U.S.
Senators:
John
Corzine (D)
U.S.
Senate
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-4744
District
Office:
1 Gateway Center, 11th Floor
Newark, NJ 07102
(973)
645-3030
Robert
Torricelli (D) until Jan. 2003
113
Dirksen Building
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-3224
District
Office:
1 Riverfront
Plaza, 3rd Floor
Newark,
NJ 07102
(973)
624-5555
Frank
Lautenberg (D) Jan. 2003-
U.S.
Congressman - (9th District)
Steve
Rothman (D)
1607
Longworth Office Building
Washington, DC 20515-3009
(202)225-5061
FAX (202) 225-5851
District
Office:
Court Plaza North
25 Main Street
Hackensack, NJ 07601-7089
(201) 798-1366
FAX (201) 646-1944
District
Office:
130 Central Avenue
Jersey City, NJ 07306
(201) 798-1366
FAX: (201) 789-1725
State
Senators - (36th District)
Garry Furnari (D)
590 Franklin Avenue
Nutley, NJ 07110
( 973) 667-4477
Paul DiGaetano (R)
71 Union Avenue
Rutherford, NJ 07070
(201) 933-0533
John
Kelly (R)
371 Franklin Ave., 2nd Fl.
Nutley, NJ 07110
(973) 667-6123
MAYORS
George
Bayliss (R) 1896-1909
William Brandenburg, Jr. (D) 1909-1919
Harry McKinlay (R) 1920-1921
Alfred F. Barnard (R) 1922-1930
Daniel Rentschler (R) 1931-1936
Alexander Allan (R) 1937-1944
John R. Manson 1945-1946
Louis E. Gaeckle 1947-1950
Walter J. O'Connell 1951-1954
Leonard Barnett (D) 1955-1956
Peter R. Tonner (D) 1956-1964
William D. McDowell (R) 1965-1968
Theodore R. Lapinski (R) 1969-1970
Edward J. Slodowski (D) 1971-1974
Ernest T. Cerone (R) 1975-1978
Edward Martone (D) 1979-1982
Leonard R. Kaiser (R) 1983-2002
Russell
L. Pitman (D) Jan 2003-
SCHOOLS
North
Arlington Public School:
North
Arlington's first public school was built in 1872 on the
site of the present Borough Hall when the borough was
still part of Union Township. A typical one-room schoolhouse
of the time, it served the needs of Bergen County School
District 38.
After
North Arlington came into being in 1896, the school became
known as North Arlington Public School. Increasing population,
however, soon made the facility inadequate, and a new
school (officially School No. 1 but better known as Lincoln
School) was opened in 1912. The board of education then
offered the old building to the borough council for $2,500.
The council gladly accepted, and the transfer was effective
October 1, 1912. The borough government up to this time,
had no official quarters of its own. The council, which
once met in the mayor's home, was using the schoolhouse
for meetings; but with all the desks and blackboards,
this was clearly a makeshift arrangement. Now the schoolhouse
could be converted to make it suitable for accommodating
council meetings and other municipal functions.
The
new Borough Hall was enlarged in 1920 and even more extensively
remodeled in 1932, keeping only the foundation of the
old. So complete was this renovation that a dedication
ceremony was held July 4, 1932. The project provided employment
to some 145 local workers hard hit by the Depression.
A 1950s renovation gave the building its "closed-in" front,
replacing a columned portico. In 1974 there was still
another renovation.
Given
its origin as an 1872 schoolhouse, the North Arlington
Borough Hall is one of the oldest municipal buildings
(if not the oldest) in Bergen County.
Lincoln
and Washington Schools:
Along
with independence as a borough came the responsibility
for local education. North Arlington, when it became a
borough in 1896, inherited the old Union Township school
within its borders - the one-room, red-brick structure
that had served School District 38 since it was built
in 1872. The enrollment of the little school, which encompassed
only the equivalent of the present grades one through
eight, was about 45 students during the first years of
borough government. Those continuing their education beyond
eighth grade attended high school out of town, in Kearny,
Lyndhurst, and Belleville.
By 1906,
the one-room schoolhouse had 75 students, and with year-by-year
growth of the town the place was beginning to burst its
seams. The obvious answer was a new schoolhouse, and the
choice, clearly a good one in retrospect, was for the
board of education to sell the old school to the borough
and build a larger facility next door. The old building
then became Borough Hall and the new one - considerably
larger, with four rooms - was opened in 1912 as School
No. 1, later known as Lincoln School. A five-room addition
including an auditorium for Lincoln School was proposed
in 1916 but turned down by voters at the school board
election. The following year the same proposal was approved,
and the work was completed by September. By now enrollment
was up to 285; the faculty totaled six.
