Primary School (PreK-1; 432 students),
Bartle Elementary School (grades 2-5; 409),
Highland Park Middle School (grades 6-8, the 6th grade
was added in 2007; 215) and
Highland Park High School
(grades 9-12; 454).
Transportation
Roads
There are five main roads in Highland Park:
- New Jersey Route 27 - Known
as Raritan Avenue, it traverses for about 1 1/2 miles through
downtown and the outskirts of Highland Park. The section between
Adelaide and Fifth Avenues runs virtually east to west and divides
the town into the north and south sides.
- County Route 514 -
Starts as a road named Woodbridge Avenue that splits off at Route
27 at South Sixth Avenue. It runs through the southeast region of
the borough.
- Middlesex County
Route 622 - River Road in Highland Park, stretches for over in
the western region of the borough following the curving bank of the
Raritan River.
- Middlesex County
Route 676 - This is Duclos Lane and it forms a portion of
Highland Park's eastern border with Edison. Road spends .49 of a
mile in Highland Park.
- Middlesex County
Route 692 - Cedar Lane in the northern section of the borough
intersects with River Road.
Bus
New Jersey Transit local bus
service is provided on the
810
and
814 routes.
Community
There is a
new state-of-the-art environmental center on River Road, just a few
hundred feet upstream from the Albany Street Bridge
. The borough's Environmental Commission
envisions this center as a stop along a riverbank walking trail
that would link Johnson Park with Donaldson Park and beyond, to the
Meadows environmental area on the Edison border.
History
The native Lenape people hunted on this hilly land aside the gently
flowing Raritan River and their trails crisscrossed the area. One
of the earliest European settlers was Henry Greenland, who owned of
land and operated an inn along the Mill Brook section of the
Assunpink Trail during the late 1600s. Others early settlers
included George Drake, Reverend John Drake, and Captain Francis
Drake, kinsmen of the famous explorer. In the early 1700s, a few
wealthy Europeans including the Van Horns and Merrills settled on
large tracts of land establishing an isolated farmstead pattern of
development that would continue for the next 150 years.
In 1685, John Inian bought land on both shores of the Raritan River
and built two new landings downstream from the Assunpink Trail's
fording place. He established a ferry service and the main road
then was redirected to lead straight to the ferry landing. This
river crossing was run by generations of different owners and a
ferry house tavern operated for many years in the 1700s. A toll
bridge replaced the ferry in 1795.
The wood plank Albany Street
Bridge
was dismantled in 1848 and reconstructed in
1853. The present day stone arch road bridge was built in
1892. It became the
Lincoln Highway
Bridge in 1914 and was widened in 1925.
The Reverend
John Henry
Livingston, newly chosen head of Queen's College, purchased a
plot of land in 1809, which would hereafter be known as the
Livingston Manor. Now, a gracious Greek Revival house built around
1843 by Robert and Louisa Livingston stands on this property. The
Livingston Homestead, which is listed in the
National Register of
Historic Places, was owned by the Waldron family throughout
most of the 20th century. It remains Highland Park's most prominent
historic house.
In the
early 19th century, both the Delaware & Raritan Canal
and a railroad were constructed largely to serve the commercial
center of New Brunswick
across the river. In 1836, the
New Jersey
Railroad and Transportation Company built a rail line that
terminated on the Highland Park side of the Raritan River and
established a station named "East New Brunswick." The
Camden and Amboy Railroad built a
wood, double-deck bridge which eliminated the station stop in 1838.
It was destroyed by a suspicious fire in 1878. An iron truss bridge
was quickly built upon enlarged stone piers, which in turn was
replaced in 1902 by the twelve span, concrete-covered, stone arch
bridge currently standing.
Despite the canal and the railroad, Highland Park's land continued
to be used for agriculture. Residential development slowly began 30
years later, with several stately houses constructed on Adelaide
Avenue and more modest houses constructed on Cedar, First, and
Second Avenues and Magnolia, Benner, and Johnson Streets. In the
1870s, the small hamlet became better known as "Highland Park", a
name derived from the suburban housing development although the
area adjacent to the railroad tracks continued to be called "East
New Brunswick."
