fbpx
Wikipedia

Highland Park, New Jersey

Highland Park is a borough in Middlesex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, in the New York City metropolitan area. The borough is located on the northern banks of the Raritan River, in the Raritan Valley region. As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 15,072,[10][11] an increase of 1,090 (+7.8%) from the 2010 census count of 13,982,[20][21] which in turn reflected a decline of 17 (−0.1%) from the 13,999 counted in the 2000 census.[22]

Highland Park, New Jersey
Livingston Homestead, Highland Park, NJ south view.
Location of Highland Park in Middlesex County highlighted in red (left). Inset map: Location of Middlesex County in New Jersey highlighted in orange (right).
Census Bureau map of Highland Park, New Jersey
Highland Park
Location in Middlesex County
Highland Park
Location in New Jersey
Highland Park
Location in the United States
Coordinates: 40°30′03″N 74°25′40″W / 40.500795°N 74.427911°W / 40.500795; -74.427911[1][2]
Country United States
State New Jersey
CountyMiddlesex
IncorporatedMarch 15, 1905
Government
 • TypeBorough
 • BodyBorough Council
 • MayorElsie Foster (D, appointed to unexpired term ending December 31, 2027)[3][4]
 • AdministratorTeri Jover[5]
 • Municipal clerkJennifer Santiago[6]
Area
 • Total1.83 sq mi (4.74 km2)
 • Land1.82 sq mi (4.72 km2)
 • Water0.01 sq mi (0.02 km2)  0.44%
 • Rank424th of 565 in state
21st of 25 in county[1]
Elevation75 ft (23 m)
Population
 • Total15,072
 • Estimate 
(2023)[10][12]
14,959
 • Rank174th of 565 in state
16th of 25 in county[13]
 • Density8,276.8/sq mi (3,195.7/km2)
  • Rank46th of 565 in state
3rd of 25 in county[13]
Time zoneUTC−05:00 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC−04:00 (Eastern (EDT))
ZIP Code
Area code732 / 908[16]
FIPS code3402331470[1][17][18]
GNIS feature ID0885252[1][19]
Websitewww.hpboro.com

Highland Park was formed as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 15, 1905, when it broke away from what was then known as Raritan Township (present-day Edison).[23] The borough was named for its location above the Raritan River.[24]

History edit

The earliest settlers of the land that would become Highland Park were the Lenape Native Americans, who hunted in the hills along the Raritan River and had trails that crisscrossed the area, providing a link between the Delaware River and Hudson River areas.[25] 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, which was later developed as Raritan Landing. 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 18th century.[26] 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 seven-span stone arch road bridge was built in 1892 and stretches 595 feet (181 m) across the Raritan River to New Brunswick.[27] It became the Lincoln Highway Bridge in 1914 and was widened in 1925.[28]

In the late 17th century, Henry Greenland became one of the area's first European settlers; he owned nearly 400 acres (1.6 km2) of land on the Mill Brook section of the Assunpink Trail, where he operated an inn for travelers. Others early settlers included Captain Francis Drake and other members of the Drake family, relatives of the famous explorer. In the early 18th century, 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.[29]

The Reverend John Henry Livingston of the famous Livingston family, newly chosen head of Queen's College (now Rutgers University), purchased a 150-acre (0.61 km2) plot of land in 1809, which would hereafter be known as the Livingston Manor. A gracious Greek Revival house built around 1843 by Robert and Louisa Livingston stands on this property, which remains Highland Park's most prominent historic house. 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.[30]

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.[citation needed] 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."[31] 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.[26] A replacement iron truss bridge was constructed on the existing enlarged stone piers, which in turn was replaced in 1902 by the current twelve-span stone arch bridge encased in concrete in the 1940s.[32]

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."[26] 1870 was also the year in which Highland Park was annexed to the newly formed township now called Edison, but at the time called Raritan Township.[23]

 
The Doughboy statue in downtown Highland Park

Highland Park had its own school district and on March 15, 1905, the Borough of Highland Park was formed.[23] Highland Park's drive for independence from Raritan Township arose over the issue of public schooling. Residents wanted an independent school system and there was 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.

Since its establishment as a borough, 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, and the Janeway & Carpender Wallpaper factory. The borough is the birthplace of the Band-Aid.[26] 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.[citation needed]

Throughout the 20th century, Highland Park's religious institutions, educational facilities, and municipal governance have kept pace with the growth of the borough. The trends of local autonomy and control that shaped Highland Park in the past continue to this day.[citation needed]

In 2012, Highland Park became the first municipality in the state to contract a home performance company to help residents consume less energy. The program is a one-of-a-kind program that can offer up to a 30% energy savings for homeowners.[33][34]

In 2016, Highland Park became the state's first registered HeartSafe community.[35]

Livingston Manor Historic District edit

Livingston Homestead
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Location81 Harrison Avenue
Coordinates40°30′08″N 74°26′7″W / 40.50222°N 74.43528°W / 40.50222; -74.43528
Architectural styleGreek Revival
Part ofLivingston Manor Historic District (ID04000672)
NRHP reference No.02000215[36]
NJRHP No.3950 [37]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMarch 20, 2002
Designated CPJuly 7, 2004
Designated NJRHPDecember 20, 2001
Livingston Manor Historic District
LocationParts of Cleveland, Grant, Harrison, Lawrence, Lincoln, Madison, and North Second Avenues and River Road
Coordinates40°30′5″N 74°26′17″W / 40.50139°N 74.43806°W / 40.50139; -74.43806
NRHP reference No.04000672[36]
NJRHP No.4289 [37]
Added to NRHPJuly 7, 2004

Livingston Manor was a subdivision built upon the lands surrounding the Livingston 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.[38]

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 distinguished 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 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.[26] 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, the carpenter Frederick Nietscke and the contractor Harold Richard Segoine, 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.

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 show 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.[39] 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 for 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.[40]

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 and 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."[41]

Highland Park's identity as a streetcar suburb was transformed to that of an automobile suburb during the 1920s. By 1922, there had been 210 dwellings constructed in Livingston Manor. The Livingston Manor Corporation continued to have transactions into the 1960s, but the area's significant development had taken place by 1925.

The Livingston Manor is an important neighborhood in Highland Park. The Livingston Manor Historic District was listed in the New Jersey Register of Historic Places on April 1, 2004, and in the National Register of Historic Places on July 7, 2004.[26]

Buildings designed by Alexander Merchant edit

Alexander Merchant (1872–1952) designed the following buildings:

  • 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. The Lafayette School is now condominiums and no longer a school.
  • Reformed Church of Highland Park on South Second Avenue (original church-1897 and auditorium wing c. 1920)
  • Irving School on Central Avenue (original building-1914)
  • The Center School on North Third Avenue (formerly the Hamilton School–opened 1915)[42]
  • 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 on March 10, 1965, destroyed the upper levels of the auditorium and offices.[43]
  • The Brody House at corner of Raritan and North Adelaide Avenues (built 1911–demolished 1997)
  • The former Police Station at 137 Raritan Avenue (demolished).
  • Anshe Emeth Memorial Temple on Livingston Avenue in neighboring New Brunswick (1929)

Geography edit

According to the United States Census Bureau, the borough had a total area of 1.83 square miles (4.74 km2), including 1.82 square miles (4.72 km2) of land and 0.01 square miles (0.02 km2) of water (0.44%).[1][2]

The borough received its name for its "park-like" setting, on the "high land" of the banks of the Raritan River, overlooking New Brunswick. Highland Park borders the Middlesex County municipalities of Edison, New Brunswick, and Piscataway.[44][45][46]

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
19101,517
19204,866220.8%
19308,69178.6%
19409,0023.6%
19509,7218.0%
196011,04913.7%
197014,38530.2%
198013,396−6.9%
199013,279−0.9%
200013,9995.4%
201013,982−0.1%
202015,0727.8%
2023 (est.)14,959[10][12]−0.7%
Population sources: 1910–1920[47]
1910[48] 1910–1930[49]
1940–2000[50] 2000[51][52]
2010[20][21] 2020[10][11]

2010 census edit

The 2010 United States census counted 13,982 people, 5,875 households, and 3,267 families in the borough. The population density was 7,728.1 per square mile (2,983.8/km2). There were 6,203 housing units at an average density of 3,428.5 per square mile (1,323.8/km2). The racial makeup was 68.26% (9,544) White, 7.83% (1,095) Black or African American, 0.14% (20) Native American, 17.84% (2,495) Asian, 0.03% (4) Pacific Islander, 3.28% (458) from other races, and 2.62% (366) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 8.95% (1,252) of the population.[20]

Of the 5,875 households, 26.0% had children under the age of 18; 43.2% were married couples living together; 9.3% had a female householder with no husband present and 44.4% were non-families. Of all households, 31.4% were made up of individuals and 9.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.38 and the average family size was 3.10.[20]

21.1% of the population were under the age of 18, 10.2% from 18 to 24, 32.9% from 25 to 44, 24.2% from 45 to 64, and 11.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 34.8 years. For every 100 females, the population had 92.0 males. For every 100 females ages 18 and older there were 91.0 males.[20]

The Census Bureau's 2006–2010 American Community Survey showed that (in 2010 inflation-adjusted dollars) median household income was $78,821 (with a margin of error of +/− $8,312) and the median family income was $103,316 (+/− $6,807). Males had a median income of $72,533 (+/− $8,231) versus $55,591 (+/− $3,873) for females. The per capita income for the borough was $41,300 (+/− $3,714). About 5.4% of families and 8.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 9.4% of those under age 18 and 8.8% of those age 65 or over.[53]

2000 census edit

As of the 2000 United States census[17] there were 13,999 people, 5,899 households, and 3,409 families residing in the borough. The population density was 7,614.1 inhabitants per square mile (2,939.8/km2). There were 6,071 housing units at an average density of 3,302.0 per square mile (1,274.9/km2). 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.[51][52]

Of residents reporting their ancestry, 9.8% were of Italian, 9.1% Irish, 8.1% German, 7.8% Russian, 7.5% Polish.[51] 66.2% spoke English, 7.2% Spanish, 6.4% Chinese, 2.2% Hebrew, 1.8% Russian, 1.2% Hungarian, 1.1% French and 1.1% Hindi as their language spoken at home.[54]

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.[51][52]

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.[51][52]

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.[51][52]

Community edit

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.[55]

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.[56]

In 1978, Highland Park became the first municipality in New Jersey to have an eruv, a symbolic enclosure that allows Orthodox Jews to perform certain activities outdoors on the Sabbath that would be otherwise prohibited.[57] Through an arrangement with New Jersey Bell (now Verizon), a continuous wire was strung from pole to pole around portions of the borough. Eventually this expanded and includes portions of Edison and connects with New Brunswick. The wires are inspected every Friday to ensure that the connections are complete. When intact, this eruv satisfies most Orthodox Jewish religious requirements allowing residents to carry objects during the Sabbath.[58]

Government edit

Local government edit

Highland Park is governed under the borough form of New Jersey municipal government, which is used in 218 (of the 564) municipalities statewide, making it the most common form of government in New Jersey.[59] The governing body is comprised of a mayor and a borough council, with all positions elected at-large on a partisan basis as part of the November general election. A mayor is elected directly by the voters to a four-year term of office. The borough council includes six members elected to serve three-year terms on a staggered basis, with two seats coming up for election each year in a three-year cycle.[7] The borough form of government used by Highland Park is a "weak mayor / strong council" government in which council members act as the legislative body with the mayor presiding at meetings and voting only in the event of a tie. The mayor can veto ordinances subject to an override by a two-thirds majority vote of the council. The mayor makes committee and liaison assignments for council members, and most appointments are made by the mayor with the advice and consent of the council.[60][61][62]

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. All elected positions are part-time; the mayor and council members typically hold outside jobs, and receive small salaries from their elected offices.

