The New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry manages a public park system which consists of over 50 protected areas designated as state parks, state forests, recreation areas, and other properties within the state of New Jersey in the United States. The agency also owns and manages 38 historical sites and buildings throughout the state (some located within the boundaries of state parkland) and also owns five public marinas and four public golf courses. These properties are administered by the Division's State Park Service, founded in 1923. New Jersey's state park system includes properties as small as the 32-acre (0.13 km2) Barnegat Lighthouse State Park and as large as the 115,000-acre (470 km2) Wharton State Forest. The state park system comprises 430,928 acres (1,743.90 km2)—roughly 7.7% of New Jersey's land area—and serves over 17.8 million annual visitors.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, New Jersey did not have much of a lumber or forestry industry. The value of its trees was insignificant and undermined by destruction by uncontrolled forest fires, and after decades of clear-cutting forests to fuel iron forges, furnaces, and other industrial operations. [1] [2] In 1896, the state geologist recommended the acquisition of land for parks in order to protect water supplies and to provide natural recreation to the state's increasing urban populations. [3] After several years of reports and advocacy of geologists and naturalists (including, notably, U.S. forester Gifford Pinchot), New Jersey governor Edward C. Stokes established the Forest Park Reservation Commission in 1905 to protect forest land and create a system of park reserves within the state. [3] [4] [5] At the commission's meeting on September 12, 1905, the commissioners adopted the Salem Oak (of Salem, New Jersey) as a symbol of New Jersey's parks. [6] The commissioners acquired two tracts in southern New Jersey, near Mays Landing and along the Bass River, as the first state forest reserves. [7] The Mays Landing tract was sold in 1916 after opposition from local officials and landowners made acquisition and expansion on adjacent lands impossible. The Bass River tract became the core of Bass River State Forest. [8] In 1907, the commissioners would also acquire 5,000 acres (20 km2) on Kittatinny Mountain near Culver's Gap, supplemented by a gift from Governor Stokes, which would become the core of Stokes State Forest. [9] The reservations, which by 1912 comprised 13,720 acres (55.5 km2) became sites for studying forests, reforestation projects, and scientific forestry. [10] With the acquisition of a tract that included Swartswood Lake in Stillwater Township, the commission began developing parks for the purposes of recreation by providing boating, fishing, camping, and picnicking. In the Commission's 1915 Annual Report, they stated "It is intended to make Swartswood a public playground. Boat liveries and picnic shelters to be maintained under proper control will make it available to a large number of people". [11] The Forest Park Reservation Commission was consolidated with other agencies into the Department and Board of Conservation and Development on April 8, 1915. [12]
In 1923, the legislature authorized the creation of the State Park Service to administer the state parks and forests. New Jersey began to redirect its efforts from the development of these and other properties for recreational purposes instead of protecting or promoting the commercial potential of forested land. The state legislature established a commission to create a historic park along the Delaware River above Trenton, at the location where George Washington and Continental Army crossed the river on December 25, 1776 before the surprise attack on Hessian troops at the Battle of Trenton and the Battle of Princeton (January 3, 1777). The initial plans were defeated by a public referendum, but there was increased desire to complete these plans to establish a Washington Crossing Memorial Park in time for the 150th anniversary of American independence in 1926. The park was officially dedicated and opened to the public on June 4, 1927. In the wake of World War I, state forester Alfred Gaskill proposed a new public park along Kittatinny Mountain, "as the State’s memorial to its sons who had made the supreme sacrifice in the Great War". A few years later, Colonel Anthony R. Kuser donated his mountaintop estate at High Point (the state's highest elevation) to the state for a public park with an additional gift of $500,000 to erect a granite-clad obelisk to honor veterans. Construction of the monument began in 1928 and was completed in 1930.