1870 was also the year in which Highland
Park was annexed to the newly formed Raritan
Township
.
The seeds were sown for Highland Park's independence from Raritan
Township over the issue of public schooling. Highland Park had its
own school district and on March 15, 1905 the Borough of Highland
Park was formed. Important factors were the desire for an
independent school system and a related dispute over school taxes.
The fire department, which had formed in 1899, also wanted more
local control over their affairs. The 1905 New Jersey census
counted 147 dwellings in the new borough. In 1918,
Robert Wood Johnson II was appointed
to the Highland Park Council and became mayor in 1920. His summer
house and estate was located on River Road, just north of the
railroad tracks.
Over the past 100 years, Highland Park's lands have been parceled
into ever-smaller suburban residential plots. Planned developments
included Watson Whittlesey's Livingston Manor development begun in
1906; the Viehmann Tract, also on the north side; Riverview Terrace
on the south side; Raritan Park Terrace in the triangle between
Raritan and Woodbridge Avenues; and East New Brunswick Heights in
the Orchard Heights neighborhood. It has taken years of
continuously constructing houses and apartment buildings to create
the largely residential borough.
Highland
Park's industrial development in the 19th and 20th centuries
included such businesses as a brewery, Johnson &
Johnson
, The John Waldron Machine Company, Turner Tubes,
Flako Products, and the Janeway & Carpender Wallpaper
factory. The borough is the birthplace of the
Band-Aid and Flako Products packaged mixes for
baked goods. However, the industrial nature of the borough
completely declined by the 1960s. The commercial zones along both
Raritan and Woodbridge Avenues continue to thrive with "mom &
pop" shops, many that have lasted for generations.
Throughout the 20th century, Highland Park's religious
institutions, educational facilities, and municipal governance have
kept pace with the growth of the town. The trends of local autonomy
and control that shaped Highland Park in the past continue to this
day.
Highland Park also was home to Drug Fair, the largest independent
drug store in New Jersey, from 1955-1999. Drug Fair was owned by
Donald Weiss and served the residents of the area.
List of
mayors of Highland Park, New Jersey
Livingston Manor Historic District
Livingston Manor was a subdivision built upon the lands surrounding
the Livingston family homestead. This subdivision was the
brainchild of Watson Whittlesey (1863-1914), a real estate
developer born in Rochester, New York. Whittlesey was more than a
typical land speculator; he was a community builder, which was
noted by his residency in various Livingston Manor houses from 1906
to 1914, and by his active involvement in the municipal affairs of
Highland Park. Instead of auctioning lots like his 19th century
predecessors, Whittlesey sold subdivided lots with either a house
completely built by his company or with the promise of providing a
company-constructed house similar to those previously
constructed.
The suburban development grew between 1906 and 1925 when
Whittlesey's company, the Livingston Manor Corporation and its
successor, the Highland Park Building Company, constructed
single-family houses from plans produced by a select group of
architects. While a variety of building types and styles are
present on each block, the buildings in the district are distinct
by the use of specific building plans found nowhere else in
Highland Park and by the embellishments that are typical of the
Craftsman philosophy, which emphasized the value of the labor of
skilled artisans who showed pride in their abilities.
In the first years of this development, the houses were constructed
one entire block at a time beginning with the southeast side of
Grant Avenue between Lawrence Avenue and North Second Avenue. The
next block to be developed was the northwest side of Lincoln Avenue
between Lawrence Avenue and North Second Avenue. Six stucco
bungalows were then constructed on the southern side of Lawrence
east of Lincoln Avenue. As the housing development grew in
popularity, houses were constructed less systematically by block,
and more often on lots that individual homeowners randomly selected
from the remaining available properties. Whittlesey used plans from
architects George Edward Krug and Francis George Hasselman, as well
as plans generated by several local architects including John
Arthur Blish and William Boylan. Several of Livingston Manor's
Tudor Revival houses were designed by Highland Park's eminent
architect, Alexander Merchant. Merchant created numerous buildings
in New Brunswick and Highland Park (see list below). Like other
early-20th century architects, he was active during the period of
early American modernism, but having trained at the firm of
Carrère and Hastings,
Merchant developed and maintained a classical design
vocabulary.