As of 2024, the mayor of Highland Park is Democrat Elsie Foster, whose term of office ending on December 31, 2027. Members of the Borough Council are Council President Matthew Hersh (D, 2026), Tara Canavera (D, 2024), Philip George (D, 2025), Matthew Hale (D, 2025), Stephany Kim-Choban (D, 2024) and Jason Postelnik (D, 2026).[3][63][64][65][66]

In January 2023, the borough council appointed Elsie Foster to fill the vacant seat expiring in December 2023 that had been held by Gayle Brill Mittler until she resigned from office the previous month citing a desire for more time with her family.[67] The next month, Jason Postelnik was appointed to the council seat expiring in December 2023 that was vacated by Elsie Foster when she took office as mayor.[68]

In January 2017, the borough council selected Matthew Hersh to fill the seat expiring in December 2019 that became vacant following the death of Jon Erickson the previous October before Election Day; Erickson's name remained on the ballot and he was elected to serve the three-year term. Hersh had earlier been chosen to serve the balance of Erickson's previous term that expired in December 2016.[69] In July 2018, Hersh resigned to accept a position with a state agency and was replaced by Matthew Hale.[70]

Mayors edit

The mayors are:

  • James B. Archer (D), 1905–1907.
  • Lorenz Volkert (R), 1908–1913.
  • George White (D), 1914–1915.
  • Russell E. Watson (R), 1916–1919.
  • Robert Wood Johnson II (R), 1920–1921.[71]
  • Cornelius B. McCrelis Jr. (R), 1922–1923.
  • George F. Leonard (D), 1924–1925.
  • Benjamin Erickson (R), 1926–1928.
  • Edwin W. Eden (R), 1928–1929.
  • Richard T. Parker (R), 1930–1931.
  • Irving D. Buttler (R), 1932–1935.
  • Russell C. Smalley (R), 1936–1937.
  • Russell B. Howell, 1938–1939.
  • Walter K. Wood, 1940–1941.
  • Harold W. Drake (R), 1942–1946.
  • George W. Miller (R), 1946–1948.
  • Alvah H. Cole (R), 1948–1951.
  • Joseph C. DeCoster (D), 1952–1953.
  • William C. Campbell (D), 1954–1955.
  • Luther H. Martin (D), 1956–1959.
  • Samuel J. Kronman (D), 1960–1965.
  • Herbert M. Tanzman (D), 1966–1969.
  • Samuel J. Kronman (D), 1970–1971.
  • Gasper Paul Beck (D), 1972–1975.
  • Harold "Hesh" Berman (D), 1976–1979.
  • Charles W. Muhollen (D), 1980–1983.
  • Harold "Hesh" Berman (D), 1984–1987.
  • Jeffrey M.Orbach (R), 1988–1991.
  • H. James Polos (D), 1992–1999.
  • Meryl Frank (D), 2000–2010 (resigned office).[26][72]
  • Steve Nolan (D), 2010–2012.[73][74]
  • Gary Minkoff (D), 2013–2014 (resigned office).
  • Padraic Millet (D), 2014 (acting)
  • Gayle Brill Mittler (D), 2014–2022. Re-elected on November 5, 2019, to serve another 4-year term, which would expire on December 31, 2023; she resigned in December 2022.
  • Elsie Foster (D), 2023–present after being appointed to fill Gayle Britt Mittler's vacant seat

Federal, state and county representation edit

Highland Park is located in the 6th Congressional District[75] and is part of New Jersey's 18th state legislative district.[76][77][78]

For the 118th United States Congress, New Jersey's 6th congressional district is represented by Frank Pallone (D, Long Branch).[79][80] New Jersey is represented in the United States Senate by Democrats Cory Booker (Newark, term ends 2027)[81] and Bob Menendez (Englewood Cliffs, term ends 2025).[82][83]

For the 2024-2025 session, the 18th legislative district of the New Jersey Legislature is represented in the State Senate by Patrick J. Diegnan (D, South Plainfield) and in the General Assembly by Robert Karabinchak (D, Edison) and Sterley Stanley (D, East Brunswick).[84]

Middlesex County is governed by a Board of County Commissioners, whose seven members are elected at-large on a partisan basis to serve three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with either two or three seats coming up for election each year as part of the November general election. At an annual reorganization meeting held in January, the board selects from among its members a commissioner director and deputy director.[85] As of 2024, Middlesex County's Commissioners (with party affiliation, term-end year, and residence listed in parentheses) are:

Director Ronald G. Rios (D, Carteret, 2024),[86] Deputy Director Shanti Narra (D, North Brunswick, 2024),[87] Claribel A. "Clary" Azcona-Barber (D, New Brunswick, 2025),[88] Charles Kenny (D, Woodbridge Township, 2025),[89] Leslie Koppel (D, Monroe Township, 2026),[90] Chanelle Scott McCullum (D, Piscataway, 2024)[91] and Charles E. Tomaro (D, Edison, 2026).[92][93]

Constitutional officers are: Clerk Nancy Pinkin (D, 2025, East Brunswick),[94][95] Sheriff Mildred S. Scott (D, 2025, Piscataway)[96][97] and Surrogate Claribel Cortes (D, 2026; North Brunswick).[98][99][100]

Politics edit

As of March 2011, there were a total of 8,506 registered voters in Highland Park, of which 5,082 (59.7%) were registered as Democrats, 634 (7.5%) were registered as Republicans and 2,776 (32.6%) were registered as Unaffiliated. There were 14 voters registered as Libertarians or Greens.[101]

In the 2012 presidential election, Democrat Barack Obama received 72.7% of the vote (4,470 cast), ahead of Republican Mitt Romney with 24.9% (1,528 votes), and other candidates with 2.4% (148 votes), among the 6,191 ballots cast by the borough's 9,052 registered voters (45 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 68.4%.[102][103] In the 2008 presidential election, Democrat Barack Obama received 72.1% of the vote (4,699 cast), ahead of Republican John McCain with 25.6% (1,667 votes) and other candidates with 1.5% (96 votes), among the 6,518 ballots cast by the borough's 9,072 registered voters, for a turnout of 71.8%.[104] In the 2004 presidential election, Democrat John Kerry received 72.0% of the vote here (4,550 ballots cast), outpolling Republican George W. Bush with 26.4% (1,669 votes) and other candidates with 0.8% (70 votes), among the 6,319 ballots cast by the borough's 8,507 registered voters, for a turnout percentage of 74.3.[105]

In the 2013 gubernatorial election, Democrat Barbara Buono received 64.1% of the vote (2,449 cast), ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 33.9% (1,294 votes), and other candidates with 2.1% (79 votes), among the 3,867 ballots cast by the borough's 9,065 registered voters (45 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 42.7%.[106][107] In the 2009 gubernatorial election, Democrat Jon S. Corzine received 65.7% of the vote here (2,842 ballots cast), ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 26.0% (1,125 votes), Independent Chris Daggett with 6.5% (280 votes) and other candidates with 0.9% (39 votes), among the 4,329 ballots cast by the borough's 8,342 registered voters, yielding a 51.9% turnout.[108]

Education edit

 
Highland Park High School

The Highland Park Public Schools serve students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade.[109] As of the 2020–21 school year, the district, comprised of four schools, had an enrollment of 1,558 students and 145.7 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 10.7:1.[110] Schools in the district (with 2020–21 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics[111]) are Irving Primary School[112] with 248 students in grades Pre-K–1, Bartle Elementary School[113] with 437 students in grades 2–5, Highland Park Middle School[114] with 364 students in grades 6–8 and Highland Park High School[115] with 477 students in grades 9–12.[116][117][118]

The community is also served by the Greater Brunswick Charter School, a K–8 charter school serving students from Highland Park, Edison, Milltown and New Brunswick.[119] As of the 2020–2021 school year, the school had an enrollment of 394 students and 31.8 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.4:1.[120]

Eighth grade students from all of Middlesex County are eligible to apply to attend the high school programs offered by the Middlesex County Vocational and Technical Schools, a county-wide vocational school district that offers full-time career and technical education at Middlesex County Academy in Edison, the Academy for Allied Health and Biomedical Sciences in Woodbridge Township and at its East Brunswick, Perth Amboy and Piscataway technical high schools, with no tuition charged to students for attendance.[121][122]

The Center School serves students with learning and emotional challenges in grades K–12. Founded in 1971 in Bound Brook, the school moved in 1989 to a former public school building in Highland Park.[123] A fire in the school's building in February 2012 forced the school to relocate to Branchburg Township on an interim basis.[124]

Transportation edit

Roads and highways edit

 
Route 27 and County Route 514 entering Highland Park on the Albany Street Bridge

As of May 2010, the borough had a total of 31.46 miles (50.63 km) of roadways, of which 27.85 miles (44.82 km) were maintained by the municipality, 2.22 miles (3.57 km) by Middlesex County, and 1.39 miles (2.24 km) by the New Jersey Department of Transportation.[125]

There are five main roads in Highland Park:[126]

  • New Jersey Route 27 – Known as Raritan Avenue, it traverses for about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) 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.[127]
  • County Route 514 – Enters Highland Park concurrent with Route 27, then heads eastward on Woodbridge Avenue at South Sixth Avenue. It runs through the southeast region of the borough.[128]
  • Middlesex County Route 622 – River Road in Highland Park, stretches for over 1 mile (1.6 km) in the western region of the borough following the curving bank of the Raritan River.[129]
  • Middlesex County Route 676 – This is Duclos Lane and it forms a portion of Highland Park's eastern border with Edison. Road spends 0.49 miles (0.79 km) in Highland Park.[130]
  • Middlesex County Route 692 – Cedar Lane in the northern section of the borough intersects with River Road.[131]

U.S. Route 1 and New Jersey Route 18 are accessible close to Highland Park, just beyond its southeastern and southwestern borders.

Public transportation edit

NJ Transit local bus service is provided on the 810 and 814 routes.[132][133]

Atlantic City weekend service is available on Suburban Transit's 700 route.[134]

NJ Transit northbound trains to Penn Station New York, and southbound to the Trenton Transit Center via the Northeast Corridor Line can be found in neighboring New Brunswick station and Edison station.

Wildlife edit

 
A deer in the street in Highland Park

White-tailed deer are common enough in and around Highland Park to be seen as a problem.[135] A deer population survey which includes Highland Park was conducted by Raritan Valley Community College in December 2019; the borough's government was using this survey in 2020 as it made plans for deer management.[136]

Notable people edit

People who were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Highland Park include:

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e 2019 Census Gazetteer Files: New Jersey Places, United States Census Bureau. Accessed July 1, 2020.
  2. ^ a b US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990, United States Census Bureau. Accessed September 4, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Mayor & Borough Council, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed May 27, 2024.
  4. ^ 2023 New Jersey Mayors Directory, New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, updated February 8, 2023. Accessed February 10, 2023.
  5. ^ Administration, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed May 27, 2024.
  6. ^ Borough Clerk, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed May 27, 2024.
  7. ^ a b 2012 New Jersey Legislative District Data Book, Rutgers University Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, March 2013, p. 81.
  8. ^ "ArcGIS REST Services Directory". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
  9. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Borough of Highland Park, Geographic Names Information System. Accessed March 5, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c d e QuickFacts Highland Park borough, New Jersey, United States Census Bureau. Accessed March 31, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c Total Population: Census 2010 - Census 2020 New Jersey Municipalities, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Accessed December 1, 2022.
  12. ^ a b Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Minor Civil Divisions in New Jersey: April 1, 2020 to July 1, 2023, United States Census Bureau, released May 2024. Accessed May 16, 2024.
  13. ^ a b Population Density by County and Municipality: New Jersey, 2020 and 2021, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Accessed March 1, 2023.
  14. ^ Look Up a ZIP Code for Highland Park, NJ, United States Postal Service. Accessed October 1, 2011.
  15. ^ Zip Codes, State of New Jersey. Accessed August 28, 2013.
  16. ^ Area Code Lookup - NPA NX for Highland Park, NJ, Area-Codes.com. Accessed August 28, 2013.
  17. ^ a b U.S. Census website, United States Census Bureau. Accessed September 4, 2014.
  18. ^ Geographic Codes Lookup for New Jersey, Missouri Census Data Center. Accessed April 1, 2022.
  19. ^ US Board on Geographic Names, United States Geological Survey. Accessed September 4, 2014.
  20. ^ a b c d e DP-1 - Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 for Highland Park borough, Middlesex County, New Jersey Archived February 12, 2020, at archive.today, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  21. ^ a b Table DP-1. Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2010 for Highland Park borough 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  22. ^ Table 7. Population for the Counties and Municipalities in New Jersey: 1990, 2000 and 2010, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development, February 2011. Accessed May 1, 2023.
  23. ^ a b c Snyder, John P. The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606-1968, Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey; 1969. p. 170. Accessed May 28, 2024.
  24. ^ Hutchinson, Viola L. The Origin of New Jersey Place Names, New Jersey Public Library Commission, May 1945. Accessed September 1, 2015.
  25. ^ Cheslow, Jerry. "If You're Thinking of Living In/Highland Park, N.J.; Small in Size but Large in Diversity", The New York Times, October 8, 2000. Accessed December 4, 2019. "Raritan Avenue was originally part of the Leni Lenape Indian Assunpink Trail, a path that connected the Hudson and Delaware River Valleys."
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Kolva, Jeanne; and Pisciotta, Joanne. Highland Park; Borough of Homes, pp. 18–19. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2005. ISBN 0-7385-2472-7. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  27. ^ Richman, Steven M. The Bridges of New Jersey: Portraits of Garden State Crossings, p. 24. Accessed December 15, 2019. "Originally built in 1892, the Albany Street Bridge in New Brunswick was altered in 1924, widened in 1929 and 1954, and fitted with a new deck and railings in 1985.... The seven spans of this 595-foot-long bridge carry Albany Street, with its portion of Route 27 (also known as the Lincoln Highway), through New Brunswick and across the Raritan River to Highland Park."
  28. ^ Hatala, Greg. "Glimpse of History: A crossing spot that spans centuries", The Star-Ledger, February 12, 2012, updated March 30, 2019. Accessed December 15, 2019. "A stone-arch bridge was built in 1892 and widened in 1925. The Albany Street Bridge has undergone many renovations, but the stone base constructed in 1892 still serves as its foundation."
  29. ^ Ducca Sr., William F. "Highland Park - Its Beginnings", Rutgers University. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  30. ^ Spies, Stacy. National Register nomination for Livingston Homestead (Washington, D.C., National Park Service, 2001).
  31. ^ Kolva, Jeanne. History of Highland Park, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed February 24, 2024. "The native Lenape people inhabited this hilly land aside the gently flowing Raritan River and their trails crisscrossed the land. One of the earliest recorded European settlers in the Highland Park area was Henry Greenland who owned 384 acres of land and operated an inn along the Mill Brook section of the Assunpink Trail during the late 1600s. "
  32. ^ A Brief History of Highland Park, NJ, The Highland Park Historical Society. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on April 24, 2012. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  34. ^ "Ciel Power".
  35. ^ Staff. "Highland Park—New Jersey's First HeartSafe Municipality", Jewish Link of New Jersey, May 19, 2016. Accessed June 20, 2017. "On April 5, the Council of the Borough of Highland Park designated the municipality as the first HeartSafe Community in the state of New Jersey."
  36. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  37. ^ a b New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places in Middlesex County, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Historic Preservation Office, updated September 18, 2019. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  38. ^ Livingston Manor Historic District, Highland Park Historical Society. Accessed October 6, 2014.
  39. ^ US Census 1910, 1920, and New Jersey Census of 1915.
  40. ^ Daily Home News, April 10, 1914.
  41. ^ Daily Home News, August 17, 1918 Obituary.
  42. ^ "Highland Park's New School May Be Open This Week". The Daily Home News. New Brunswick, New Jersey. November 22, 1915. p. 9. Retrieved September 5, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  43. ^ Shepard, Walter (March 10, 1965). "Fire Engulfs Former Masonic Building". The Daily Home News. New Brunswick, New Jersey. pp. 1, 18. Retrieved September 5, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  44. ^ Areas touching Highland Park, MapIt. Accessed February 24, 2020.
  45. ^ Municipalities, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed December 1, 2019.
  46. ^ New Jersey Municipal Boundaries, New Jersey Department of Transportation. Accessed November 15, 2019.
  47. ^ Compendium of censuses 1726-1905: together with the tabulated returns of 1905, New Jersey Department of State, 1906. Accessed July 31, 2013.
  48. ^ Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910: Population by Counties and Minor Civil Divisions, 1910, 1900, 1890, United States Census Bureau, p. 337. Accessed July 4, 2012.
  49. ^ Fifteenth Census of the United States : 1930 - Population Volume I, United States Census Bureau, p. 717. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  50. ^ Table 6: New Jersey Resident Population by Municipality: 1940 - 2000, Workforce New Jersey Public Information Network, August 2001. Accessed May 1, 2023.
  51. ^ a b c d e f Census 2000 Profiles of Demographic / Social / Economic / Housing Characteristics for Highland Park borough, New Jersey October 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  52. ^ a b c d e DP-1: Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2000 - Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data for Helmetta borough, Middlesex County, New Jersey Archived February 12, 2020, at archive.today, United States Census Bureau. Accessed November 23, 2012.
  53. ^ DP03: Selected Economic Characteristics from the 2006-2010 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates for Highland Park borough, Middlesex County, New Jersey Archived February 12, 2020, at archive.today, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  54. ^ QT-P16: Language Spoken at Home: 2000 - Census 2000 Summary File 3 (SF 3) - Sample Data for Highland Park borough, Middlesex County, New Jersey Archived February 12, 2020, at archive.today, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 1, 2012.
  55. ^ Lurie, Maxine N.; Mappen, Marc. "Highland Park", Encyclopedia of New Jersey, p. 363, Rutgers University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-8135-3325-2. Accessed June 27, 2011. "In addition, the borough was home at various times to two Nobel Laureates, Selman Waksman and Arno Penzias."
  56. ^ Highland Park Environmental News 2007 December 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, accessed January 3, 2007.
  57. ^ Selinger, Janice. "Highland Park: Site of State's First Eruv",The New York Times, December 17, 1978. Accessed July 19, 2022. "This transition came about through the establishment of an eruv — New Jersey's first — by Rabbi Pesach Raymon of Ahavas Achim Congregation in New Brunswick."
  58. ^ Map, Highland Park Eruv. Accessed July 19, 2022.
  59. ^ Inventory of Municipal Forms of Government in New Jersey, Rutgers University Center for Government Studies, July 1, 2011. Accessed June 1, 2023.
  60. ^ Cerra, Michael F. "Forms of Government: Everything You've Always Wanted to Know, But Were Afraid to Ask" September 24, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, New Jersey State League of Municipalities. Accessed November 30, 2014.
  61. ^ "Forms of Municipal Government in New Jersey", p. 6. Rutgers University Center for Government Studies. Accessed June 1, 2023.
  62. ^ Government October 19, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed December 4, 2019. It has a Mayor and Council form of government in which the Mayor and Borough Council have separate executive and legislative powers. This provides a system of checks and balances by avoiding a large concentration of power in either the Council or the Office of Mayor. The Mayor votes only in case of a tie."
  63. ^ 2024 Municipal Data Sheet, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed May 27, 2024.
  64. ^ November 7, 2023 General Election Official Results, Middlesex County, New Jersey, December 7, 2023. Accessed January 1, 2024.
  65. ^ November 8, 2022 General Election Official Results, Middlesex County, New Jersey, updated November 22, 2022. Accessed January 1, 2023.
  66. ^ General Election November 2, 2021 Official Results, Middlesex County, New Jersey, updated November 19, 2021. Accessed April 13, 2022.
  67. ^ Russell, Suzanne. "Elsie Foster elected Highland Park mayor for rest of 2023", MyCentralJersey.com, January 25, 2023. Accessed March 31, 2023. "Elsie Foster is the borough's new mayor. During a special Borough Council meeting on Tuesday, Foster, the council president, who had been serving this year as the acting mayor, was elected mayor by the council and will serve in the position until the end of 2023, replacing former Mayor Gayle Brill Mittler who resigned Dec. 31.... Last month former Mayor Gayle Brill Mittler, who had served as mayor since 2014, announced she was resigning with a year left on her term to spend more time with her family, including her three grandchildren."
  68. ^ Russell, Suzanne. "Meet Highland Park's newest council member", MyCentralJersey.com, February 25, 2023. Accessed March 31, 2023. "Jason Postelnik was sworn in Tuesday to fill the council seat vacated by Elsie Foster, who was selected last month to serve as mayor following the resignation of Mayor Gayle Brill Mittler last year."
  69. ^ Baldwin, Carly. "Highland Park Fills Council Vacancy; Matthew Hersh will fill out the remainder of popular Councilman Jon Erickson's term. Erickson died unexpectedly in October.", New Brunswick, NJ Patch, January 7, 2017. Accessed December 4, 2019. "The Borough Council has reappointed Democrat Matthew Brian Hersh (pictured) to continue filling a vacancy on the seven-member governing body, the result of the Oct. 16 death of popular Councilman Jon K. Erickson. Erickson served on the Highland Park Council since 2002 until his death. He was posthumously re-elected last Nov. 8th, because his passing occurred after the deadline to remove his name from the ballot."
  70. ^ Staff. "Political Science Prof Hale Now a Highland Park Councilman", Insider NJ, July 18, 2018. Accessed December 4, 2019. "Seton Hall University Political Science Professor Matt Hale – who writes a column for this website – last night assumed a seat on the Highland Park Borough Council.... Hale, a Democrat, accepted the appointment to replace Councilman Matthew Hersh, who congratulated his successor. 'I did resign from the Council last month for an incredible opportunity with Gov. Murphy's administration as director of communications at the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities, working on an inspiring and ambitious environmental policy agenda,' Hersh wrote on Facebook."
  71. ^ Staff. "Robert Wood Johnson, 74, Dies. Chairman of Johnson & Johnson. Founder's Son Led Company Until 1963. No. 2 Man on War Production Board", The New York Times, January 31, 1968. Accessed August 12, 2018. "He had served from 1920 to 1922 as Mayor of Highland Park, and contended that his experience in small-town politics taught him more about psychology than all the books he had read."
  72. ^ Mayors of Highland Park, New Jersey, Political Graveyard. Accessed October 6, 2014. "Robert Wood Johnson Jr. 1920-22 Cornelius McCrelis 1922-24 Edwin W. Eden 1928-30 Alvah H. Cole 1948-51 Joseph C. DeCoster 1952-53 Meryl L. Frank 2007"
  73. ^ Johnson, Brett. "Former councilman Stephen Nolan takes oath as interim mayor of Highland Park", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, January 21, 2010. Accessed December 5, 2016. "Shortly after Stephen Nolan was sworn in as Highland Park's interim mayor tonight, former mayor Meryl Frank presented him with a set of keys."
  74. ^ "Mayor of Highland Park is Affirmed", Leoraw, January 5, 2012. Accessed December 5, 2016. "Gary Minkoff is Affirmed as the new Mayor of Highland Park.... Outgoing mayor Steve Nolan is pictured on the right."
  75. ^ Plan Components Report, New Jersey Redistricting Commission, December 23, 2011. Accessed February 1, 2020.
  76. ^ Municipalities Sorted by 2011-2020 Legislative District, New Jersey Department of State. Accessed February 1, 2020.
  77. ^ 2019 New Jersey Citizen's Guide to Government, New Jersey League of Women Voters. Accessed October 30, 2019.
  78. ^ Districts by Number for 2011-2020, New Jersey Legislature. Accessed January 6, 2013.
  79. ^ Directory of Representatives: New Jersey, United States House of Representatives. Accessed January 3, 2019.
  80. ^ Biography, Congressman Frank Pallone Jr. Accessed January 3, 2019. "Frank Pallone, Jr., was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, where he grew up and still resides."
  81. ^ U.S. Sen. Cory Booker cruises past Republican challenger Rik Mehta in New Jersey, PhillyVoice. Accessed April 30, 2021. "He now owns a home and lives in Newark's Central Ward community."
  82. ^ Biography of Bob Menendez, United States Senate, January 26, 2015. "Menendez, who started his political career in Union City, moved in September from Paramus to one of Harrison's new apartment buildings near the town's PATH station.."
  83. ^ Home, sweet home: Bob Menendez back in Hudson County. nj.com. Accessed April 30, 2021. "Booker, Cory A. - (D - NJ) Class II; Menendez, Robert - (D - NJ) Class I"
  84. ^ Legislative Roster for District 18, New Jersey Legislature. Accessed January 18, 2024.
  85. ^ Board of County Commissioners, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022. "The residents of Middlesex County's 25 municipalities elect seven persons to serve as members of the Board of County Commissioners. The Commissioners are elected at large to staggered three-year terms in the November general election. In January of each year, the Board reorganizes, selecting one Commissioner to be County Commissioner Director and another to be County Commissioner Deputy Director."
  86. ^ Ronald G. Rios, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  87. ^ Shanti Narra, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  88. ^ Claribel A. Azcona-Barber, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  89. ^ Charles Kenny, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  90. ^ Leslie Koppel, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  91. ^ Chanelle Scott McCullum, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  92. ^ Charles E. Tomaro, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  93. ^ 2022 County Data Sheet, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  94. ^ Nancy J. Pinkin, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  95. ^ Clerks, Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey. Accessed June 19, 2022.
  96. ^ Mildred S. Scott, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  97. ^ Sheriffs, Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey. Accessed June 19, 2022.
  98. ^ Claribel Cortes, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  99. ^ Constitutional Officers, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Accessed May 1, 2022.
  100. ^ Surrogates, Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey. Accessed June 19, 2022.
  101. ^ Voter Registration Summary - Middlesex, New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections, March 23, 2011. Accessed November 23, 2012.
  102. ^ "Presidential General Election Results - November 6, 2012 - Middlesex County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Elections. March 15, 2013. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  103. ^ "Number of Registered Voters and Ballots Cast - November 6, 2012 - General Election Results - Middlesex County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Elections. March 15, 2013. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  104. ^ 2008 Presidential General Election Results: Middlesex County, New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections, December 23, 2008. Accessed November 23, 2012.
