Brick Township

Brick Township
Author: Gene Donatiello
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 130
Release: 2013
Genre: History
ISBN: 0738597643

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In 1850, the New Jersey Legislature created Ocean County and Brick Township, naming it for Joseph W. Brick, the industrious owner of Bergen Iron Works. At the beginning of the 20th century, Brick Township was a rural community. Up until the 1920s, postcards of the township were primarily architectural images. Brick Township contains updated images of familiar names and places: Emma Havens Young, for whom an elementary school has been named; the very popular Red Lion Tavern, later called the Red Lion Inn; the progression of four bridges crossing Barnegat Bay to the peninsula area of Brick Township; and Traders Cove Marina as it looked in the 1950s when it was called Pleasure Cove Marina. There are postcards from summer camps, such as Camp NEJECHO and Metedeconk Summer Camp, and from summer resorts, such as Breton Woods, Riviera Beach, and Normandy Beach.

Brick Township

Brick Township
Author: Eugene E. Donatiello
Publisher: Arcadia Library Editions
Total Pages: 130
Release: 1999-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781531602192

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In 1850, when the New Jersey Legislature created Ocean County, they also created Brick Township among a region of virgin woodlands. The new township was named after its most prominent resident, Joseph W. Brick, the industrious and successful owner of Bergen Iron Works. As his and other local industries expanded, more and more people began to call Brick their home. Brick Township records these founders and the events and places that helped them shape our community. By 1920, parts of the new township had declared their independence, and the remaining parts of Brick began to evolve into a resort community. The summer tourists, farmers, home builders and shipbuilders, anglers, hunters, tavern and innkeepers, merchants, and others helped fashion Brick into an intimate but prosperous community. Brick continued to be a quiet, rural, resort area into the 1950s, when the Garden State Parkway opened, and residential and commercial development created dramatic growth in year-round residents, and it became a thriving suburban community. Brick Township captures scenes of life in Brick from 1850 to the 1950s and beyond; from the early European settlers to the suburbanites who now call Brick their home; from the thriving poultry industry to area resorts; from Joseph Brick to our friends and family who live among us today.

Brick Township Schools

Brick Township Schools
Author: League of Women Voters of Ocean County (N.J.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 63
Release: 1973
Genre: Education
ISBN:

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Brick Township

Brick Township
Author: League of Women Voters of Brick Township, New Jersey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 30
Release: 1970
Genre: Brick Town (N.J. : Township)
ISBN:

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Public Health Assessment

Public Health Assessment
Author: United States. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Division of Health Assessment and Consultation. Superfund Site Assessment Branch
Publisher:
Total Pages: 59
Release: 2000
Genre: Hazardous waste sites
ISBN:

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Floodplain Management Plan

Floodplain Management Plan
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 99
Release: 2014
Genre: Flood control
ISBN: 9781742935539

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"The Murrumbidgee River Hay to Maude Floodplain Management Plan (the FMP) has been prepared to provide strategic guidance to the NSW Government and landholders who are involved in the management of floodwaters on the Murrumbidgee River (Hay to Maude) floodplain. The vision for the FMP is: an environment where flood risk to occupiers and users of the floodplain is minimised and flood dependent ecosystems within the floodplain and on the downstream Lowbidgee floodplain are sustained by access to floodwaters"--Page 1.