Many workers in the building trades such as Harvey E. Dodge,
Frederick Nietscke, a carpenter and Harold Richard Segoine, a
contractor, have also been identified as Livingston Manor
Corporation employees as well as Livingston Manor residents.
Whittlesey, with his wife Anna, also lived in several Livingston
Manor houses including the Spanish Colonial style house at 35
Harrison Avenue designed specifically for them.
The Manor is now celebrating its centennial. On December 1, 1906,
the first deeds were transferred to two individual homeowners. Many
prominent New Brunswick and Highland Park residents bought houses
in this new neighborhood. They included Rutgers College professors,
school teachers, bank employees, factory owners, and store owners.
Census data shows that most of the women were housewives and
mothers. There were many extended families. Some families took in
boarders and several households included live-in servants.
Sixty-two houses had been constructed in Livingston Manor by
1910.
In 1912, Watson Whittlesey hired a sales agent, John F. Green, and
began selling bungalow lots. These properties were smaller and less
expensive, and a set of plans for a bungalow was given to any
purchaser. By 1913, 120 houses had been constructed in Livingston
Manor.
Dubbed "Lord of the Manor", Whittlesey created a neighborhood
spirit by giving receptions to the residents; by providing
playgrounds for the children; and by encouraging the men to take a
more active part in public affairs. After his death on April 8,
1914, Manor residents turned out in the hundreds to attend a
memorial service at his house.
The Highland Park Building Company was incorporated in 1914 by
long-standing members of his company including builder Robert
Lufburrow and engineer Harold Richard Segoine. In 1916, Mrs.
Whittlesey, who was president of the Livingston Manor Corporation,
turned over the privately owned streets, sidewalks, and curbs to
the borough. Remarkably, there were no provisions for the borough
to accept public ownership of the sewers. That required an act of
legislation at the statehouse in Trenton, which was accomplished by
Senator Florance, Assemblyman Edgar, and signed by Governor
Walter Evans Edge the following
year. Anna Wilcox Whittlesey, "Lady of the Manor", died on August
16, 1918. She was remembered as "a woman of rare refinement and
culture, and the soul of hospitality."
Highland Park's identity as a streetcar suburb was transformed to
that of an automobile suburb during the 1920s. Two hundred and ten
dwellings had been constructed in Livingston Manor by 1922. The
Livingston Manor Corporation continued to have transactions into
the 1960s, but the area's significant development had taken place
by 1925.
It has always been locally recognized that Livingston Manor is an
important neighborhood in Highland Park. The
Livingston Manor Historic
District was listed in the New Jersey Register on April 1, 2004
and in the
National
Register of Historic Places on July 7, 2004. This text was
condensed from the National Register nomination written by Borough
Historian Jeanne Kolva.
Buildings designed by Alexander Merchant
- 55 South Adelaide Avenue (1909)
- Lafayette School on South Second Avenue and Benner Street
(original school-1907 and Second Avenue wing-1915. The third wing
on Second Avenue was designed by Merchant's son Alexander Merchant,
Jr. in 1952)
- Reformed Church on South Second Avenue (original church-1897
and auditorium wing circa 1920)
- Irving School on Central Avenue (original building-1914)
- The Center School on North Third Avenue (formerly the Hamilton
School in 1914)
- The Pomeranz Building on Raritan Avenue and South Third Avenue
(1920)
- 82 Harrison Avenue (1913)
- Two houses on Cliff Court (1914)
- Several houses on South Adelaide Avenue near Cliff Court
(1910-1914)
- The
Highland Park High School
(original building-1926)
- The Masonic Temple on Raritan Avenue at North Fourth Avenue
(1923) It remains as a one-story commercial building after a fire
in 1965 destroyed the upper levels of the auditorium and
offices.