  105. ^ 2004 Presidential Election: Middlesex County, New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections, December 13, 2004. Accessed November 23, 2012.
  106. ^ "Governor - Middlesex County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Elections. January 29, 2014. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  107. ^ "Number of Registered Voters and Ballots Cast - November 5, 2013 - General Election Results - Middlesex County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Elections. January 29, 2014. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  108. ^ 2009 Governor: Middlesex County October 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections, December 31, 2009. Accessed November 23, 2012.
  109. ^ Highland Park Board of Education District Policy 0110 - Identification, Highland Park Public Schools. Accessed March 10, 2022. "Purpose: The Board of Education exists for the purpose of providing a thorough and efficient system of free public education in grades PreK through 12 in the Highland Park School District. Composition: The Highland Park School District is comprised of all the area within the municipal boundaries of Highland Park."
  110. ^ District information for Highland Park Boro School District, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed February 15, 2022.
  111. ^ School Data for the Highland Park Public Schools, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed February 15, 2022.
  112. ^ Irving Primary School, Highland Park Public Schools. Accessed March 10, 2022.
  113. ^ Bartle Elementary School, Highland Park Public Schools. Accessed March 10, 2022.
  114. ^ Highland Park Middle School, Highland Park Public Schools. Accessed March 10, 2022.
  115. ^ Highland Park High School, Highland Park Public Schools. Accessed March 10, 2022.
  116. ^ District Info , Highland Park School District. Accessed February 24, 2024.
  117. ^ School Performance Reports for the Highland Park Boro School District, New Jersey Department of Education. Accessed April 1, 2024.
  118. ^ New Jersey School Directory for the Highland Park Public Schools, New Jersey Department of Education. Accessed February 1, 2024.
  119. ^ About Us, Greater Brunswick Charter School. Accessed December 15, 2019. "The Greater Brunswick Regional Charter School is defined by the broad themes of child-directed learning in the vein of constructivism, Howard Gardner's 'unschooled mind,' and Montessori instruction; multi-age groupings of students; a unique degree of parental and community involvement; and a region of residence serving the entire and contiguous school districts of New Brunswick, Edison, Highland Park, and Milltown."
  120. ^ District information for Greater Brunswick Charter School, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed February 15, 2022.
  121. ^ Heyboer, Kelly. "How to get your kid a seat in one of N.J.'s hardest-to-get-into high schools", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, May 2017. Accessed November 18, 2019. "Middlesex County has two stand-alone career academies for high-achieving students: the Academy for Science, Math and Engineering Technology, located on the campus of Middlesex County College in Edison, and the Academy for Allied Health and Biomedical Sciences in Woodbridge. How to apply: Students must attend a mandatory information session and submit an application by November of their 8th grade year."
  122. ^ Locations, Middlesex County Vocational and Technical Schools. Accessed December 2, 2019.
  123. ^ History, The Center School. Accessed July 4, 2012.
  124. ^ Cooper, Warren. "Displaced from Highland Park by a fire, the Center School settles in at Branchburg's Old York School", Somerset Messenger-Gazette, March 5, 2012. Accessed July 4, 2012. "The school 'reopened' unexpectedly on Feb. 22 to accommodate 112 students and 52 staffers of a private, special-needs school in Highland Park that was shuttered a week earlier by a fire. Classes at The Center School on Madison Avenue had ended for the day when a fire broke out about 5:30 p.m. on Feb. 14, according to Executive Director and Principal Marcie Fiorentino."
  125. ^ Middlesex County Mileage by Municipality and Jurisdiction, New Jersey Department of Transportation, May 2010. Accessed July 18, 2014.
  126. ^ Middlesex County Road Map, New Jersey Department of Transportation. Accessed December 1, 2019.
  127. ^ Route 27 Straight Line Diagram, New Jersey Department of Transportation, updated May 2018. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  128. ^ County Route 514 Straight Line Diagram, New Jersey Department of Transportation, updated October 2012. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  129. ^ Middlesex County Route 622 Straight Line Diagram, New Jersey Department of Transportation, updated June 2011. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  130. ^ Middlesex County Route 676 Straight Line Diagram, New Jersey Department of Transportation, updated June 2011. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  131. ^ Middlesex County Route 692 Straight Line Diagram, New Jersey Department of Transportation, updated June 2011. Accessed December 4, 2019.
  132. ^ , NJ Transit, backed up by the Internet Archive as of May 22, 2009. Accessed October 1, 2011.
  133. ^ Middlesex County Transit Guide, Middlesex County. Accessed April 1, 2023.
  134. ^ Atlantic City Service, Suburban Transit. Accessed April 21, 2015.
  135. ^ Deer Damage Management Program, Rutgers University Ecological Preserve. Accessed August 17, 2020.
  136. ^ Deer Management, Borough of Highland Park. Accessed August 17, 2020.
  137. ^ Adele appeared in ten Broadway musicals from 1917 to 1931 with her brother Fred, who credited her with initiating his career in show business. After birth as Adele Austerlitz in Omaha, she enrolled in Chambers’ Dancing Academy, relocated to New York City in 1904, participated in Claude Alvienne's dancing school, attended public school at Highland Park, New Jersey for two years, enrolled in Ned Wayburn's dancing school in 1910, then began acting career. See Consult Annual Obituary 1981 (St. Martin's Press, 1982) 66-68 and Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Vol 1 (Charles Scribner's Sons, 1998) 20-22 and American National Biography, Vol 1 (1999) 692-693."
  138. ^ a b Donnelly, Marea. "Fred Astaire's sister was the real dance and vaudeville star", The Daily Telegraph, September 10, 2016. Accessed November 8, 2020. "When bookings dropped off from 1910 as they lost their cute appeal and Adele shot up over Fred, they attended classes at New Jersey's Highland Park public school for two years."
  139. ^ After birth as Fred Austerlitz in Omaha, he enrolled in Chambers’ Dancing Academy, relocated to New York City in 1904, participated in Claude Alvienne's dancing school, attended public school at Highland Park, New Jersey for two years, enrolled with his sister Adele in Ned Wayburn's dancing school in 1910, then began his acting career. See Consult Current Biography (1964) 13-14 and Lincoln Journal Star, May 9, 1999, pp. E-1, E-2 and American National Biography, Vol 1 (1999) 693-695 and Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Vol 2 (1999) 36-38."
  140. ^ a b c 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."
  141. ^ Makin, Bob. "Levinson Axelrod celebrates 70 years of service"[permanent dead link], Home News Tribune, November 12, 2009. Accessed August 17, 2012. "His son is with CBS News as their Washington reporter. He's writing a book that is out soon about his relationship with his father. His name is Jim Axelrod. He's well known. They're Highland Park people. Jim went to Highland Park High School."
  142. ^ Staff. "Harvey J. Brudner: Obituary", The Record, September 16, 2009. Accessed February 2, 2015. "He was born and raised in New York City and lived for many years in Highland Park, NJ."
  143. ^ "Interview with Former Poet Laureate of Missouri, David Clewell", Geosi Reads, October 16, 2016. Accessed February 7, 2020. "Shortly after the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, Bob Stephens read every word of Thoreau's Civil Disobedience out loud to his 8 a.m. Freshman English class at Highland Park High because he honestly believed that words, used well, had the power to change lives. Small wonder, then, that he was the person to show me the first poems I actually cared about in mine."
  144. ^ a b , Highland Park Chamber of Commerce, backed up by the Internet Archive as of May 22, 2001. Accessed April 9, 2011.
  145. ^ Howard, Roberta. "Hoots from the Owl", The Daily Home News, November 16, 1955. Accessed May 9, 2024, via Newspapers.com. "Nancy Dorian, also of the class of 1954, made the dean's list at Connecticut College for Women."
  146. ^ Jordan, Chris. "Remembering Kirk Douglas: His three greatest fight scenes and his Jersey connection", Asbury Park Press, February 5, 2020. Accessed February 7, 2020. "We also note that Douglas was a Jersey guy — sort of. His first wife Diana Dill, whom Douglas married in 1943, had a connection to the Johnson family of New Brunswick's Johnson & Johnson fame. Douglas and Dill lived briefly in the Johnson-built Merriwold Castle on River Road in Highland Park. Son Michael, also a noted actor, was born in New Brunswick in 1944."
  147. ^ Dzielak, Kathy. "Michael Douglas comes home to New Jersey", Asbury Park Press, May 15, 2014. Accessed February 7, 2020. "Born: Michael Kirk Douglas in St. Peter's Hospital in New Brunswick, N.J., the son of actors Kirk and Diana Douglas. Lived the first six weeks of his life in Highland Park, N.J. at Merriewold, the former estate of the late J. Seward Johnson (Sr.), the Johnson & Johnson heir."
  148. ^ Groner, Jonathan. "This Is Not Your Father's World: An Interview with Samuel G. Freedman" May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, 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.'"
  149. ^ Kochman, Marilyn. "In Person; An Equation for Success", The New York Times, October 5, 2003. Accessed April 9, 2011. "Dr. Gelfand, who lives in Highland Park, has made an indelible impact in such areas as functional analysis, representation theory, geometry and integrable systems."
  150. ^ "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."
  151. ^ Alan H. Guth, Victor F. Weisskopf Professor of Physics September 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, 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."
  152. ^ Hunt, Todderick. "Dwayne Haskins Jr., one of the top quarterbacks in the country, recaps recent Rutgers visit", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, May 29, 2014. Accessed September 17, 2018. "Dwayne Haskins, the Bullis School (Potomac, Md.) sophomore quarterback, has been one of the hottest recruits throughout the entire country during the spring evaluation period. The 6-3, 185-pounder has multiple ties to the Scarlet Knights program as he grew up in Highland Park, N.J."
  153. ^ Catton, Pia. "The Lights Are Bright Off-Broadway", The Wall Street Journal, May 28, 2012. Accessed January 4, 2022. "Even if Hollywood beckons, Ms. Herzog's roots are firmly in the theater, a community she has been long been a part of, even before she realized it. A native of Highland Park, N.J., she had an early exposure to New York theater through her grandparents, who were in the industry."
  154. ^ Makin, Bob. "Makin Waves with Highland Park filmmaker John Hulme", Courier News, January 12, 2017. Accessed June 7, 2017. "Longtime borough resident, filmmaker and former basketball star John Hulme chronicles the intense feelings that accompanied the Owls' Rocky-like game against New Brunswick's Zebras in the 1987 Central Jersey Group I championship basketball game in his new documentary Blood, Sweat & Tears: A Basketball Exorcism.... At first, the local filmmaker focuses on the lifelong pain he has felt about New Brunswick freshman Cassius 'Money' Hargrove swishing the game-winning jump shot and snuffing victory from the underdogs as the ball cascaded just out of the reach of Hulme's long arms into the basket."
  155. ^ Horner, Shirley. "About Books", The New York Times, February 15, 1987. Accessed June 11, 2015. "After J. Seward's 1937 divorce from their mother ended a 13-year marriage, the four children of that marriage were forced by necessity to live in a garage next to the chicken coop of a spacious estate, their former home in Highland Park. J. Seward's second child, J. Seward Johnson Jr., founder of the Johnson Atelier Technical Institute of Sculpture in Princeton, told the author that 'since the age of 7, I'd felt disenfranchised.'"
  156. ^ Gardner, Joel R. and Harrison, Andrew R. "The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: The Early Years" October 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, 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."
  157. ^ "N.J. pastor ready to take on the establishment in run for governor". NJ.com. November 3, 2016. Retrieved April 11, 2017.
  158. ^ Sacha Killeya-Jones, Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball. Accessed March 22, 2020. "Born Aug. 10 in Highland Park, New Jersey"
  159. ^ #278 Sheldon Lavin, Forbes. Accessed November 8, 2020. "Residence: Highland Park, New Jersey"
  160. ^ Chronology, Roy Lichtenstein Foundation. Accessed April 3, 2017. "1960:... Moves into a house at 66 S. Adelaide Avenue, Highland Park, New Jersey, where he sets up his studio in the bedroom."
  161. ^ Amato, Jennifer. "Parents celebrate baby's birth at body shop"[permanent dead link], CentralJersey.com, May 2, 2017. Accessed September 28, 2018. "Little did Seth Mandel know that 10 years after leaving Greater Media Newspapers, a precursor of Newspaper Media Group, that his family would make its own headlines. Seth and his wife Bethany thought their third child was going to arrive on April 27, a day after Bethany's due date, so they headed from their home in Highland Park to the hospital in Princeton."
  162. ^ Ojito, Mirta. "Author didn't seek tie-in to Madonna", The Tampa Tribune, January 10, 1997. Accessed April 9, 2011. "Soon after, Martinez began work on the book, which he completed in his new home in Highland Park, NJ..."
  163. ^ ""Round About Town",The Daily Home News, May 4, 1960. Accessed January 26, 2023, via Newspapers.com. "Dario would be the first to take issue with former Highland Park-iie Suzy Parker who declared on the Jack Paar program last night that 'the French are a mean people.'"
  164. ^ 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."
  165. ^ "Communion Action", The Daily Home News, December 8, 1960. Accessed January 26, 2023, via Newspapers.com. "Stavro E. Prodromou, 17, center, recipient of the Highland Park Fire Department scholarship at Rutgers University, looks on as Louis Figle, fire chief, presents $400 check to Dr. Mason W. Cross, president of the university.... Prodromou, son of Mr. and Mrs. Evangelo Prodromou of 218 Magnolia St., Highland Park, was graduated from Highland Park High School in June."
  166. ^ George Reynolds, Rutgers University Oral History Archives, October 29, 1999. Accessed June 28, 2019. "I was born in 1917, in Trenton. Soon after that, I guess I was two years old, we moved to Highland Park, New Jersey, and that's where I lived my early life."
  167. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang. "Susana Rotker-Martinez, 46, Language Professor at Rutgers", The New York Times, December 2, 2000. Accessed August 12, 2018. "Dr. Susana Rotker-Martinez, director of the Rutgers Center for Hemispheric Studies, was hit by a truck and fatally injured Monday while crossing a road in Piscataway, N.J. She was 46 and lived in Highland Park."
  168. ^ Rucker, Rudy van Bitter. All the visions, p. 102. Ocean View Books, 1991. ISBN 9780938075097. Accessed February 28, 2018. "Audrey and I were newlyweds there in Highland Park, and we used to watch The Newlywed Game on TV every week."
  169. ^ Home Page, Neil J. A. Sloane. Accessed May 30, 2015.
  170. ^ L.J. Smith profile January 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, 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.
  171. ^ Ronnen, Meir. "Joan Snyder at the Jewish Museum; New York's Jewish Museum is currently presenting Joan Snyder: A Painting Survey, 1969-2005 through October 23.", The Jerusalem Post, February 18, 2010. Accessed August 12, 2018. "Born in Highland Park, New Jersey in 1940, Snyder was the middle child of Jewish parents who never lost a sense of their immigrant heritage."
  172. ^ "Ulrich P. Strauss Obituary (2015) Asbury Park Press". Legacy.com. Retrieved May 26, 2022.
  173. ^ Gray, Kristy. "Peek into the imagination of Cody sci-fi artist Darrel K. Sweet: Mind Traveler", Casper Star-Tribune, January 21, 2007. Accessed April 9, 2011. "Sweet was drawing at age 3½ growing up in Highland Park, N.J. His mother still has some of these pictures, nearly seven decades old."
  174. ^ Staff. "Math drives this Rutgers professor" February 3, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, copy of article from The Star-Ledger, March 23, 2008. Accessed July 4, 2012. "Endre Szemeredi 67, Highland Park "
  175. ^ "Norman Tanzman, 85, once Middlesex state senator". Home News Tribune, June 7, 2004. Accessed March 1, 2021, via Newspapers.com. "Born in New York City, Mr. Tanzman moved to New Brunswick when he was 4, and then to Highland Park."
  176. ^ "Hugh Kormos, Publisher, Dies; Funeral Will Be Held Tomorrow", The Central Jersey Home News, December 3, 1951. Accessed May 31, 2020. "Born in Zsambek, Hungary, Mr. Kormos came to the community in 1921, shortly after his marriage to Miss Olga Von Till of Highland Park, whom he met in Budapest while she was studying music abroad."
  177. ^ Greats go down - Alan Voorhees, Rand Brown September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, 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."
  178. ^ Cheslow, Jerry. "If You're Thinking of Living in/Highland Park; Well-Established, but Unpretentious", The New York Times, November 21, 1993. Accessed September 8, 2014. "Highland Park has been home to two Nobel laureates. The late Selman A. Waksman was awarded the prize in medicine and physiology in 1952 for his work with antibiotics and Dr. Arno A. Penzias, who shared the 1978 prize in physics for his work related to the big bang theory, still lives there."