According to the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry administers and manages 430,928 acres (1,743.90 km2) in its state parks, forests, and other areas. These areas, during the state's 2006 fiscal year (from July 1, 2005 to June 30, 2006) recorded 17,843,541 visitors. [13]
In 2006, the Division of Parks and Forestry began planning and preliminary work two new state parks: Great Falls State Park in Paterson, and Capital State Park in Trenton. [14] [15] The state's only other urban park is Liberty State Park in Jersey City. [15] According to the master plan prepared by Philadelphia-based planning and urban design firm Wallace Roberts & Todd, Capital State Park would incorporate areas around the state's capitol complex in Trenton and the city's Delaware River and Assunpink Creek waterfronts to provide "a long-term strategy to revitalize Trenton by reestablishing connections to the downtown and reclaiming its riverfront." [16] [17] Great Falls subsequently became Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park.
In 2009, the state also purchased 1,174 acres (4.75 km2) in Jefferson Township the former site of the Mount Paul monastery and seminary belonging to Paulist Fathers (from 1924–2009). The tract, which will be developed into a state park, is located in the state's Highlands region on the eastern side of Sparta Mountain and featuring mountain streams that flow into the Russia Brook (a tributary of the Rockaway River). [18]
In 2021, Governor Phil Murphy approved the state purchase of part of an abandoned right-of way from Norfolk Southern Railway for the purpose of converting it into a new state park tentatively named the Essex - Hudson Greenway . The park will run from Montclair to Jersey City. Largely facilitated by the Open Space Institute, the park will also be a crucial section of the East Coast Greenway as well as part the 9/11 Memorial Trail, which will connect Shanksville, The Pentagon, and One World Trade Center. It will connect to the proposed Hackensack River Greenway and possibly the Hudson River Waterfront Walkway. [19] The park may also incorporate a "transitway, a project proposed in NJ Transit's "Innovation Challenge", which aims to add a new, creative transportation solutions to The Meadowlands [20] [21]
The State Park Service asks its visitors to embrace the "Carry In, Carry Out" philosophy in order to "keep the parks clean and beautiful by carrying out the trash you carry in". [22]
Fishing and hunting are permitted in several of the state parks and forest. [22]
The State Park System also includes four golf courses that are open to the public. Each of the four courses include associated restaurant and banquet facilities and is operated under contract between a private management company and the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry. [23] Centerton Golf Course, located in Pittsgrove Township in Salem County is located within Parvin State Park. [24] Cream Ridge Golf Course is located in Cream Ridge in Monmouth County and was acquired by the state in 2006. [25] Spring Meadow Golf Course in Farmingdale in Monmouth County was privately developed and operated beginning in the 1920s and acquired by the state five decades later. [26]
Several of these properties were acquired as part of open space preservation initiatives managed by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection 's Green Acres Program. [24] [26]
