Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Allamuchy Township, New Jersey" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Allamuchy and Township
* Allamuchy Township
* Hackettstown High School, a part of the Hackettstown School District ( PreK-12 ) with Independence and Allamuchy Township School Districts
When the location for the Tranquility Methodist Church was being chosen, a disagreement arose over erecting it in Allamuchy Township or Kennedytown.
Allamuchy Township is a Township in Warren County, New Jersey, United States.
Allamuchy Township was incorporated as a township by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 4, 1873, from portions of Independence Township.
Allamuchy-Panther Valley is a census-designated place located within Allamuchy Township in the eastern region of the Lehigh Valley.
Allamuchy Township is governed by the Faulkner Act ( Small Municipality ) form of government.
Allamuchy Township is in the 5th Congressional district and part of the 23rd state legislative district.
Public school students in kindergarten through eighth grade attend the Allamuchy Township School District.
Interstate 80 crosses Allamuchy Township, and is accessible at Exit 19, County Route 517.
Allamuchy Township was formerly served by the Allamuchy Train Station and Allamuchy Freight House until passenger service was ended in 1933.
* Allamuchy Township Official Web Site
* Warren County page for Allamuchy Township
Allamuchy-Panther Valley is a census-designated place and unincorporated area located within Allamuchy Township, in Warren County, New Jersey.
Hackettstown borders the townships of Washington, Mansfield, Allamuchy, Mount Olive Township and Independence.
Portions of the township were taken to form Hackettstown ( March 9, 1853 ) and Allamuchy Township ( April 4, 1873 ).
As the seven townships gradually were subdivided, Independence was reduced to half its original size through the loss of Hackettstown in 1853 and Allamuchy Township in 1873.
It extends from west Phillipsburg northeast approximately to Allamuchy Township, NJ.
# redirect Allamuchy Township, New Jersey
# REDIRECT Allamuchy Township, New Jersey

Allamuchy and .
Allamuchy Mountain and Jenny Jump Mountain are part of the New York – New Jersey Highlands, also known as the Reading Prong.
It extends from the Delaware River south to where the Musconetcong River goes into the Delaware River, northeast to the Jenny Jump Mountains and then along Route 80 to the Allamuchy Mountains to the terminal moraine near Hackettstown.
The highest elevation on Allamuchy Mountain is on the ridge northeast of Allamuchy.
The Highlands is Allamuchy Mountains and the Jenny Jump Mountains.
Blairstown Twp., Hope Twp., half of Independence Twp., part of White Twp., and all of Allamuchy Twp was covered by the Glacier.
through Allamuchy, then to Independence Twp where it turns west and flows through White Twp.
* Waterloo Village, ( located in Byram ) in Allamuchy Mountain State Park, exhibits many different time periods from a 400-year-old Lenape ( Delaware ) Native American village to a bustling port along the once prosperous Morris Canal.
Allamuchy Elementary School, which had an enrollment of 386 students in the 2008-09 school year.
Students in public school for grades 9-12 attend Hackettstown High School which serves students from Hackettstown, as well as students from the townships of Allamuchy, Independence and Liberty, as part of sending / receiving relationships with the Hackettstown School District.
Many choose the Allamuchy area because of its proximity to New York City.
The Allamuchy Freight House is on the National Historic Register.

Township and Committee
The DMC is governed by a Board of Directors consisting of business owners and residents, which is appointed by the Township Committee.
Cranford is governed under the Township form of government with a five-member Township Committee.
The Township Committee is elected directly by the voters in partisan elections to serve three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with one or two seats coming up for election each year.
, members of the Cranford Township Committee are Mayor David W. Robinson, Deputy Mayor Andis Kalnins ( Commissioner of Finance ), Lisa Adubato ( Commissioner of Public Safety ), Kevin Campbell ( Commissioner of Engineering, Commissioner of Public Works ) and Edward O ' Malley ( Commissioner of Public Affairs ).
As of 2009, seven women have been elected to the Cranford Township Committee and three women have served as Mayor of Cranford.
Barbara Brande was the first woman elected to the Township Committee and the first woman mayor of the township.
Mayor Brande was elected to the Township Committee in 1974 and reelected in 1977, serving a total of six years.
Freeholder Kowalski was an unsuccessful candidate for Cranford Township Committee in 1999 and served as Union County Freeholder Chairwoman in 2007.
Rowley, Mildred I., The History of Kirkwood, Illinois and Tompkins Township, Warren County, Bicentennial Heritage Committee, 1976.
On April 26, 2004, the Buena Vista Township Committee voted to temporarily rename the community of Richland, a section of Buena Vista Township.
Buena Vista is governed under the Township form of government with a five-member Township Committee.
The Township Committee is elected directly by the voters to three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with one or two seats coming up for election each year.
At an annual reorganization meeting, the Township Committee selects one of its members to serve as Mayor and another to serve as Deputy Mayor.
, the members of the Buena Vista Township Committee are Mayor Peter Bylone, Deputy Mayor Richard Harlan, Sue Barber, Chuck Chiarello and Teresa Kelly.
The Township of Egg Harbor is governed under the Township form of New Jersey municipal government by a five-member Township Committee.
The Mayor and Deputy Mayor are chosen by the Township Committee from among its members during the Reorganization meeting each January.
The members of Township Committee are part-time elected officials.
, members of the Egg Harbor Township Committee are Mayor James J. McCullough, Deputy Mayor John W. Risley, Jr., Joe Cafero, John Carman, Jr. and Paul Hodson.
The Township of Hamilton is governed under the Township form of New Jersey municipal government by a five-member Township Committee.

0.564 seconds.