- The Brody House at corner of Raritan and North Adelaide Avenues
(built 1911—demolished 1997)
- The former Police Station at 137 Raritan Avenue (now a
deli).
Notable residents
Notable current and former residents of Highland Park include:
- Jim Axelrod, CBS news
correspondent.
- Harvey Jerome Brudner
(1931-2009), engineer and inventor.
- Jeffrey Cohen (1957-), author of mystery novels and non-fiction
books on Asperger Syndrome
- Earle Dickson (1892-1961),
inventor of the Band-Aid.
- Samuel G. Freedman, Author and columnist for
The New York Times.
- Willie Garson (1964-), actor best
known for his role as Stanford Blatch in Sex and the City.
- Rebecca Goldstein (1950-),
author, philosopher, and 1996 MacArthur "Genius Award" winner.
- Alan Guth (1947-), physicist and
cosmologist.
- Michael Jacobs (1955-) Broadway
playwright and award winning writer of many television series such
as Boy Meets World,
Dinosaurs and
Charles In Charge.
- John
Seward Johnson II (1930-), sculptor and founder of the Johnson
Atelier in Hamilton Township, Mercer County, New
Jersey
.
- Soterios
Johnson, WNYC
radio
host.
- Jerry Levine (1957-), Film and TV
Actor - Teen Wolf, Born on the Fourth of
July.
- Roy Lichtenstein, Pop
artist.
- Arthur & Helen McCallum, inventors of Flako packaged mixes
for baked goods.
- Justin Louis, afternoon
drive host at New Jersey's WJLK, "94.3 The
Point".
- Robert Wood Johnson II,
Johnson & Johnson President, general, and philanthropist.
Robert Wood Johnson II was mayor of Highland Park from 1920 to
1922.
- Stephen B. Nolan, Acting Director of the New Jersey Division of
Consumer Affairs.
- Arno Allan Penzias (1933-)
physicist and a co-winner of the 1978 Nobel Prize in physics.
- L.J. Smith,
NFL tight end who
currently plays for the Baltimore
Ravens.
- Joan Snyder, pioneering
neo-expressionist feminist artist and 2007 MacArthur "Genius Award"
winner.
- Darrell K. Sweet, professional illustrator best known
for cover art for science fiction and fantasy novels.
- Alan Voorhees, engineer and
urban planner.
- Tomas Eloy Martinez,
journalist and writer, distinguished professor and director of the
department of Latin American Studies at Rutgers, author of "Santa
Evita" and "The Peron Novel".
References
- "The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606-1968", John
P. Snyder, Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey;
1969. p. 170.
- 2005 New Jersey Legislative District Data Book,
Rutgers University Edward
J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, April 2005,
p. 81.
- Mayor &
Borough Council Members, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed
March 18, 2007.
- 2008 New Jersey Citizen's Guide to Government, New
Jersey League of Women Voters, p. 58.
Accessed September 30, 2009.
- Data for the Highland Park Public Schools,
National Center for
Education Statistics. Accessed May 15, 2008.
- Middlesex County Bus/Rail Connections,
New
Jersey Transit. Accessed June 21, 2007.
- Highland Park Environmental News 2007, accessed
January 3, 2007.
- Kolva, Jeanne and Joanne Pisciotta. Highland Park; Borough
of Homes. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2005) pp.
18-19.
- Spies, Stacy. National Register nomination for Livingston
Homestead (Washington, DC, National Park Service, 2001).
- Kolva, Jeanne and Joanne Pisciotta. Highland Park; Borough
of Homes. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2005)p.
42.