Park Name | Image | Location | Year Established | Size | Remarks | Links |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Allaire State Park | Howell and Wall townships in Monmouth County 40°9′43.60″N74°7′53.62″W / 40.1621111°N 74.1315611°W | 1940 | 3,205 acres (12.97 km2) | Features restored nineteenth-century ironworks, Allaire Village; ecosystem and geography of New Jersey's coastal plains region and Manasquan River floodplain—habitat for over 200 species of wildflowers, trees and plants, and birds; includes high-iron and acidic podzolic soils and bog iron deposits. Hosts the Pine Creek Railroad, an excursion rail line operated by the New Jersey Museum of Transportation. | [27] [28] | |
Allamuchy Mountain State Park | Green and Byram townships in Sussex County; Allamuchy Township in Warren County Mount Olive Township in Morris County 40°55′16.48″N74°46′56.00″W / 40.9212444°N 74.7822222°W | 1966 | 9,092 acres (36.79 km2) | Located along Allamuchy Mountain and Musconetcong River, features 2,440-acre (9.9 km2) Allamuchy Natural Area of mature mixed oak-hardwood forests, natural fields; 14 miles (23 km) of marked and 20 miles (32 km) of unmarked trails including Sussex Branch Trail and Highlands Trail. | [29] | |
Barnegat Lighthouse State Park | At the northern tip of Long Beach Island in Ocean County 39°45′46.91″N74°6′28.74″W / 39.7630306°N 74.1079833°W | 1951 | 32 acres (0.13 km2) | The site of Barnegat Lighthouse (1859); offers marine birdwatching and saltwater fishing, located along on New Jersey Coastal Heritage Trail Route. | [30] | |
Cape May Point State Park | Lower Township in Cape May County 38°55′59.35″N74°57′39.33″W / 38.9331528°N 74.9609250°W | 1972 | 244 acres (0.99 km2) | The site of Cape May Lighthouse (1859); premier location in North America for observing fall bird migration to the south. | [31] [32] | |
Capital State Park | Trenton in Mercer County | 2006 | - | Park currently being developed, includes buildings and areas of Trenton's capitol complex, waterfront areas along Delaware River and Assunpink Creek; celebrate Trenton's Native American, Colonial, Revolutionary War, ethnic, and industrial heritage | [16] | |
Cheesequake State Park | Old Bridge Township in Middlesex County 40°26′6″N74°16′13″W / 40.43500°N 74.27028°W | 1940 | 1,610 acres (6.5 km2) | Transitional zone between two different ecosystems featuring open fields, saltwater and freshwater marshes, Pine Barrens white cedar swamp, and northeastern hardwood forest. | [33] | |
Corson's Inlet State Park | Corson's Inlet between Ocean City and Strathmere in Cape May County 39°13′1.95″N74°38′46.52″W / 39.2172083°N 74.6462556°W | 1963 | 341 acres (1.38 km2) | One of the last undeveloped tracts along the state's oceanfront; features primary and secondary sand dune systems, shoreline overwash, marine estuaries; migratory and residential wildlife species; hiking, fishing, crabbing, boating and sunbathing. | [34] | |
Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park | Over 60 miles (97 km) through Central New Jersey in Middlesex, Somerset, Mercer, and Hunterdon counties. 40°22′7.27″N74°36′58.14″W / 40.3686861°N 74.6161500°W | 1974 | 6,595 acres (26.69 km2) | Delaware and Raritan Canal mileage including the 36-mile (58 km) main canal between New Brunswick and Trenton and 22-mile (35 km) feeder canal between Trenton and Frenchtown; many historic structures including buildings, locks, spillways, and towpath; described as "the longest (and narrowest) recreation area in the state. A greenway that snakes through one of the most heavily populated regions in the world." | [35] [36] | |
Double Trouble State Park | Lacey and Berkeley townships in Ocean County 39°53′52.36″N74°13′16.65″W / 39.8978778°N 74.2212917°W | 1964 | 8,495 acres (34.38 km2) | Provides "a window into the Pine Barrens history" and region's ecosystem; preserved historic village associated with New Jersey cranberry agriculture and Atlantic White Cedar logging and milling industries. | [37] | |