External links edit

highland, park, jersey, highland, park, borough, middlesex, county, state, jersey, york, city, metropolitan, area, borough, located, northern, banks, raritan, river, raritan, valley, region, 2020, united, states, census, borough, population, increase, from, 20. Highland Park is a borough in Middlesex County in the U S state of New Jersey in the New York City metropolitan area The borough is located on the northern banks of the Raritan River in the Raritan Valley region As of the 2020 United States census the borough s population was 15 072 10 11 an increase of 1 090 7 8 from the 2010 census count of 13 982 20 21 which in turn reflected a decline of 17 0 1 from the 13 999 counted in the 2000 census 22 Highland Park New JerseyBoroughLivingston Homestead Highland Park NJ south view SealLocation of Highland Park in Middlesex County highlighted in red left Inset map Location of Middlesex County in New Jersey highlighted in orange right Census Bureau map of Highland Park New JerseyHighland ParkLocation in Middlesex CountyShow map of Middlesex County New JerseyHighland ParkLocation in New JerseyShow map of New JerseyHighland ParkLocation in the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 40 30 03 N 74 25 40 W 40 500795 N 74 427911 W 40 500795 74 427911 1 2 Country United StatesState New JerseyCountyMiddlesexIncorporatedMarch 15 1905Government 7 TypeBorough BodyBorough Council MayorElsie Foster D appointed to unexpired term ending December 31 2027 3 4 AdministratorTeri Jover 5 Municipal clerkJennifer Santiago 6 Area 8 Total1 83 sq mi 4 74 km2 Land1 82 sq mi 4 72 km2 Water0 01 sq mi 0 02 km2 0 44 Rank424th of 565 in state21st of 25 in county 1 Elevation 9 75 ft 23 m Population 2020 10 11 Total15 072 Estimate 2023 10 12 14 959 Rank174th of 565 in state16th of 25 in county 13 Density8 276 8 sq mi 3 195 7 km2 Rank46th of 565 in state3rd of 25 in county 13 Time zoneUTC 05 00 Eastern EST Summer DST UTC 04 00 Eastern EDT ZIP Code08904 14 15 Area code732 908 16 FIPS code3402331470 1 17 18 GNIS feature ID0885252 1 19 Websitewww wbr hpboro wbr com Highland Park was formed as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 15 1905 when it broke away from what was then known as Raritan Township present day Edison 23 The borough was named for its location above the Raritan River 24 Contents 1 History 1 1 Livingston Manor Historic District 1 2 Buildings designed by Alexander Merchant 2 Geography 3 Demographics 3 1 2010 census 3 2 2000 census 4 Community 5 Government 5 1 Local government 5 2 Mayors 5 3 Federal state and county representation 5 4 Politics 6 Education 7 Transportation 7 1 Roads and highways 7 2 Public transportation 8 Wildlife 9 Notable people 10 References 11 External linksHistory editThe earliest settlers of the land that would become Highland Park were the Lenape Native Americans who hunted in the hills along the Raritan River and had trails that crisscrossed the area providing a link between the Delaware River and Hudson River areas 25 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 which was later developed as Raritan Landing 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 18th century 26 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 seven span stone arch road bridge was built in 1892 and stretches 595 feet 181 m across the Raritan River to New Brunswick 27 It became the Lincoln Highway Bridge in 1914 and was widened in 1925 28 In the late 17th century Henry Greenland became one of the area s first European settlers he owned nearly 400 acres 1 6 km2 of land on the Mill Brook section of the Assunpink Trail where he operated an inn for travelers Others early settlers included Captain Francis Drake and other members of the Drake family relatives of the famous explorer In the early 18th century 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 29 The Reverend John Henry Livingston of the famous Livingston family newly chosen head of Queen s College now Rutgers University purchased a 150 acre 0 61 km2 plot of land in 1809 which would hereafter be known as the Livingston Manor A gracious Greek Revival house built around 1843 by Robert and Louisa Livingston stands on this property which remains Highland Park s most prominent historic house 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 30 In the early 19th century both the Delaware amp Raritan Canal and a railroad were constructed largely to serve the commercial center of New Brunswick across the river citation needed 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 31 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 26 A replacement iron truss bridge was constructed on the existing enlarged stone piers which in turn was replaced in 1902 by the current twelve span stone arch bridge encased in concrete in the 1940s 32 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 26 1870 was also the year in which Highland Park was annexed to the newly formed township now called Edison but at the time called Raritan Township 23 nbsp The Doughboy statue in downtown Highland Park Highland Park had its own school district and on March 15 1905 the Borough of Highland Park was formed 23 Highland Park s drive for independence from Raritan Township arose over the issue of public schooling Residents wanted an independent school system and there was 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 Since its establishment as a borough 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 amp Johnson The John Waldron Machine Company Turner Tubes and the Janeway amp Carpender Wallpaper factory The borough is the birthplace of the Band Aid 26 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 amp pop shops many that have lasted for generations citation needed Throughout the 20th century Highland Park s religious institutions educational facilities and municipal governance have kept pace with the growth of the borough The trends of local autonomy and control that shaped Highland Park in the past continue to this day citation needed In 2012 Highland Park became the first municipality in the state to contract a home performance company to help residents consume less energy The program is a one of a kind program that can offer up to a 30 energy savings for homeowners 33 34 In 2016 Highland Park became the state s first registered HeartSafe community 35 Livingston Manor Historic District edit For the tract of land in the Province of New York granted to Robert Livingston the Elder in 1715 see Livingston Manor For the hamlet in Sullivan County New York see Livingston Manor New York Livingston HomesteadU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtContributing propertyNew Jersey Register of Historic Places nbsp nbsp nbsp Show map of Middlesex County New Jersey nbsp nbsp Show map of New Jersey nbsp nbsp Show map of the United StatesLocation81 Harrison AvenueCoordinates40 30 08 N 74 26 7 W 40 50222 N 74 43528 W 40 50222 74 43528Architectural styleGreek RevivalPart ofLivingston Manor Historic District ID04000672 NRHP reference No 02000215 36 NJRHP No 3950 37 Significant datesAdded to NRHPMarch 20 2002Designated CPJuly 7 2004Designated NJRHPDecember 20 2001 Livingston Manor Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtNew Jersey Register of Historic PlacesLocationParts of Cleveland Grant Harrison Lawrence Lincoln Madison and North Second Avenues and River RoadCoordinates40 30 5 N 74 26 17 W 40 50139 N 74 43806 W 40 50139 74 43806NRHP reference No 04000672 36 NJRHP No 4289 37 Added to NRHPJuly 7 2004 Livingston Manor was a subdivision built upon the lands surrounding the Livingston 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 38 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 distinguished 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 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 26 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 Carrere and Hastings Merchant developed and maintained a classical design vocabulary Many workers in the building trades such as Harvey E Dodge the carpenter Frederick Nietscke and the contractor Harold Richard Segoine 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 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 show 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 39 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 for 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 40 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 and 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 41 Highland Park s identity as a streetcar suburb was transformed to that of an automobile suburb during the 1920s By 1922 there had been 210 dwellings constructed in Livingston Manor The Livingston Manor Corporation continued to have transactions into the 1960s but the area s significant development had taken place by 1925 The Livingston Manor is an important neighborhood in Highland Park The Livingston Manor Historic District was listed in the New Jersey Register of Historic Places on April 1 2004 and in the National Register of Historic Places on July 7 2004 26 Buildings designed by Alexander Merchant edit Alexander Merchant 1872 1952 designed the following buildings 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 The Lafayette School is now condominiums and no longer a school Reformed Church of Highland Park on South Second Avenue original church 1897 and auditorium wing c 1920 Irving School on Central Avenue original building 1914 The Center School on North Third Avenue formerly the Hamilton School opened 1915 42 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 on March 10 1965 destroyed the upper levels of the auditorium and offices 43 The Brody House at corner of Raritan and North Adelaide Avenues built 1911 demolished 1997 The former Police Station at 137 Raritan Avenue demolished Anshe Emeth Memorial Temple on Livingston Avenue in neighboring New Brunswick 1929 Geography editAccording to the United States Census Bureau the borough had a total area of 1 83 square miles 4 74 km2 including 1 82 square miles 4 72 km2 of land and 0 01 square miles 0 02 km2 of water 0 44 1 2 The borough received its name for its park like setting on the high land of the banks of the Raritan River overlooking New Brunswick Highland Park borders the Middlesex County municipalities of Edison New Brunswick and Piscataway 44 45 46 Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 19101 517 19204 866220 8 19308 69178 6 19409 0023 6 19509 7218 0 196011 04913 7 197014 38530 2 198013 396 6 9 199013 279 0 9 200013 9995 4 201013 982 0 1 202015 0727 8 2023 est 14 959 10 12 0 7 Population sources 1910 1920 47 1910 48 1910 1930 49 1940 2000 50 2000 51 52 2010 20 21 2020 10 11 2010 census edit The 2010 United States census counted 13 982 people 5 875 households and 3 267 families in the borough The population density was 7 728 1 per square mile 2 983 8 km2 There were 6 203 housing units at an average density of 3 428 5 per square mile 1 323 8 km2 The racial makeup was 68 26 9 544 White 7 83 1 095 Black or African American 0 14 20 Native American 17 84 2 495 Asian 0 03 4 Pacific Islander 3 28 458 from other races and 2 62 366 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 8 95 1 252 of the population 20 Of the 5 875 households 26 0 had children under the age of 18 43 2 were married couples living together 9 3 had a female householder with no husband present and 44 4 were non families Of all households 31 4 were made up of individuals and 9 5 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 38 and the average family size was 3 10 20 21 1 of the population were under the age of 18 10 2 from 18 to 24 32 9 from 25 to 44 24 2 from 45 to 64 and 11 6 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 34 8 years For every 100 females the population had 92 0 males For every 100 females ages 18 and older there were 91 0 males 20 The Census Bureau s 2006 2010 American Community Survey showed that in 2010 inflation adjusted dollars median household income was 78 821 with a margin of error of 8 312 and the median family income was 103 316 6 807 Males had a median income of 72 533 8 231 versus 55 591 3 873 for females The per capita income for the borough was 41 300 3 714 About 5 4 of families and 8 9 of the population were below the poverty line including 9 4 of those under age 18 and 8 8 of those age 65 or over 53 2000 census edit As of the 2000 United States census 17 there were 13 999 people 5 899 households and 3 409 families residing in the borough The population density was 7 614 1 inhabitants per square mile 2 939 8 km2 There were 6 071 housing units at an average density of 3 302 0 per square mile 1 274 9 km2 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 51 52 Of residents reporting their ancestry 9 8 were of Italian 9 1 Irish 8 1 German 7 8 Russian 7 5 Polish 51 66 2 spoke English 7 2 Spanish 6 4 Chinese 2 2 Hebrew 1 8 Russian 1 2 Hungarian 1 1 French and 1 1 Hindi as their language spoken at home 54 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 51 52 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 51 52 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 51 52 Community editHighland Park has at times been a bedroom community for nearby Rutgers University and Johnson amp 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 55 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 56 In 1978 Highland Park became the first municipality in New Jersey to have an eruv a symbolic enclosure that allows Orthodox Jews to perform certain activities outdoors on the Sabbath that would be otherwise prohibited 57 Through an arrangement with New Jersey Bell now Verizon a continuous wire was strung from pole to pole around portions of the borough Eventually this expanded and includes portions of Edison and connects with New Brunswick The wires are inspected every Friday to ensure that the connections are complete When intact this eruv satisfies most Orthodox Jewish religious requirements allowing residents to carry objects during the Sabbath 58 Government editLocal government edit Highland Park is governed under the borough form of New Jersey municipal government which is used in 218 of the 564 municipalities statewide making it the most common form of government in New Jersey 59 The governing body is comprised of a mayor and a borough council with all positions elected at large on a partisan basis as part of the November general election A mayor is elected directly by the voters to a four year term of office The borough council includes six members elected to serve three year terms on a staggered basis with two seats coming up for election each year in a three year cycle 7 The borough form of government used by Highland Park is a weak mayor strong council government in which council members act as the legislative body with the mayor presiding at meetings and voting only in the event of a tie The mayor can veto ordinances subject to an override by a two thirds majority vote of the council The mayor makes committee and liaison assignments for council members and most appointments are made by the mayor with the advice and consent of the council 60 61 62 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 All elected positions are part time the mayor and council members typically hold outside jobs and receive small salaries from their elected offices As of 2024 update the mayor of Highland Park is Democrat Elsie Foster whose term of office ending on December 31 2027 Members of the Borough Council are Council President Matthew Hersh D 2026 Tara Canavera D 2024 Philip George D 2025 Matthew Hale D 2025 Stephany Kim Choban D 2024 and Jason Postelnik D 2026 3 63 64 65 66 In January 2023 the borough council appointed Elsie Foster to fill the vacant seat expiring in December 2023 that had been held by Gayle Brill Mittler until she resigned from office the previous month citing a desire