Five
years later enrollment had nearly doubled, to 524, a clear
indication of the growth of North Arlington in the years
immediately following World War I. Yet in December 1921,
a proposed eight-room addition was defeated by voters
by a wide margin - and by now voters had begun a pattern
of voting down new school facilities only to approve them
a year or two later, a pattern that would continue almost
without exception through the completion of a five-school
physical plant. Accordingly, in April 1922 the eight-room
addition was voted to proceed. The newly enlarged school
- now 14 rooms including an auditorium - was completed
in June 1923 and formally dedicated as Lincoln School.
Up to now it had been officially North Arlington School
No. 1 and only informally known as Lincoln School. The
official name was suggested by Alfred King, a Civil War
veteran who had lived in town for a number of years. In
1926 the board acquired still another tract at Hedden
Terrace and Prospect Avenue and sought approval to build.
Once again, the electorate said no. By 1928, however,
continued population growth forced the inevitable, and
voters approved construction of two additional schools
- Wilson at the Argyle Place site and Jefferson at the
Hedden Terrace location. Both were constructed in 1929.
Roosevelt School followed in 1955.
North
Arlington High School
By 1929,
enrollment in North Arlington's four existing schools
(Lincoln, Washington, Wilson, and Jefferson) totaled 1,296.
Another 153 older students attended high school in Kearny.
But those students going to Kearny were only adding to
an overcrowding problem there, and in 1932 Kearny announced
its refusal to accept any additional students from North
Arlington.
Even
before this there had come the clear realization that
North Arlington, sooner or later, would have to have its
own high school. Two factors slowed the process. Firstly,
the borough had recently completed construction of three
schools and, particularly since this was the Depression,
its financial resources were strained to the limit. Secondly
(and somewhat paradoxically), the state commissioner of
education insisted that the borough, for its size, did
not yet need a high school.
Because
the borough continued to have difficulty placing students
out of town, the commissioner relented a little and allowed
the borough to establish its own ninth grade at Lincoln
School. Kearny continued to refuse additional students,
and the local board then made arrangements to send tenth-graders
to Hasbrouck Heights. This meant a student would go to
Lincoln for ninth grade, switch to Hasbrouck Heights for
tenth, and then attend Kearny High School for the last
two grades. Finally, in 1936, North Arlington voters agreed
to an 11-room addition to Lincoln School, and with state
approval, this became North Arlington High School with
a full four-year program. The high school opened in September
1936 and graduated its first class in June 1937. At the
the time of its opening it had an enrollment of 349 students;
the other schools, a total of 1,253. A gymnasium was added
to the high school in the early 1940s, as a WPA (Work
Projects Administration) project, and in 1962 came the
cafeteria, library, and northern wing.
Queen
of Peace Schools
Queen
of Peace Grammar School began under the leadership of
Msgr. Peter B. O'Connor in 1925. Eighty students attended
its first classes, which were held in the parish hall
of the church. O'Connor enlisted the aid of the Sisters
of St. Joseph, a Philadelphia-based order devoted exclusively
to teaching, who joined with the Christian Brothers of
LaSalle in forming the new school's faculty. In 1928,
Rev. Thomas J. Walsh, bishop of Newark, laid the cornerstone
for a new building to house the rapidly growing institution.
By 1936, Queen of Peace Grammar School had the largest
enrollment of any parochial school in Bergen County. Queen
of Peace High School opened in 1930, at a time when North
Arlington had no other secondary schools. Fifteen students
attended its first year of classes, and its first commencement
speaker was the famous Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. Four years
later, admission had swelled until both Queen of Peace
schools served over 800 students - nearly half the number
attending the borough's public schools. The old facility
quickly became inadequate, and in 1952, Archbishop Boland
presided at the ground breaking of the new high school
building.
In 1954,
Queen of Peace became the first parish high school in
New Jersey to be evaluated by the Middle Atlantic States
Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. It was
granted membership in the Association and ranked sixteenth
among sixty-eight schools evaluated in a three-year period.
Churches
Our
Lady Queen of Peace Church
Since
its founding in 1919, Queen of Peace Church has had a
remarkable influence on the development of North Arlington.