Farny State Park | Rockaway Township in Morris County 40°57′44.82″N74°27′28.81″W / 40.9624500°N 74.4580028°W | 1943 | 4,866 acres (19.69 km2) | Adjacent to Splitrock Reservoir; features mature mixed oak hardwood forest, swamps, and streams characteristic of the Highlands physiographic province; provides habitat for the endangered red-shouldered hawk and threatened barred owl. | [38] | |
Fort Mott State Park | Pennsville Township in Salem County 39°36′11″N75°33′9″W / 39.60306°N 75.55250°W | 1951 | 124 acres (0.50 km2) | Coastal defense battery built 1872–1902 to protect the Delaware River and Philadelphia after the American Civil War. Troops were stationed at site from 1897 to 1922. | [39] [40] [41] | |
Hacklebarney State Park | Located between Long Valley and Chester in Morris County 40°44′53″N74°43′56″W / 40.74806°N 74.73222°W | 1924 | 1,186 acres (4.80 km2) | The glacial valley and gorge of the Black River; features the rock strewn landscape of the glacial moraine from the Wisconsinan glaciation; features three endangered species: American ginseng, leatherwood and Virginia pennywort | [42] | |
High Point State Park | Montague Township, Sussex County 41°17′45″N74°41′20″W / 41.29583°N 74.68889°W | 1923 | 16,091 acres (65.12 km2) | Donated by Colonel Anthony R. Kuser and wife Susie Dryden Kuser; landscaping designed by the Olmsted Brothers of Boston, sons of Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York City's Central Park. Features the highest elevation in New Jersey, High Point, a 1,803-foot (550 m) prominence of Kittatinny Mountain marked by a 220-foot (67 m) granite obelisk erected as veterans memorial. | [43] | |
Hopatcong State Park | Landing, Roxbury Township in Morris County; Hopatcong Borough in Sussex County 40°54′52″N74°39′55″W / 40.91444°N 74.66528°W | 1922 | 163 acres (0.66 km2) | Two separate parcels of land, one on the southwestern shore of state's largest freshwater lake, Lake Hopatcong, another on Lake Musconetcong; the park features remnants of the Morris Canal and Lake Hopatcong Historical Museum. | [44] | |
Island Beach State Park | Former borough of Island Beach and Berkeley Township in Ocean County 39°54′18.98″N74°4′53.15″W / 39.9052722°N 74.0814306°W | 1953 | 3,003 acres (12.15 km2) | Island Beach is a narrow 10-mile (16 km) barrier island between Atlantic Ocean and Barnegat Bay featuring untouched primary dunes, thicket, freshwater wetlands, maritime forest and tidal marshes; also New Jersey's largest osprey colony, peregrine falcons, wading birds, shorebirds, waterfowl, and migrating songbirds. | [45] | |
Kittatinny Valley State Park | Andover Township and Andover Borough in Sussex County 41°0′59″N74°44′38″W / 41.01639°N 74.74389°W | 1994 | 5,656 acres (22.89 km2) | Features glacial lakes and limestone outcroppings at the headwaters of the Pequest River; part of the Sussex Branch Trail passes through park; site of the Aeroflex–Andover Airport, a New Jersey Forest Fire Service airbase for aerial wildfire suppression. | [46] | |
Liberty State Park | Jersey City in Hudson County 40°42′14.36″N74°3′13.50″W / 40.7039889°N 74.0537500°W | 1976 | 1,212 acres (4.90 km2) | Created to commemorate country's bicentennial celebration, features Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal (CRRNJ); sweeping view of the Hudson River and Manhattan skyline; Liberty Science Center; "Empty Sky" Memorial for the September 11 terrorist attacks; ferry service to Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty. | [47] | |
Long Pond Ironworks State Park | Hewitt, West Milford Township in Passaic County 41°8′27.55″N74°18′33.22″W / 41.1409861°N 74.3092278°W | 1974 | 6,911 acres (27.97 km2) | Features Monksville Reservoir and ruins of Long Pond Ironworks, an eighteenth- and nineteenth-century ironworking community (1766–1882) along the Wanaque River. | [48] | |