for more time with her family 67 The next month Jason Postelnik was appointed to the council seat expiring in December 2023 that was vacated by Elsie Foster when she took office as mayor 68 In January 2017 the borough council selected Matthew Hersh to fill the seat expiring in December 2019 that became vacant following the death of Jon Erickson the previous October before Election Day Erickson s name remained on the ballot and he was elected to serve the three year term Hersh had earlier been chosen to serve the balance of Erickson s previous term that expired in December 2016 69 In July 2018 Hersh resigned to accept a position with a state agency and was replaced by Matthew Hale 70 Mayors edit The mayors are James B Archer D 1905 1907 Lorenz Volkert R 1908 1913 George White D 1914 1915 Russell E Watson R 1916 1919 Robert Wood Johnson II R 1920 1921 71 Cornelius B McCrelis Jr R 1922 1923 George F Leonard D 1924 1925 Benjamin Erickson R 1926 1928 Edwin W Eden R 1928 1929 Richard T Parker R 1930 1931 Irving D Buttler R 1932 1935 Russell C Smalley R 1936 1937 Russell B Howell 1938 1939 Walter K Wood 1940 1941 Harold W Drake R 1942 1946 George W Miller R 1946 1948 Alvah H Cole R 1948 1951 Joseph C DeCoster D 1952 1953 William C Campbell D 1954 1955 Luther H Martin D 1956 1959 Samuel J Kronman D 1960 1965 Herbert M Tanzman D 1966 1969 Samuel J Kronman D 1970 1971 Gasper Paul Beck D 1972 1975 Harold Hesh Berman D 1976 1979 Charles W Muhollen D 1980 1983 Harold Hesh Berman D 1984 1987 Jeffrey M Orbach R 1988 1991 H James Polos D 1992 1999 Meryl Frank D 2000 2010 resigned office 26 72 Steve Nolan D 2010 2012 73 74 Gary Minkoff D 2013 2014 resigned office Padraic Millet D 2014 acting Gayle Brill Mittler D 2014 2022 Re elected on November 5 2019 to serve another 4 year term which would expire on December 31 2023 she resigned in December 2022 Elsie Foster D 2023 present after being appointed to fill Gayle Britt Mittler s vacant seat Federal state and county representation edit Highland Park is located in the 6th Congressional District 75 and is part of New Jersey s 18th state legislative district 76 77 78 For the 118th United States Congress New Jersey s 6th congressional district is represented by Frank Pallone D Long Branch 79 80 New Jersey is represented in the United States Senate by Democrats Cory Booker Newark term ends 2027 81 and Bob Menendez Englewood Cliffs term ends 2025 82 83 For the 2024 2025 session the 18th legislative district of the New Jersey Legislature is represented in the State Senate by Patrick J Diegnan D South Plainfield and in the General Assembly by Robert Karabinchak D Edison and Sterley Stanley D East Brunswick 84 Middlesex County is governed by a Board of County Commissioners whose seven members are elected at large on a partisan basis to serve three year terms of office on a staggered basis with either two or three seats coming up for election each year as part of the November general election At an annual reorganization meeting held in January the board selects from among its members a commissioner director and deputy director 85 As of 2024 update Middlesex County s Commissioners with party affiliation term end year and residence listed in parentheses are Director Ronald G Rios D Carteret 2024 86 Deputy Director Shanti Narra D North Brunswick 2024 87 Claribel A Clary Azcona Barber D New Brunswick 2025 88 Charles Kenny D Woodbridge Township 2025 89 Leslie Koppel D Monroe Township 2026 90 Chanelle Scott McCullum D Piscataway 2024 91 and Charles E Tomaro D Edison 2026 92 93 Constitutional officers are Clerk Nancy Pinkin D 2025 East Brunswick 94 95 Sheriff Mildred S Scott D 2025 Piscataway 96 97 and Surrogate Claribel Cortes D 2026 North Brunswick 98 99 100 Politics edit As of March 2011 there were a total of 8 506 registered voters in Highland Park of which 5 082 59 7 were registered as Democrats 634 7 5 were registered as Republicans and 2 776 32 6 were registered as Unaffiliated There were 14 voters registered as Libertarians or Greens 101 In the 2012 presidential election Democrat Barack Obama received 72 7 of the vote 4 470 cast ahead of Republican Mitt Romney with 24 9 1 528 votes and other candidates with 2 4 148 votes among the 6 191 ballots cast by the borough s 9 052 registered voters 45 ballots were spoiled for a turnout of 68 4 102 103 In the 2008 presidential election Democrat Barack Obama received 72 1 of the vote 4 699 cast ahead of Republican John McCain with 25 6 1 667 votes and other candidates with 1 5 96 votes among the 6 518 ballots cast by the borough s 9 072 registered voters for a turnout of 71 8 104 In the 2004 presidential election Democrat John Kerry received 72 0 of the vote here 4 550 ballots cast outpolling Republican George W Bush with 26 4 1 669 votes and other candidates with 0 8 70 votes among the 6 319 ballots cast by the borough s 8 507 registered voters for a turnout percentage of 74 3 105 In the 2013 gubernatorial election Democrat Barbara Buono received 64 1 of the vote 2 449 cast ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 33 9 1 294 votes and other candidates with 2 1 79 votes among the 3 867 ballots cast by the borough s 9 065 registered voters 45 ballots were spoiled for a turnout of 42 7 106 107 In the 2009 gubernatorial election Democrat Jon S Corzine received 65 7 of the vote here 2 842 ballots cast ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 26 0 1 125 votes Independent Chris Daggett with 6 5 280 votes and other candidates with 0 9 39 votes among the 4 329 ballots cast by the borough s 8 342 registered voters yielding a 51 9 turnout 108 Education edit nbsp Highland Park High School The Highland Park Public Schools serve students in pre kindergarten through twelfth grade 109 As of the 2020 21 school year the district comprised of four schools had an enrollment of 1 558 students and 145 7 classroom teachers on an FTE basis for a student teacher ratio of 10 7 1 110 Schools in the district with 2020 21 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics 111 are Irving Primary School 112 with 248 students in grades Pre K 1 Bartle Elementary School 113 with 437 students in grades 2 5 Highland Park Middle School 114 with 364 students in grades 6 8 and Highland Park High School 115 with 477 students in grades 9 12 116 117 118 The community is also served by the Greater Brunswick Charter School a K 8 charter school serving students from Highland Park Edison Milltown and New Brunswick 119 As of the 2020 2021 school year the school had an enrollment of 394 students and 31 8 classroom teachers on an FTE basis for a student teacher ratio of 12 4 1 120 Eighth grade students from all of Middlesex County are eligible to apply to attend the high school programs offered by the Middlesex County Vocational and Technical Schools a county wide vocational school district that offers full time career and technical education at Middlesex County Academy in Edison the Academy for Allied Health and Biomedical Sciences in Woodbridge Township and at its East Brunswick Perth Amboy and Piscataway technical high schools with no tuition charged to students for attendance 121 122 The Center School serves students with learning and emotional challenges in grades K 12 Founded in 1971 in Bound Brook the school moved in 1989 to a former public school building in Highland Park 123 A fire in the school s building in February 2012 forced the school to relocate to Branchburg Township on an interim basis 124 Transportation editRoads and highways edit nbsp Route 27 and County Route 514 entering Highland Park on the Albany Street Bridge As of May 2010 update the borough had a total of 31 46 miles 50 63 km of roadways of which 27 85 miles 44 82 km were maintained by the municipality 2 22 miles 3 57 km by Middlesex County and 1 39 miles 2 24 km by the New Jersey Department of Transportation 125 There are five main roads in Highland Park 126 New Jersey Route 27 Known as Raritan Avenue it traverses for about 1 5 miles 2 4 km 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 127 County Route 514 Enters Highland Park concurrent with Route 27 then heads eastward on Woodbridge Avenue at South Sixth Avenue It runs through the southeast region of the borough 128 Middlesex County Route 622 River Road in Highland Park stretches for over 1 mile 1 6 km in the western region of the borough following the curving bank of the Raritan River 129 Middlesex County Route 676 This is Duclos Lane and it forms a portion of Highland Park s eastern border with Edison Road spends 0 49 miles 0 79 km in Highland Park 130 Middlesex County Route 692 Cedar Lane in the northern section of the borough intersects with River Road 131 U S Route 1 and New Jersey Route 18 are accessible close to Highland Park just beyond its southeastern and southwestern borders Public transportation edit NJ Transit local bus service is provided on the 810 and 814 routes 132 133 Atlantic City weekend service is available on Suburban Transit s 700 route 134 NJ Transit northbound trains to Penn Station New York and southbound to the Trenton Transit Center via the Northeast Corridor Line can be found in neighboring New Brunswick station and Edison station Wildlife edit nbsp A deer in the street in Highland Park White tailed deer are common enough in and around Highland Park to be seen as a problem 135 A deer population survey which includes Highland Park was conducted by Raritan Valley Community College in December 2019 the borough s government was using this survey in 2020 as it made plans for deer management 136 Notable people editSee also Category People from Highland Park New Jersey People who were born in residents of or otherwise closely associated with Highland Park include Adele Astaire 1896 1981 acclaimed vaudeville and musical theater dancer actress 137 138 Fred Astaire 1899 1987 dancer singer actor recipient of three Emmy and three Golden Globe Awards and an honorary Academy Award 139 138 Jim Axelrod born 1963 CBS news correspondent 140 141 Harvey Jerome Brudner 1931 2009 engineer and inventor 142 David Clewell 1955 2020 poet and creative writing instructor at Webster University who served as the Poet Laureate of Missouri 143 Earle Dickson 1892 1961 inventor of the Band Aid 144 Nancy Dorian 1936 2024 linguist who carried out research into the decline of the East Sutherland dialect of Scottish Gaelic 145 Kirk Douglas born Issur Danielovitch 1916 2020 actor producer director philanthropist and writer 146 Michael Douglas born 1944 actor director and producer 147 Samuel G Freedman author and columnist for The New York Times 148 Willie Garson 1964 2021 actor best known for his role as Stanford Blatch in Sex and the City 140 Israel Gelfand 1913 2009 renowned mathematician 149 Rebecca Goldstein born 1950 author philosopher and 1996 MacArthur Genius Award winner 150 Alan Guth born 1947 physicist and cosmologist 151 Dwayne Haskins 1997 2022 American football quarterback 152 Amy Herzog playwright 153 John Hulme born 1987 author of the book series The Seems and director of the documentary Blood Sweat amp Tears A Basketball Exorcism 154 John Seward Johnson II 1930 2020 sculptor and founder of the Johnson Atelier in Hamilton Township Mercer County New Jersey 155 Robert Wood Johnson II 1893 1968 Johnson amp Johnson President general and philanthropist who served as mayor of Highland Park from 1920 to 1922 156 Soterios Johnson WNYC radio host 140 Seth Kaper Dale Protestant pastor who was a Green Party candidate in the New Jersey gubernatorial election 2017 157 Sacha Killeya Jones born 1998 American British basketball player for Hapoel Gilboa Galil of the Israeli Basketball Premier League 158 Sheldon Lavin 1932 2023 CEO and chairman of meat processor OSI Group 159 Roy Lichtenstein 1923 1997 pop artist who moved to a home at 66 South Adelaide Avenue in 1960 144 160 Seth Mandel born 1982 conservative author who is editor of The Washington Examiner 161 Tomas Eloy Martinez 1934 2010 journalist and writer professor and director of the department of Latin American Studies at Rutgers author of Santa Evita and The Peron Novel 162 Suzy Parker 1932 2003 fashion model and actress 163 Arno Allan Penzias 1933 2024 physicist and a co winner of the 1978 Nobel Prize in physics 164 Stav Prodromou born 1944 businessman who was the founder and former chief executive officer of Poqet Computer Corporation 165 George T Reynolds 1917 2005 physicist best known for his work in particle physics biophysics and environmental science 166 Susana Rotker 1954 2000 Venezuelan journalist columnist essayist and writer 167 Rudy Rucker born 1946 mathematician computer scientist and science fiction author best known for the novels in the Ware Tetralogy 168 Neil Sloane born 1939 mathematician creator and maintainer of the On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences 169 L J Smith born 1980 former NFL tight end 170 Joan Snyder born 1940 pioneering neo expressionist feminist artist and 2007 MacArthur Genius Award winner 171 Ulrich P Strauss 1920 2015 Rutgers University chemist and 1971 Guggenheim Fellow 172 Darrell K Sweet 1934 2011 illustrator best known for cover art for science fiction and fantasy novels 173 Endre Szemeredi born 1940 mathematician who was the 2012 winner of the Abel Prize 174 Norman Tanzman 1918 2004 politician who served in the New Jersey General Assembly from 1962 to 1968 and in the New Jersey Senate from 1968 to 1974 175 Olga Von Till 1897 1996 classical pianist and piano teacher 176 Alan Voorhees 1922 2005 engineer and urban planner 177 Selman Waksman 1888 1973 biochemist and microbiologist who won the Nobel Prize for his work on antibiotics including Streptomycin for treating tuberculosis 178 References edit a b c d e 2019 Census Gazetteer Files New Jersey Places United States Census Bureau Accessed July 1 2020 a b US Gazetteer files 2010 2000 and 1990 United States Census Bureau Accessed September 4 2014 a b Mayor amp Borough Council Borough of Highland Park Accessed May 27 2024 2023 New Jersey Mayors Directory New Jersey Department of Community Affairs updated February 8 2023 Accessed February 10 2023 Administration Borough of Highland Park Accessed May 27 2024 Borough Clerk Borough of Highland Park Accessed May 27 2024 a b 2012 New Jersey Legislative District Data Book Rutgers University Edward J Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy March 2013 p 81 ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 11 2022 U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Borough of Highland Park Geographic Names Information System Accessed March 5 2013 a b c d e QuickFacts Highland Park borough New Jersey United States Census Bureau Accessed March 31 2023 a b c Total Population Census 2010 Census 2020 New Jersey Municipalities New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed December 1 2022 a b Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Minor Civil Divisions in New Jersey April 1 2020 to July 1 2023 United States Census Bureau released May 2024 Accessed May 16 2024 a b Population Density by County and Municipality New Jersey 2020 and 2021 New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed March 1 2023 Look Up a ZIP Code for Highland Park NJ United States Postal Service Accessed October 1 2011 Zip Codes State of New Jersey Accessed August 28 2013 Area Code Lookup NPA NX for Highland Park NJ Area Codes com Accessed August 28 2013 a b U S Census website United States Census Bureau Accessed September 4 2014 Geographic Codes Lookup for New Jersey Missouri Census Data Center Accessed April 1 2022 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey Accessed September 4 2014 a b c d e DP 1 Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics 2010 for Highland Park borough Middlesex County New Jersey Archived February 12 2020 at archive today United States Census Bureau Accessed May 1 2012 a b Table DP 1 Profile of General Demographic