Its first pastor, Msgr. Peter B. O'Connor, founded both
the parochial grammar and high school, organized a dental
clinic, and lobbied for better public transportation in
the Borough. The church building itself, completed in
1951, is noted for its thirteen stained glass windows
which depict the history of Catholicism in America.
First
Presbyterian Church
In 1924,
the First Presbyterian Church of Arlington founded a Sunday
School in an empty store on Ridge Road. It later moved
into Lincoln High School under the leadership of church
elder George P. Scherff. The growing congregation voted
to sever its connection with the Arlington Church and
became an independent parish. In 1929, the new church
was built on a lot purchased by the Newark Presbytery.
Clyde H. Roddy was the first pastor of the church.
By 1949,
the Church had acquired its present site on Ridge Road.
The new building was erected and dedicated in 1955.
Grace
Evangelical Lutheran Church
Founded
in 1932 by Rev. Harry Pfunke, Grace Lutheran Church spent
its first ten years holding services in Borough Hall assembly
room. Under Pfunke's successor, Rev. Stephen Ballek, the
congregation purchased its first chapel in 1943. The present
property on Ridge Road and Arlington Blvd. was purchased
in 1952, and the new building was completed in 1955. The
pews that had adorned the old church were donated to Clara
Maas for use in their own chapel. Grace Lutheran Church
has long maintained close ties to the borough's young
people; before the current Youth Center was built, North
Arlington's youth activities were held on church grounds.
St.
Paul's Episcopal Church
St.
Paul's was established by Archdeacon Ladd of Rutherford
in 1914. Its first services were held in the Borough Hall,
but the construction of its first church began later that
year. Its services later expended to include a church
school and a bible class. St. Paul's church was destroyed
by fire in 1978. A new church was built and consecrated
in 1980.
The
Harvest Center
Built in 1909 The Harvest Center is North Arlington¹s
oldest house of worship. This Charismatic Christian Church
was originally a Pentecostal Mission built only three
years after the Azusa Street Revival in 1906 where the
Pentecostal movement was born. Originally an Italian speaking
congregation the Church grew and by World War II it had
become a bi-lingual congregation. Due to the changing
demographics of the town the Church found its congregation
getting smaller and by the mid 1970¹s it closed its doors
for several years. Dr. Frank Duprée and his wife Giovanna
reopened the Church doors in 1979 and re-established it.
Its services are marked with lively singing and Dr. Duprée¹s
powerful preaching of the Word of God. The Church is located
at 119 Biltmore Street close to Washington School.
Schuyler
Mine Chronology
One
of the pivotal events in North Arlington history was the
discovery of copper ore on the property of Arent Schuyler
in 1713.
The
Schuyler copper mine financed the development of the entire
area for nearly a century, and saw the beginnings of the
Industrial Revolution in America.
1668
- A patent is issued to Captain William Sandford for
land between the Passaic and Hackensack rivers that becomes
known as New Barbadoes Neck.
1712
- Part of this subsequently transferred by Sandford
to his uncle, Major Nathaniel Kingsland, is deeded to
Arent Schuyler.
1713
or 1714 - A large stone found near Schuyler's house
proves to be copper ore.
1715
- Mining begins. Brigadier General Robert Hunter,
governor of New York and New Jersey, writes to the Lords
of Trade in London (November 12, 1715) that there is "a
Copper Mine here brought to perfection [producing] about
a ton in the month of July or August last, of which copper
farthings may be coined."
1721
- Frank Harrison, surveyor of the port of New York,
writes to the Lords of Trade that "Copper Oare now rises
very rich and in great plenty in a new-discovered mine
of one Mr. Schuyler in New Jersey."
1730
- Following the death of Arent Schuyler, the mine
is inherited by his sons Peter, Adoniah, and John, the
last of whom takes on management of the mine for himself
and his brothers.
1731
- The mine, by now, has shipped 1,386 tons (roughly
100 tons a year), making the enterprise a highly profitable
one. Most of the ore at this time is extracted by drift
mining - digging into the side of the slope between meadows
and high ground.
1734
- To ensure that the value of copper ore accrues to
British interests, the New Jersey legislature imposes
a substantial duty on all copper not sent directly to
England for smelting.