- Kolva, Jeanne and Joanne Pisciotta. Highland Park; Borough
of Homes. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2005)
- Snyder, John P. "The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries:
1606-1968." (Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey;
1969) p. 170.
- Kolva, Jeanne and Joanne Pisciotta. Highland Park; Borough
of Homes. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2005) p.
109.
- Kolva, Jeanne and Joanne Pisciotta. Highland Park; Borough
of Homes. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2005).
- US Census 1910, 1920, and New Jersey Census of 1915.
- Daily Home News, April 10, 1914.
- Daily Home News, August 17, 1918 Obituary.
- Granieri, Laurie. "Actor, journalists honored as alumni",
Home
News Tribune, May 6, 2005."On May 14, the borough high school will honor alumni
Willie Garson, best known as Stanford Blatch on the former HBO
series Sex and the City, CBS news correspondent Jim
Axelrod and WNYC Public Radio news anchor and Morning
Edition host Soterios Johnson."
- The Mayor's Viewpoint: Celebrating a century of
progress, accessed April 8, 2007.
- Groner, Jonathan. "This Is Not Your Father's World: An Interview with Samuel
G. Freedman", Jewish Community Alliance of Southern Maine.
Accessed April 16, 2008. "Freedman himself grew up in Highland
Park, New Jersey in a family that was, in his words, 'totally
secular.'"
- "Goldstein and Howard Receive MacArthur 'Genius'
Fellowships", Columbia University Record,
September 6, 1996. Accessed July 22, 2007. "Her works include The
Mind-Body Problem (1983), The Late-Summer Passion of a Woman of
Mind (1989), The Dark Sister (1991), Strange Attractors (1993) and
Mazel (1995). She lives in Highland Park, N.J."
- ALAN H. GUTH, Victor F. Weisskopf Professor of
Physics, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. Accessed June 11, 2007. "Professor
Alan Guth was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1947. He grew
up and attended the public schools in Highland Park, NJ, but
skipped his senior year of high school to begin studies at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology."
- Justin Louis DJ bio., Accessed October 16, 2007.
- Gardner, Joel R. and Harrison, Andrew R. "The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: The Early
Years", The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2005, p. 2.
Accessed July 22, 2007. "Johnson married Elizabeth Dixon Ross, of
New Brunswick, in 1916, and their wedding was the social event of
the year. They moved into Bellevue, an estate in Highland Park, and
their son, Robert Wood Johnson III, was born in 1920. While living
in Highland Park, Johnson became involved in local politics and
served a term as mayor while he was still in his twenties."
- Stephen B. Nolan, Acting Director, New Jersey Division of
Consumer Affairs. Accessed July 22, 2007. "He served as a
councilman in Highland Park, where he currently resides, and
continues as a member of the town's Planning Board and
Redevelopment Agency."
- Horner, Shirley. "ABOUT BOOKS", The New York
Times, October 3, 1993. Accessed December 19, 2007.
"Previous recipients of the award, which has come to be known as
the Michael, include Mary Higgins Clark of Saddle River, Belva
Plain of Short Hills, Wende and Harry Devlin of Mountainside, the
Nobel laureate Dr. Arno Penzias of Highland Park and Gay Talese of
Ocean City."
- L.J. Smith profile, Philadelphia
Eagles. Accessed June 9, 2007. "Growing up in the small town of
Highland Park, NJ (2 square miles, population 14,500), Smith
graduated from the local high school as part of a 115-person
class.
- Ronnen, Meir. "Joan Snyder at the Jewish Museum",
The Jerusalem Post, September 23,
2005. "Born in Highland Park, New Jersey in 1940..."
- www.macfound.org
- Greats go down - Alan Voorhees, Rand Brown,
Tollroadsnews. December 24, 2005. Accessed July 22, 2007. "Born in
Highland Park NJ, he was a distinguished Navy Seal in World War II,
part of a team that regularly reconnoitered enemy occupied shores
mapping beaches for good landing sites - for which he was awarded a
Silver Star."
External links