Characteristics 2010 for Highland Park borough Archived 2012 04 02 at the Wayback Machine New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development Accessed May 1 2012 Table 7 Population for the Counties and Municipalities in New Jersey 1990 2000 and 2010 New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development February 2011 Accessed May 1 2023 a b c Snyder John P The Story of New Jersey s Civil Boundaries 1606 1968 Bureau of Geology and Topography Trenton New Jersey 1969 p 170 Accessed May 28 2024 Hutchinson Viola L The Origin of New Jersey Place Names New Jersey Public Library Commission May 1945 Accessed September 1 2015 Cheslow Jerry If You re Thinking of Living In Highland Park N J Small in Size but Large in Diversity The New York Times October 8 2000 Accessed December 4 2019 Raritan Avenue was originally part of the Leni Lenape Indian Assunpink Trail a path that connected the Hudson and Delaware River Valleys a b c d e f g Kolva Jeanne and Pisciotta Joanne Highland Park Borough of Homes pp 18 19 Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing 2005 ISBN 0 7385 2472 7 Accessed May 1 2012 Richman Steven M The Bridges of New Jersey Portraits of Garden State Crossings p 24 Accessed December 15 2019 Originally built in 1892 the Albany Street Bridge in New Brunswick was altered in 1924 widened in 1929 and 1954 and fitted with a new deck and railings in 1985 The seven spans of this 595 foot long bridge carry Albany Street with its portion of Route 27 also known as the Lincoln Highway through New Brunswick and across the Raritan River to Highland Park Hatala Greg Glimpse of History A crossing spot that spans centuries The Star Ledger February 12 2012 updated March 30 2019 Accessed December 15 2019 A stone arch bridge was built in 1892 and widened in 1925 The Albany Street Bridge has undergone many renovations but the stone base constructed in 1892 still serves as its foundation Ducca Sr William F Highland Park Its Beginnings Rutgers University Accessed May 1 2012 Spies Stacy National Register nomination for Livingston Homestead Washington D C National Park Service 2001 Kolva Jeanne History of Highland Park Borough of Highland Park Accessed February 24 2024 The native Lenape people inhabited this hilly land aside the gently flowing Raritan River and their trails crisscrossed the land One of the earliest recorded European settlers in the Highland Park area was Henry Greenland who owned 384 acres of land and operated an inn along the Mill Brook section of the Assunpink Trail during the late 1600s A Brief History of Highland Park NJ The Highland Park Historical Society Accessed December 4 2019 It s in Our Power Archived from the original on April 24 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 Ciel Power Staff Highland Park New Jersey s First HeartSafe Municipality Jewish Link of New Jersey May 19 2016 Accessed June 20 2017 On April 5 the Council of the Borough of Highland Park designated the municipality as the first HeartSafe Community in the state of New Jersey a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 a b New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places in Middlesex County New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Historic Preservation Office updated September 18 2019 Accessed December 4 2019 Livingston Manor Historic District Highland Park Historical Society Accessed October 6 2014 US Census 1910 1920 and New Jersey Census of 1915 Daily Home News April 10 1914 Daily Home News August 17 1918 Obituary Highland Park s New School May Be Open This Week The Daily Home News New Brunswick New Jersey November 22 1915 p 9 Retrieved September 5 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Shepard Walter March 10 1965 Fire Engulfs Former Masonic Building The Daily Home News New Brunswick New Jersey pp 1 18 Retrieved September 5 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Areas touching Highland Park MapIt Accessed February 24 2020 Municipalities Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed December 1 2019 New Jersey Municipal Boundaries New Jersey Department of Transportation Accessed November 15 2019 Compendium of censuses 1726 1905 together with the tabulated returns of 1905 New Jersey Department of State 1906 Accessed July 31 2013 Thirteenth Census of the United States 1910 Population by Counties and Minor Civil Divisions 1910 1900 1890 United States Census Bureau p 337 Accessed July 4 2012 Fifteenth Census of the United States 1930 Population Volume I United States Census Bureau p 717 Accessed May 1 2012 Table 6 New Jersey Resident Population by Municipality 1940 2000 Workforce New Jersey Public Information Network August 2001 Accessed May 1 2023 a b c d e f Census 2000 Profiles of Demographic Social Economic Housing Characteristics for Highland Park borough New Jersey Archived October 2 2014 at the Wayback Machine United States Census Bureau Accessed May 1 2012 a b c d e DP 1 Profile of General Demographic Characteristics 2000 Census 2000 Summary File 1 SF 1 100 Percent Data for Helmetta borough Middlesex County New Jersey Archived February 12 2020 at archive today United States Census Bureau Accessed November 23 2012 DP03 Selected Economic Characteristics from the 2006 2010 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates for Highland Park borough Middlesex County New Jersey Archived February 12 2020 at archive today United States Census Bureau Accessed May 1 2012 QT P16 Language Spoken at Home 2000 Census 2000 Summary File 3 SF 3 Sample Data for Highland Park borough Middlesex County New Jersey Archived February 12 2020 at archive today United States Census Bureau Accessed May 1 2012 Lurie Maxine N Mappen Marc Highland Park Encyclopedia of New Jersey p 363 Rutgers University Press 2004 ISBN 0 8135 3325 2 Accessed June 27 2011 In addition the borough was home at various times to two Nobel Laureates Selman Waksman and Arno Penzias Highland Park Environmental News 2007 Archived December 12 2006 at the Wayback Machine accessed January 3 2007 Selinger Janice Highland Park Site of State s First Eruv The New York Times December 17 1978 Accessed July 19 2022 This transition came about through the establishment of an eruv New Jersey s first by Rabbi Pesach Raymon of Ahavas Achim Congregation in New Brunswick Map Highland Park Eruv Accessed July 19 2022 Inventory of Municipal Forms of Government in New Jersey Rutgers University Center for Government Studies July 1 2011 Accessed June 1 2023 Cerra Michael F Forms of Government Everything You ve Always Wanted to Know But Were Afraid to Ask Archived September 24 2014 at the Wayback Machine New Jersey State League of Municipalities Accessed November 30 2014 Forms of Municipal Government in New Jersey p 6 Rutgers University Center for Government Studies Accessed June 1 2023 Government Archived October 19 2013 at the Wayback Machine Borough of Highland Park Accessed December 4 2019 It has a Mayor and Council form of government in which the Mayor and Borough Council have separate executive and legislative powers This provides a system of checks and balances by avoiding a large concentration of power in either the Council or the Office of Mayor The Mayor votes only in case of a tie 2024 Municipal Data Sheet Borough of Highland Park Accessed May 27 2024 November 7 2023 General Election Official Results Middlesex County New Jersey December 7 2023 Accessed January 1 2024 November 8 2022 General Election Official Results Middlesex County New Jersey updated November 22 2022 Accessed January 1 2023 General Election November 2 2021 Official Results Middlesex County New Jersey updated November 19 2021 Accessed April 13 2022 Russell Suzanne Elsie Foster elected Highland Park mayor for rest of 2023 MyCentralJersey com January 25 2023 Accessed March 31 2023 Elsie Foster is the borough s new mayor During a special Borough Council meeting on Tuesday Foster the council president who had been serving this year as the acting mayor was elected mayor by the council and will serve in the position until the end of 2023 replacing former Mayor Gayle Brill Mittler who resigned Dec 31 Last month former Mayor Gayle Brill Mittler who had served as mayor since 2014 announced she was resigning with a year left on her term to spend more time with her family including her three grandchildren Russell Suzanne Meet Highland Park s newest council member MyCentralJersey com February 25 2023 Accessed March 31 2023 Jason Postelnik was sworn in Tuesday to fill the council seat vacated by Elsie Foster who was selected last month to serve as mayor following the resignation of Mayor Gayle Brill Mittler last year Baldwin Carly Highland Park Fills Council Vacancy Matthew Hersh will fill out the remainder of popular Councilman Jon Erickson s term Erickson died unexpectedly in October New Brunswick NJ Patch January 7 2017 Accessed December 4 2019 The Borough Council has reappointed Democrat Matthew Brian Hersh pictured to continue filling a vacancy on the seven member governing body the result of the Oct 16 death of popular Councilman Jon K Erickson Erickson served on the Highland Park Council since 2002 until his death He was posthumously re elected last Nov 8th because his passing occurred after the deadline to remove his name from the ballot Staff Political Science Prof Hale Now a Highland Park Councilman Insider NJ July 18 2018 Accessed December 4 2019 Seton Hall University Political Science Professor Matt Hale who writes a column for this website last night assumed a seat on the Highland Park Borough Council Hale a Democrat accepted the appointment to replace Councilman Matthew Hersh who congratulated his successor I did resign from the Council last month for an incredible opportunity with Gov Murphy s administration as director of communications at the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities working on an inspiring and ambitious environmental policy agenda Hersh wrote on Facebook Staff Robert Wood Johnson 74 Dies Chairman of Johnson amp Johnson Founder s Son Led Company Until 1963 No 2 Man on War Production Board The New York Times January 31 1968 Accessed August 12 2018 He had served from 1920 to 1922 as Mayor of Highland Park and contended that his experience in small town politics taught him more about psychology than all the books he had read Mayors of Highland Park New Jersey Political Graveyard Accessed October 6 2014 Robert Wood Johnson Jr 1920 22 Cornelius McCrelis 1922 24 Edwin W Eden 1928 30 Alvah H Cole 1948 51 Joseph C DeCoster 1952 53 Meryl L Frank 2007 Johnson Brett Former councilman Stephen Nolan takes oath as interim mayor of Highland Park NJ Advance Media for NJ com January 21 2010 Accessed December 5 2016 Shortly after Stephen Nolan was sworn in as Highland Park s interim mayor tonight former mayor Meryl Frank presented him with a set of keys Mayor of Highland Park is Affirmed Leoraw January 5 2012 Accessed December 5 2016 Gary Minkoff is Affirmed as the new Mayor of Highland Park Outgoing mayor Steve Nolan is pictured on the right Plan Components Report New Jersey Redistricting Commission December 23 2011 Accessed February 1 2020 Municipalities Sorted by 2011 2020 Legislative District New Jersey Department of State Accessed February 1 2020 2019 New Jersey Citizen s Guide to Government New Jersey League of Women Voters Accessed October 30 2019 Districts by Number for 2011 2020 New Jersey Legislature Accessed January 6 2013 Directory of Representatives New Jersey United States House of Representatives Accessed January 3 2019 Biography Congressman Frank Pallone Jr Accessed January 3 2019 Frank Pallone Jr was born in Long Branch New Jersey where he grew up and still resides U S Sen Cory Booker cruises past Republican challenger Rik Mehta in New Jersey PhillyVoice Accessed April 30 2021 He now owns a home and lives in Newark s Central Ward community Biography of Bob Menendez United States Senate January 26 2015 Menendez who started his political career in Union City moved in September from Paramus to one of Harrison s new apartment buildings near the town s PATH station Home sweet home Bob Menendez back in Hudson County nj com Accessed April 30 2021 Booker Cory A D NJ Class II Menendez Robert D NJ Class I Legislative Roster for District 18 New Jersey Legislature Accessed January 18 2024 Board of County Commissioners Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 The residents of Middlesex County s 25 municipalities elect seven persons to serve as members of the Board of County Commissioners The Commissioners are elected at large to staggered three year terms in the November general election In January of each year the Board reorganizes selecting one Commissioner to be County Commissioner Director and another to be County Commissioner Deputy Director Ronald G Rios Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Shanti Narra Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Claribel A Azcona Barber Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Charles Kenny Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Leslie Koppel Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Chanelle Scott McCullum Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Charles E Tomaro Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 2022 County Data Sheet Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Nancy J Pinkin Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Clerks Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey Accessed June 19 2022 Mildred S Scott Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Sheriffs Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey Accessed June 19 2022 Claribel Cortes Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Constitutional Officers Middlesex County New Jersey Accessed May 1 2022 Surrogates Constitutional Officers Association of New Jersey Accessed June 19 2022 Voter Registration Summary Middlesex New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections March 23 2011 Accessed November 23 2012 Presidential General Election Results November 6 2012 Middlesex County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections March 15 2013 Retrieved December 24 2014 Number of Registered Voters and Ballots Cast November 6 2012 General Election Results Middlesex County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections March 15 2013 Retrieved December 24 2014 2008 Presidential General Election Results Middlesex County New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections December 23 2008 Accessed November 23 2012 2004 Presidential Election Middlesex County New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections December 13 2004 Accessed November 23 2012 Governor Middlesex County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections January 29 2014 Retrieved December 24 2014 Number of Registered Voters and Ballots Cast November 5 2013 General Election Results Middlesex County PDF New Jersey Department of Elections January 29 2014 Retrieved December 24 2014 2009 Governor Middlesex County Archived October 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine New Jersey Department of State Division of Elections December 31 2009 Accessed November 23 2012 Highland Park Board of Education District Policy 0110 Identification Highland Park Public Schools Accessed March 10 2022 Purpose The Board of Education exists for the purpose of providing a thorough and efficient system of free public education in grades PreK through 12 in the Highland Park School District Composition The Highland Park School District is comprised of all the area within the municipal boundaries of Highland Park District information for Highland Park Boro School District National Center for Education Statistics Accessed February 15 2022 School Data for the Highland Park Public Schools National Center for Education Statistics Accessed February 15 2022 Irving Primary