1743
- By now, drift mining is no longer productive, and
the facility has been converted to shaft mining. In this
year a worker named Malachi Vanderpoel is reported killed
in a fall down a 100-foot shaft. This is apparently what
came to be known as the Victoria Shaft, sunk about 1735,
"reputed to be the first shaft ever sunk in what is now
the United States" (quoting the Annual Report of the [N.J.]
State Geologist, 1900).
1748
- The mine has now been worked as deep as hand and
horse power can keep it free of water. Colonel Schuyler,
aware of the use of steam power in England, orders a steam
(or "fire") engine sent from England.
1749
- The mine is visited in the fall by Benjamin Franklin,
who writes (in a letter to Jared Eliot, February 13, 1750)
that the mine is not being worked because of flooding
and that "they [wait] for a fire-engine from England to
drain their pits."
1753
- The engine arrives in New York in September in the
company of a young engineer named Josiah Hornblower and
is subsequently taken to the Schuyler property, to the
mine's deepest shaft, later known as the Victoria Shaft.
1755
- Owing to various delays, it takes a year and a half
to assemble the engine. Sometime early in 1755 (probably
in March), it is set in operation, making this the first
time steam power has been employed in the New World. The
Victoria Shaft is about 100 feet deep but is made deeper
as work progresses. As it becomes apparent that the engine
cannot keep this shaft dry, other shafts are worked.
1760
- A new brass cylinder for the engine is shipped from
London. (Letter from Joseph Mico, London, December 6,
1760, to Josiah Hornblower, Ms., New Jersey Historical
Society)
1761
- Hornblower and a partner named John Stearndall lease
the mine from Schuyler, agreeing to pay one-seventh of
the ore as rent.
1762
- The building housing the steam engine is burned
to the ground by a fire "conjectured to be by the carelessness
of one of the workmen" (New-York Mercury, March 22, 1762).
The engine itself, however, may not have been seriously
damaged.
1765
- Stearndall and Hornblower are joined by Philadelphia
interests and continue the mine for two years. Then for
two years it lies idle until operators from New York revive
it.
1768
- A fire "on Monday Night last" (New York Gazette
and Weekly Mercury, October 17, 1768, announces the sale
of his estate including, presumably, his interest in the
mine.
1793
- The mine, which lay idle during the Revolution,
is leased from Arent Schuyler, John's son, by the New
Jersey Copper Mining Association, whose principals are
Nicholas Roosevelt, Jacob Mark, and Philip A. Schuyler.
The lease required lessees to "erect and rebuild a sufficient
steam Engine." The company relies heavily on German miners
who will work for low wages.
1801
- The Soho Company (Nicholas Roosevelt, Arent I. Schuyler,
and others) is incorporated, apparently to succeed the
New Jersey Copper Mining Association in working the Schuyler
mine. But the mine is abandoned a few years later, and
the old steam engine is dismantled and sold in pieces.
The boiler (now of copper) is brought by interests in
Philadelphia. The cylinder (iron) is believed to have
been taken by a Mr. Crane, a foundry owner in Newark.
c.
1814 - The cylinder is purchased by A.W. Kinney, a
Newark machinist and spring manufacturer. He cuts it into
two pieces, each roughly four feet in length. One he uses
as a pipe for a waterwheel at his establishment; the other
he sets aside as a curiosity, apparently presuming it
to be a relic of the first steam engine.
1822
-Parker Cleaveland's "An Elementary Treatise on Mineralogy
and Geology," published in Boston, reports (Vol. 1, p.
557) that "Schuyler's mines have not been worked for several
years, although the ore is considerably abundant; some
shafts were sunk 300 feet deep."
1824
- The Schuyler Copper Mine Company is incorporated
under the laws of New Jersey, but reports differ as to
whether or not any mining takes place at this time.
1825
- The mine is leased to business interests that apparently
invest a substantial sum installing a new steam engine
and deepening the mine shafts. But the pump breaks down
on opening day, and the company forfeits its lease.
1833
- The mine is taken over by a British company, with
William Tregaskis as superintendent. As told by British
author John Finch: "The mines are now reopened... it is
the only copper mine worked in the Unit States."
1836...-
Sometime after 1836, A.W. Kinney's shop is sold to David
M. Meeker, an iron founder, and with it, the four-foot
section of cylinder supposed to be a relic of the original
engine.
1847
- The Passaic Mining Company begins operations in
August 1847, clearing the old works, erecting new buildings,
and installing new machinery including a 40-horsepower
steam engine. Despite a substantial investment, the venture
is not a success.