Monmouth Battlefield State Park | Manalapan and Freehold, in Monmouth County 40°15′22.13″N74°19′14.59″W / 40.2561472°N 74.3207194°W | 1961 | 1,818 acres (7.36 km2) | Site of the June 28, 1778 Battle of Monmouth during the American Revolution. George Washington and Continental Army attacked the rear of a British Army column commanded by Lieutenant General Sir Henry Clinton; features interpretative center, annual reenactment battle held in June, the Craig House (1746), the Rhea-Applegate house (1745), and a pick-your-own fruit orchard. | [49] | |
Parvin State Park | Pittsgrove Township in Salem County 39°30′39.07″N75°7′57.51″W / 39.5108528°N 75.1326417°W | 1931 | 2,092 acres (8.47 km2) | Features Pine Barrens swamp hardwood and pine forest ecosystem along Muddy Run (Maurice River tributary). Features over 200 flowering plant species including blossoming dogwood, laurel, holly, magnolia, wild azalea. Historically, the home of a CCC camp (1933–1941), summer displacement camp for Japanese-American children during World War II; prisoner-of-war camp for German soldiers, and housing for Kalmyk refugees who escaped Eastern Europe and the USSR in 1952. | [50] | |
Pigeon Swamp State Park | South Brunswick Township in Middlesex County 40°23′12.8″N74°28′25.7″W / 40.386889°N 74.473806°W | 1,078 acres (4.36 km2) | Located in the watershed of Lawrence Brook, an undeveloped park featuring open ponds and hardwood forests that were a major nesting site for the now-extinct passenger pigeon. | - | ||
Princeton Battlefield State Park | Princeton Borough in Mercer County 40°19′51.09″N74°40′36.68″W / 40.3308583°N 74.6768556°W | 1777 | 681 acres (2.76 km2) | Site of the Battle of Princeton fought between British and American on January 3, 1777 — a victory that proved decisive in restoring American morale during American Revolution. Includes the Clarke House where General Hugh Mercer died from his wounds nine days later despite the efforts of Dr. Benjamin Rush. | [51] | |
Rancocas State Park | Westampton Township in Burlington County 40°0′27.13″N74°49′59.59″W / 40.0075361°N 74.8332194°W | 1965 | 1,252 acres (5.07 km2) | Located along the North Branch of the Rancocas Creek and an extensive freshwater tidal marsh. | [52] | |
Ringwood State Park | Ringwood in Passaic County 41°8′10.52″N74°15′21.99″W / 41.1362556°N 74.2561083°W | 1937 | 4,444 acres (17.98 km2) | Located on Ramapo Mountain, features historic Ringwood Manor, New Jersey Botanical Garden at Skylands Manor, and Shepherd Lake Recreation Area. | [53] | |
Stephens State Park | near Hackettstown in Warren County; Mount Olive Township in Morris County 40°52′9.06″N74°48′36.00″W / 40.8691833°N 74.8100000°W | 1937 | 805 acres (3.26 km2) | Located along Musconetcong River, features remnants of one of 23 locks and section of towpath of the Morris Canal. Highlands Trail runs through the park. | [54] | |
Swartswood State Park | Stillwater Township, Sussex County 41°4′25.07″N74°49′7.62″W / 41.0736306°N 74.8187833°W | 1914 | 3,460 acres (14.0 km2) | New Jersey's first state park. The focus of the park was a place for recreation at the state's third-largest freshwater lake, Swartswood Lake (a glacial lake). | [55] | |
Tall Pines State Preserve | Deptford Township and Mantua Township in Gloucester County 39°46′41″N75°8′31″W / 39.77806°N 75.14194°W | 2015 | 110 acres (0.45 km2) | Former golf course with over 4 miles of asphalt and grass walking trails through unmaintained natural areas. Mantua Creek runs through its center. | [56] | |
Voorhees State Park | Glen Gardner Borough, Hunterdon County 40°41′45.53″N74°53′13.68″W / 40.6959806°N 74.8871333°W | 1927 | 1,336 acres (5.41 km2) | Former New Jersey governor Foster M. Voorhees created the park with donation of his 325-acre (1.32 km2) farm; scenic views of Round Valley Reservoir and Spruce Run Reservoir; an observatory and astronomy education center, operated by the New Jersey Astronomical Association, offers the largest working telescope accessible to the public in the state—a 26-inch Cassegrain reflector. | [57] | |
