Stories about well-known and historic houses in Nutley NJ
ABRAHAM & WARREN VREELAND HOUSE
Stories about well-known and historic houses in Nutley NJ
CAPTAIN ABRAM SPEER HOUSE
(TUERS HOMESTEAD)
DODD HOUSE
AMONG the houses built in the early 1800’s, the residence of Harry H. Fletcher of 90 Vreeland Avenue has the most colorful history.
(The Nutley Sun, Jan. 3, 1974) --THE ENCLOSURE: Nutley’s most history-filled street, The Enclosure, first popped into the news in 1973 in mid- July when Commissioner John Lucy proposed ‘Improving’ that’ street by adding a new sewage system Lucy also asked to construct sidewalks and curbs and widen the roadway to 30 feet.
The Nutley Historic Preservation Committee hosted the first in a series of public presentations as part of its Historic Home Series of Nutley.
Co-sponsored by the Nutley Historical Society, the series leads off at the Nutley Museum on Nov. 2, 2023.
This first presenters were given by NHPC members, Luke Michels and Dante Intindola, both life-long residents of the town.
Their presentation will include an overview of the Nutley architect, William A. Lambert with a discussion of Lambert homes, its impact on the town’s development and other notable architectural styles of Nutley.
Caption: On a hilltop in Ridge Road, will all Nutley rustling below and the skyscrapers of New York forming the Eastern horizon, lies the Lambiase 12-acre farm which, along with about 2 acres of town-owned land, the Board of Education seeks to acquire as a site for the proposed Junior high school. In the photo above the farmhouse, barn and barnyard are shown. At the right of the photo, the peach orchard of several acres covers the soft-rolling hillside. Peacocks now roam at liberty under the heavily-laded trees. It is the Board's desire to have the main building where this farmhouse stands and use the sloping terrain for a play area.
Whenever people describe the town of Nutley, they usually mention the word “unique.” They're also quick to point out Nutley's most distinctive characteristics — its charming neighborhoods, its excellent school system, its rich cultural heritage and civic life, and. of course, its unique name.