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Piscataway and Township
Rutgers University has three campuses across the state of New Jersey, with its largest campus located mainly in the City of New Brunswick and adjacent Piscataway Township, and two smaller campuses in the cities of Newark and Camden.
It is spread across six municipalities in Middlesex County, New Jersey, chiefly in the City of New Brunswick and Piscataway Township.
Separated by the Raritan river are Busch Campus, in Piscataway, and Livingston Campus, also mainly in Piscataway but including remote sections of land extending into Edison Township and the Borough of Highland Park.
It begins at an intersection with Route 138 in Wall Township and ends when the road disseminates into Hoes Lane in Piscataway.
* Piscataway Township
Hopewell Township was supposed to be where the Somerset Freeway would have started in the south, ending in the north in either Piscataway or Franklin.
Dunellen was formed as a borough by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on October 28, 1887, when it broke away from Piscataway Township, based on the results of a referendum held on March 23, 1886.
Dunellen grew from its start in 1867 with the construction of a railroad station, which was originally called New Market station, serving the nearby community of the same name in Piscataway Township.
What is now Edison Township was originally incorporated as Raritan Township by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 17, 1870, from portions of both Piscataway Township and Woodbridge Township.
Edison Township, comprising former sections of Piscataway and Woodbridge townships, was settled ( by Europeans ) in the 17th Century.
Middlesex was incorporated as a borough by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 9, 1913, from portions of Piscataway Township, based on the results of a referendum held on May 6, 1913.
Middlesex Borough was a portion of Piscataway Township, until May 6, 1913 when it was incorporated as a separate entity through the action of the state legislature and local referendum.
Piscataway Township was formed on December 18, 1666, and officially incorporated on February 21, 1798.
Over the years, portions of Piscataway were taken to form Raritan Township ( March 17, 1870, now Edison ), Dunellen ( October 28, 1887 ), Middlesex ( April 9, 1913 ) and South Plainfield ( March 10, 1926 ).
Society Hill is a census-designated place and unincorporated area located within Piscataway Township.
The Piscataway Township Schools serves almost 7, 000 students with its high school, four schools that educate students in kindergarten through third grade, two intermediate schools serving grades 4-5, and three middle schools for students in grades six, seven, and eight.
Piscataway Township High School, with 2, 184 students in grades 9-12.
Notable current and former residents of Piscataway Township include:
* Piscataway Township website

Piscataway and is
The flagship campus is located in both New Brunswick and Piscataway, with additional campuses in Newark and Camden.
Much of the route is a limited-access freeway, including the entire portion in Monmouth County and the northern end through New Brunswick and Piscataway.
However, construction is underway to extend the route to Interstate 287 in Piscataway.
The NJDOT is currently upgrading the Route 18 " avenue " to a freeway between the Route 1 interchange all the way up to the new 18 Extension in Piscataway.
It is generally believed by historians that native tribes, known as the Piscataway, established villages here before the European colonists arrived.
Piscataway is in the Trenton-Princeton-New Brunswick metropolitan area.
High Point Solutions Stadium is in Piscataway.
Piscataway is in Raritan Valley ( a line of cities in central NJ ).
Piscataway is bordered by nine municipalities in Middlesex County, Union County, and Somerset County:
Piscataway is often segmented into unofficial sections by local residents which include Bound Brook Heights " the Heights "), New Brunswick Highlands, Lake Nelson, Randolphville, Arbor, New Market, North Stelton, Fellowship Farm and Possumtown.
, the mayor of Piscataway is Brian C. Wahler.
Piscataway is in the 6th Congressional district.
Piscataway is in the
Piscataway is divided into four fire districts which are served by a total of two volunteer rescue squads and six volunteer fire companies, one of which combines both fire and EMS services.
Piscataway is served by a number of roads.
* WVPH is the community radio station of Piscataway High School and Rutgers University.
Society Hill is a census-designated place and unincorporated area located within Piscataway Township, in Middlesex County, New Jersey.
South Plainfield is bordered by Piscataway Township on the south and west, Edison on the east, and Plainfield on the north.
* Rutgers-New Brunswick is the University's largest campus, in New Brunswick and Piscataway, New Jersey
Colgate-Palmolive, as a successor to The Mennen Company, is one of about 300 companies held potentially responsible for hazardous waste at the Chemsol federal Superfund site in Piscataway, New Jersey.
The primary research center for oral, personal and home care products is located in Piscataway, New Jersey and the primary research center for pet nutrition products is located in Topeka, Kansas.

Piscataway and Middlesex
The alignment of Route 18 through Middlesex County from Middlesex to Highland Park was first designated in the 1926 designing of a new highway system as State Highway Route S-29, a prefixed spur of New Jersey Route 29 ( U. S. Route 22 ) through Middlesex County, following Washington Avenue in Middlesex and the River Road in Piscataway until terminating at State Highway Route 27 near the Albany Street Bridge in Highland Park.
By the time the 1927 New Jersey state highway renumbering had been implemented and in law, the route was re-designated as State Highway Route S-28, a prefixed spur of State Highway Route 28 in Middlesex, following Raritan Avenue and River Road through Piscataway and Highland Park, joining State Highway Route 27 on a concurrency into New Brunswick, and onto George Street in New Brunswick southward.
In 1977, the newly-formed New Jersey Department of Transportation received a federal grant to construct the Route 18 Freeway from New Street in New Brunswick, across the Raritan and terminating at Middlesex County Route 514 Spur in Piscataway.
In 2001, the New Jersey Department of Transportation approved construction of extending the Route 18 Freeway northward from Middlesex County Route 622 ( River Road, former CR 514 Spur ) in Piscataway to a new arterial on the existing Hoes Lane in the Rutgers University campuses.
In the 1960s, the route was planned to be upgraded to a freeway all the way up to Port Jervis and south to Piscataway, Middlesex County ; however, both freeway proposals were cancelled in the early 1970s.
A 1966 proposal called for Route 23 to be extended south as a freeway to Interstate 287 in Piscataway in Middlesex County, running parallel to the Garden State Parkway.
* Middlesex County Vo-Tech High School Piscataway, 21 Suttons Ln.
Branchburg, Bridgewater, Somerville, Raritan, Green Brook, North Plainfield, Bound Brook, and South Bound Brook, which are all in Somerset, and Piscataway, South Plainfield, New Brunswick, Highland Park, Edison, Middlesex, Dunellen, and Metuchen, which are all in the northern and central portions of Middlesex County, New Jersey and Plainfield in southwestern Union County.
The Piscataway location offered quick access to Union, Monmouth, Somerset, and Middlesex counties.

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