Washington Crossing State Park | Washington Crossing and Titusville sections of Hopewell Township in Mercer County 40°18′40″N74°51′49″W / 40.31111°N 74.86361°W | 1912 | 3,575 acres (14.47 km2) | Commemorates site where General George Washington and the Continental Army crossed the Delaware River on the night of December 25–26, 1776, before the Battle of Trenton during the American Revolution. | [58] | |
Washington Rock State Park | Green Brook Township, Somerset County 40°36′47.65″N74°28′23.70″W / 40.6132361°N 74.4732500°W | 1932 | 52 acres (0.21 km2) | Site of a lookout used by George Washington in 1777 monitor British troop movements around New York City and northern New Jersey when the Continental Army was stationed at the Middlebrook encampment. | [59] | |
Wawayanda State Park | Vernon Township in Sussex County; West Milford in Passaic County 41°11′53.203″N74°23′51.892″W / 41.19811194°N 74.39774778°W | 1960 | 35,524 acres (143.76 km2) | Wawayanda offers 60 miles (97 km) of trails including a 20-mile (32 km) segment of the Appalachian Trail. Features 1,325-acre (5.36 km2) Bearfort Mountain Natural Area, 399-acre (1.61 km2) Wawayanda Hemlock Ravine Natural Area (399 acres (1.61 km2)), and 2,167-acre (8.77 km2) Wawayanda Swamp Natural Area | [60] |
State park | Image | Location | Created | Size | Features and activities | Links |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abram S. Hewitt State Forest | near Hewitt, West Milford Township in Passaic County 41°11′8.5363″N74°19′52.9500″W / 41.185704528°N 74.331375000°W | 1951 | 2,001 acres (8.10 km2) | Accessible only by foot, this park is located on Bearfort Mountain, the eastern terminus of the Wawayanda Plateau, between Greenwood Lake and Upper Greenwood Lake and features a portion of the Appalachian Trail | [61] | |
Bass River State Forest | Burlington County 39°37′13.91″N74°25′28.74″W / 39.6205306°N 74.4246500°W | 1906 | 29,147 acres (117.95 km2) | Bass River is New Jersey's first state forest. Features the 67-acre (0.27 km2) man-made Lake Absegami, the remains of the Civilian Conservation Corps Camp S-55 (1933–1942), a 3,830 acres (15.5 km2) portion of Pine Barrens pygmy forest in the West Pine Plains Natural Area, and the pine/oak woods and a small Atlantic white cedar bog of the Absegami Natural Area | [62] | |
Belleplain State Forest | near Woodbine in Cumberland and Cape May counties 39°14′56.62″N74°50′28.29″W / 39.2490611°N 74.8411917°W | 1928 | 21,324 acres (86.30 km2) | Features young pine, oak and Atlantic white cedar, and the remains of three CCC camps, and Lake Nummy, formerly the Meisle Cranberry Bog | [63] | |
Brendan T. Byrne State Forest | New Lisbon, Woodland Township in Ocean County 39°53′27.66″N74°34′46.63″W / 39.8910167°N 74.5796194°W | 1908 | 37,242 acres (150.71 km2) | Features the site of Lebanon Glass Works (1851–1867); Whitesbog Village, an active nineteenth- and twentieth-century cranberry and blueberry producing community where the high bush blueberry was developed. | [64] | |
Jenny Jump State Forest | Hope in Warren County 40°55′19.3″N74°55′32.1″W / 40.922028°N 74.925583°W | 1931 | 4,466 acres (18.07 km2) | The park features the 1,112-foot (339 m) high, 6-mile (10 km) long Jenny Jump Mountain ridge, large glacial boulders and outcroppings from the Wisconsin glaciation, and because the area enjoys the darkest skies in New Jersey, the park is home to the United Astronomy Clubs of New Jersey's Greenwood Observatory, open for public stargazing. | [65] | |