School Highland Park Public Schools Accessed March 10 2022 Bartle Elementary School Highland Park Public Schools Accessed March 10 2022 Highland Park Middle School Highland Park Public Schools Accessed March 10 2022 Highland Park High School Highland Park Public Schools Accessed March 10 2022 District Info Highland Park School District Accessed February 24 2024 School Performance Reports for the Highland Park Boro School District New Jersey Department of Education Accessed April 1 2024 New Jersey School Directory for the Highland Park Public Schools New Jersey Department of Education Accessed February 1 2024 About Us Greater Brunswick Charter School Accessed December 15 2019 The Greater Brunswick Regional Charter School is defined by the broad themes of child directed learning in the vein of constructivism Howard Gardner s unschooled mind and Montessori instruction multi age groupings of students a unique degree of parental and community involvement and a region of residence serving the entire and contiguous school districts of New Brunswick Edison Highland Park and Milltown District information for Greater Brunswick Charter School National Center for Education Statistics Accessed February 15 2022 Heyboer Kelly How to get your kid a seat in one of N J s hardest to get into high schools NJ Advance Media for NJ com May 2017 Accessed November 18 2019 Middlesex County has two stand alone career academies for high achieving students the Academy for Science Math and Engineering Technology located on the campus of Middlesex County College in Edison and the Academy for Allied Health and Biomedical Sciences in Woodbridge How to apply Students must attend a mandatory information session and submit an application by November of their 8th grade year Locations Middlesex County Vocational and Technical Schools Accessed December 2 2019 History The Center School Accessed July 4 2012 Cooper Warren Displaced from Highland Park by a fire the Center School settles in at Branchburg s Old York School Somerset Messenger Gazette March 5 2012 Accessed July 4 2012 The school reopened unexpectedly on Feb 22 to accommodate 112 students and 52 staffers of a private special needs school in Highland Park that was shuttered a week earlier by a fire Classes at The Center School on Madison Avenue had ended for the day when a fire broke out about 5 30 p m on Feb 14 according to Executive Director and Principal Marcie Fiorentino Middlesex County Mileage by Municipality and Jurisdiction New Jersey Department of Transportation May 2010 Accessed July 18 2014 Middlesex County Road Map New Jersey Department of Transportation Accessed December 1 2019 Route 27 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated May 2018 Accessed December 4 2019 County Route 514 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated October 2012 Accessed December 4 2019 Middlesex County Route 622 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated June 2011 Accessed December 4 2019 Middlesex County Route 676 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated June 2011 Accessed December 4 2019 Middlesex County Route 692 Straight Line Diagram New Jersey Department of Transportation updated June 2011 Accessed December 4 2019 Middlesex County Bus Rail Connections NJ Transit backed up by the Internet Archive as of May 22 2009 Accessed October 1 2011 Middlesex County Transit Guide Middlesex County Accessed April 1 2023 Atlantic City Service Suburban Transit Accessed April 21 2015 Deer Damage Management Program Rutgers University Ecological Preserve Accessed August 17 2020 Deer Management Borough of Highland Park Accessed August 17 2020 Adele appeared in ten Broadway musicals from 1917 to 1931 with her brother Fred who credited her with initiating his career in show business After birth as Adele Austerlitz in Omaha she enrolled in Chambers Dancing Academy relocated to New York City in 1904 participated in Claude Alvienne s dancing school attended public school at Highland Park New Jersey for two years enrolled in Ned Wayburn s dancing school in 1910 then began acting career See Consult Annual Obituary 1981 St Martin s Press 1982 66 68 and Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives Vol 1 Charles Scribner s Sons 1998 20 22 and American National Biography Vol 1 1999 692 693 a b Donnelly Marea Fred Astaire s sister was the real dance and vaudeville star The Daily Telegraph September 10 2016 Accessed November 8 2020 When bookings dropped off from 1910 as they lost their cute appeal and Adele shot up over Fred they attended classes at New Jersey s Highland Park public school for two years After birth as Fred Austerlitz in Omaha he enrolled in Chambers Dancing Academy relocated to New York City in 1904 participated in Claude Alvienne s dancing school attended public school at Highland Park New Jersey for two years enrolled with his sister Adele in Ned Wayburn s dancing school in 1910 then began his acting career See Consult Current Biography 1964 13 14 and Lincoln Journal Star May 9 1999 pp E 1 E 2 and American National Biography Vol 1 1999 693 695 and Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives Vol 2 1999 36 38 a b c 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 Makin Bob Levinson Axelrod celebrates 70 years of service permanent dead link Home News Tribune November 12 2009 Accessed August 17 2012 His son is with CBS News as their Washington reporter He s writing a book that is out soon about his relationship with his father His name is Jim Axelrod He s well known They re Highland Park people Jim went to Highland Park High School Staff Harvey J Brudner Obituary The Record September 16 2009 Accessed February 2 2015 He was born and raised in New York City and lived for many years in Highland Park NJ Interview with Former Poet Laureate of Missouri David Clewell Geosi Reads October 16 2016 Accessed February 7 2020 Shortly after the My Lai massacre in Vietnam Bob Stephens read every word of Thoreau s Civil Disobedience out loud to his 8 a m Freshman English class at Highland Park High because he honestly believed that words used well had the power to change lives Small wonder then that he was the person to show me the first poems I actually cared about in mine a b The Mayor s Viewpoint Celebrating a century of progress Highland Park Chamber of Commerce backed up by the Internet Archive as of May 22 2001 Accessed April 9 2011 Howard Roberta Hoots from the Owl The Daily Home News November 16 1955 Accessed May 9 2024 via Newspapers com Nancy Dorian also of the class of 1954 made the dean s list at Connecticut College for Women Jordan Chris Remembering Kirk Douglas His three greatest fight scenes and his Jersey connection Asbury Park Press February 5 2020 Accessed February 7 2020 We also note that Douglas was a Jersey guy sort of His first wife Diana Dill whom Douglas married in 1943 had a connection to the Johnson family of New Brunswick s Johnson amp Johnson fame Douglas and Dill lived briefly in the Johnson built Merriwold Castle on River Road in Highland Park Son Michael also a noted actor was born in New Brunswick in 1944 Dzielak Kathy Michael Douglas comes home to New Jersey Asbury Park Press May 15 2014 Accessed February 7 2020 Born Michael Kirk Douglas in St Peter s Hospital in New Brunswick N J the son of actors Kirk and Diana Douglas Lived the first six weeks of his life in Highland Park N J at Merriewold the former estate of the late J Seward Johnson Sr the Johnson amp Johnson heir Groner Jonathan This Is Not Your Father s World An Interview with Samuel G Freedman Archived May 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine 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 Kochman Marilyn In Person An Equation for Success The New York Times October 5 2003 Accessed April 9 2011 Dr Gelfand who lives in Highland Park has made an indelible impact in such areas as functional analysis representation theory geometry and integrable systems 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 Archived September 7 2014 at the Wayback Machine 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 Hunt Todderick Dwayne Haskins Jr one of the top quarterbacks in the country recaps recent Rutgers visit NJ Advance Media for NJ com May 29 2014 Accessed September 17 2018 Dwayne Haskins the Bullis School Potomac Md sophomore quarterback has been one of the hottest recruits throughout the entire country during the spring evaluation period The 6 3 185 pounder has multiple ties to the Scarlet Knights program as he grew up in Highland Park N J Catton Pia The Lights Are Bright Off Broadway The Wall Street Journal May 28 2012 Accessed January 4 2022 Even if Hollywood beckons Ms Herzog s roots are firmly in the theater a community she has been long been a part of even before she realized it A native of Highland Park N J she had an early exposure to New York theater through her grandparents who were in the industry Makin Bob Makin Waves with Highland Park filmmaker John Hulme Courier News January 12 2017 Accessed June 7 2017 Longtime borough resident filmmaker and former basketball star John Hulme chronicles the intense feelings that accompanied the Owls Rocky like game against New Brunswick s Zebras in the 1987 Central Jersey Group I championship basketball game in his new documentary Blood Sweat amp Tears A Basketball Exorcism At first the local filmmaker focuses on the lifelong pain he has felt about New Brunswick freshman Cassius Money Hargrove swishing the game winning jump shot and snuffing victory from the underdogs as the ball cascaded just out of the reach of Hulme s long arms into the basket Horner Shirley About Books The New York Times February 15 1987 Accessed June 11 2015 After J Seward s 1937 divorce from their mother ended a 13 year marriage the four children of that marriage were forced by necessity to live in a garage next to the chicken coop of a spacious estate their former home in Highland Park J Seward s second child J Seward Johnson Jr founder of the Johnson Atelier Technical Institute of Sculpture in Princeton told the author that since the age of 7 I d felt disenfranchised Gardner Joel R and Harrison Andrew R The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation The Early Years Archived October 7 2007 at the Wayback Machine 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 N J pastor ready to take on the establishment in run for governor NJ com November 3 2016 Retrieved April 11 2017 Sacha Killeya Jones Kentucky Wildcats men s basketball Accessed March 22 2020 Born Aug 10 in Highland Park New Jersey 278 Sheldon Lavin Forbes Accessed November 8 2020 Residence Highland Park New Jersey Chronology Roy Lichtenstein Foundation Accessed April 3 2017 1960 Moves into a house at 66 S Adelaide Avenue Highland Park New Jersey where he sets up his studio in the bedroom Amato Jennifer Parents celebrate baby s birth at body shop permanent dead link CentralJersey com May 2 2017 Accessed September 28 2018 Little did Seth Mandel know that 10 years after leaving Greater Media Newspapers a precursor of Newspaper Media Group that his family would make its own headlines Seth and his wife Bethany thought their third child was going to arrive on April 27 a day after Bethany s due date so they headed from their home in Highland Park to the hospital in Princeton Ojito Mirta Author didn t seek tie in to Madonna The Tampa Tribune January 10 1997 Accessed April 9 2011 Soon after Martinez began work on the book which he completed in his new home in Highland Park NJ Round About Town The Daily Home News May 4 1960 Accessed January 26 2023 via Newspapers com Dario would be the first to take issue with former Highland Park iie Suzy Parker who declared on the Jack Paar program last night that the French are a mean people 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 Communion Action The Daily Home News December 8 1960 Accessed January 26 2023 via Newspapers com Stavro E Prodromou 17 center recipient of the Highland Park Fire Department scholarship at Rutgers University looks on as Louis Figle fire chief presents 400 check to Dr Mason W Cross president of the university Prodromou son of Mr and Mrs Evangelo Prodromou of 218 Magnolia St Highland Park was graduated from Highland Park High School in June George Reynolds Rutgers University Oral History Archives October 29 1999 Accessed June 28 2019 I was born in 1917 in Trenton Soon after that I guess I was two years old we moved to Highland Park New Jersey and that s where I lived my early life Saxon Wolfgang Susana Rotker Martinez 46 Language Professor at Rutgers The New York Times December 2 2000 Accessed August 12 2018 Dr Susana Rotker Martinez director of the Rutgers Center for Hemispheric Studies was hit by a truck and fatally injured Monday while crossing a road in Piscataway N J She was 46 and lived in Highland Park Rucker Rudy van Bitter All the visions p 102 Ocean View Books 1991 ISBN 9780938075097 Accessed February 28 2018 Audrey and I were newlyweds there in Highland Park and we used to watch The Newlywed Game on TV every week Home Page Neil J A Sloane Accessed May 30 2015 L J Smith profile Archived January 3 2007 at the Wayback Machine 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 New York s Jewish Museum is currently presenting Joan Snyder A Painting Survey 1969 2005 through October 23 The Jerusalem Post February 18 2010 Accessed August 12 2018 Born in Highland Park New Jersey in 1940 Snyder was the middle child of Jewish parents who never lost a sense of their immigrant heritage Ulrich P Strauss Obituary 2015 Asbury Park Press Legacy com Retrieved May 26 2022 Gray Kristy Peek into the imagination of Cody sci fi artist Darrel K Sweet Mind Traveler Casper Star Tribune January 21 2007 Accessed April 9 2011 Sweet was drawing at age 3 growing up in Highland Park N J His mother still has some of these pictures nearly seven decades old Staff Math drives this Rutgers professor Archived February 3 2011 at the Wayback Machine copy of article from The Star Ledger March 23 2008 Accessed July 4 2012 Endre Szemeredi 67 Highland Park Norman Tanzman 85 once Middlesex state senator Home News Tribune June 7 2004 Accessed March 1 2021 via Newspapers com Born in New York City Mr Tanzman moved to New Brunswick when he was 4 and then to Highland Park Hugh Kormos Publisher Dies Funeral Will Be Held Tomorrow The Central Jersey Home News December 3 1951 Accessed May 31 2020 Born in Zsambek Hungary Mr Kormos came to the community in 1921 shortly after his marriage to Miss Olga Von Till of Highland Park whom he met in Budapest while she was studying music abroad Greats go down Alan Voorhees Rand Brown Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine 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 Cheslow Jerry If You re Thinking of Living in Highland Park Well Established but Unpretentious The New York Times November 21 1993 Accessed September 8 2014 Highland Park has been home to two Nobel laureates The late Selman A Waksman was awarded the prize in medicine and physiology in 1952 for his work with antibiotics and Dr Arno A Penzias who shared the 1978 prize in physics for his work related to the big bang theory still lives there External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Highland Park New Jersey nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Highland Park New Jersey Borough of Highland Park website Highland Park Public Schools School Performance Reports for the Highland Park Public Schools New Jersey Department of Education Highland Park Volunteer Fire Department School Data for the Highland Park Public Schools National Center for Education Statistics Historical Maps of Highland Park Rutgers Special Collection Highland Park Environmental Commission Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Highland Park New Jersey amp oldid 1226180564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.