1855
- A Philadelphia company, of which one Theodore Moss
is engineer, works the mine for two years, with little
success.
1859
- The Brisk Company of Philadelphia acquires mining
rights. A cleaning of the Victoria Shaft reveals a hoard
of stolen loot, mostly silver, apparently taken from Newark
residences. Sometime after this, rights are acquired by
the Consolidated Mining Company, which operates the site
as the Victoria Copper Mine, sinking no new shafts and
using old machinery but employing as many as 200 workers
at a time.
1862
- A cave-in deliberately caused by disgruntled workers.
1863
- A new company, the New York and New Jersey Mining
Company, takes over. The Victoria Shaft is sunk to its
maximum depth of 347 feet, and a long drain tunnel is
dug from the shaft to the meadows. The company employs
between 150 and 200 men. Ore worth more than $10,000 is
reported to be produced in one day.
1865
- The pump breaks suddenly (February 1865) and the
Victoria Shaft fills with water. Workers flee, leaving
their tools behind. The mine is abandoned and remains
in disuse until 1892.
1866
-A cave-in engulfs a barn built over an old mine shaft.
1876
-The purported relic of the original Schuyler steam
engine, the four-foot section of cast iron said to have
been part of the cylinder, is displayed at the Centennial
Exposition in Philadelphia by D.M. Meeker and Sons. With
it is a letter from Joseph P. Bradley, Associate Justice
of the U.S. Supreme Court, certifying it as part of "The
first ever (steam engine)erected on this continent," (Bradley
is the grandson-in-law of Josiah Hornblower.) Sometime
after this, on David M. Meeker's death, the relic is given
to Bradley's son, Charles, of Newark, who in turn presents
it to the New Jersey Historical Society.
1889
- The purported relic now is presented to the Smithsonian
Institution by the New Jersey Historical Society. In a
letter to Samuel P. Langley, secretary of the Smithsonian,
Justice Bradley confirms authenticity of the relic.
1892
- The New York and New Jersey Mining Company attempts
to revive the mine. In an effort to economize, it tries
to remove and reuse timber pillars. There is another cave-in
(perhaps a number of them). Operations cease once again.
1899
- The mine property is acquired by the McKenzie family
of Rutherford.
1900
- The Arlington Copper Mining Company is organized
on February 3 by Charles L. Dignowity of Boston and William
C. Eakins of Chicago, with William McKenzie of Passaic
as president, Henry G. Bell of Rutherford as treasurer,
Eakins as secretary, and Dignowity as general manager
- McKenzie supplying a substantial part of the capitalization,
reported to be $2.5 million. The company, expecting that
a new metallurgical process devised by Dr. N.S. Keith
can make the old mine productive once again, installs
a new refining plant to produce copper by eletrolytic
extraction. But the process does not prove commercially
successful. Arlington Copper stock that has a par value
of $10 falls to half of that by the end of the year.
1901
- On February 19 Arlington Copper stock is reported
on the New York Stock Exchange, apparently for the last
time, at $4 a share.
1901
- In November all mining operations are suspended.
No copper has been produced.
1903
- The mine property, totalling 93 acres, is sold at
auction September 30 for the benefit of creditors and
bondholders. The buyer is James E. Pope of New York.
1906
- Arlington Copper stock is recorded as valueless.
c.1915
- With North Arlington in a period of relatively rapid
development - and since no sewer system has yet been constructed
- real estate developers propose using the old mine as
a giant, ready-made cesspool. No one in authority takes
the idea seriously.
1923
- James E. Pope leases the mine area to a mushroom
grower. The project apparently fails.
1930
- Real estate developers Wilkinson and Solomon purchase
the mine tract for some $70,000 and begin building homes.
1936
- Romm's History of North Arlington
reports that "many of the mine's shafts remain passable
today."
1949
- The mine is sealed permanently after several North
Arlington lads recount to their mothers tales of crawling
through the old mine shafts and tunnels, and the mothers
take their fear and dismay to the borough council.
1989
- Atop the old mine, where decades ago homes were
built with no thought to the potential consequences of
development, a series of cave-ins causes grave concern.
But speedy action, beginning with the borough government,
prevents any widespread damage. All cave-in sites are
eventually sealed. The only noticeable loss is a large
tree that plunged into a gaping hole at what was once
the Victoria Shaft.