Norvin Green State Forest | West Milford Township and Bloomingdale Borough in Passaic County 41°4′8.00″N74°19′32.37″W / 41.0688889°N 74.3256583°W | 1946 | 5,416 acres (21.92 km2) | Located near Wanaque Reservoir and part of the Wyanokie Wilderness Area, this state forest features Wyanokie High Point and views of the Manhattan skyline is part of the Northeastern coastal forests ecoregion and accessible only by foot. | [66] | |
Penn State Forest | Jenkin's Neck in Burlington County 39°44′04.90″N74°29′28.82″W / 39.7346944°N 74.4913389°W | 1910 | 3,366 acres (13.62 km2) | Features Oswego Lake and River and a former Civilian Conservation Corps camp, as well as part of New Jersey's pygmy forest. | [67] | |
Ramapo Mountain State Forest | Passaic and Bergen counties 41°1′58.10″N74°15′6.57″W / 41.0328056°N 74.2518250°W | - | 4,269 acres (17.28 km2) | Former estate of Clifford MacEvoy on Ramapo Mountain, includes the 120-acre (0.49 km2) Ramapo Lake Natural Area | - | |
Stokes State Forest | Sandyston, Montague, and Frankford townships in Sussex County 41°11′4.03″N74°47′50.33″W / 41.1844528°N 74.7973139°W | 1917 | 16,025 acres (64.85 km2) | Created with a donation of land by New Jersey Governor Edward C. Stokes, this state forest on Kittatinny Mountain includes the Tillman Ravine Natural Area, and New Jersey School of Conservation (operated by Montclair State University) | - | |
Wharton State Forest | Large tract through Burlington, Camden, and Atlantic counties 39°38′38.0″N74°38′48.4″W / 39.643889°N 74.646778°W | 1954 | 115,000 acres (470 km2) | New Jersey's largest state forest, features the Atlantic coastal pine barrens ecoregion as well as the New Jersey Pinelands National Reserve, and the watershed of the Mullica River, including historic Batsto Village, a former bog iron and glass manufacturing site from 1766 to 1867, and extensive hiking trails. | - | |
Worthington State Forest | Knowlton and Hardwick townships in Warren County 40°59′35.5″N75°5′7.8″W / 40.993194°N 75.085500°W | 1954 | 6,421 acres (25.98 km2) | Part of the former estate of Charles Campbell Worthington, features Mount Tammany (elevation 1,527 feet (465 m)), the New Jersey side of the Delaware Water Gap and southern areas of Kittatinny Mountain, including the 1,085-acre (4.39 km2) Dunnfield Creek Natural Area (a Wild Trout stream) and Sunfish Pond, a glacial lake | - |
State park | Image | Location | Created | Size | Features and activities | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Atsion Recreation Area | Shamong Township in Burlington County 39°44′28″N74°43′59″W / 39.74111°N 74.73306°W | - | - | Located in Wharton State Forest | - | |
Bull's Island Recreation Area | Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park Delaware Township in Hunterdon County 40°24′37.62″N75°2′5.27″W / 40.4104500°N 75.0347972°W | - | 80 acres (0.32 km2) | - | [68] | |
Round Valley Recreation Area | Lebanon and Clinton townships in Hunterdon County 40°36′50.0″N74°49′21.7″W / 40.613889°N 74.822694°W | 1968 | 3,684 acres (14.91 km2) | Trails for hiking, horseback riding, and mountain biking; camping, fishing, hunting (waterfowl only), picnicking, boating/canoeing (gas motors limited 10 hp), swimming, scuba and skin diving, cross-country skiing, ice fishing, sledding | [69] | |
Spruce Run Recreation Area | Union and Clinton townships in Hunterdon County 40°39′46″N74°56′20″W / 40.66278°N 74.93889°W | 1974 | 1,290 acres (5.2 km2) | - | - | |
Warren Grove Recreation Area | - | Warren Grove in Ocean and Burlington counties 39°45′12.29″N74°23′13.9″W / 39.7534139°N 74.387194°W | 1972 | 617 acres (2.50 km2) | Administered by the Bass River State Forest, this site was acquired from the National Park Service in 1972. This site is part of what is known as the "Pygmy Forest", featuring the groves of Pitch Pine that is part of the Dwarf Pine Plains Habitat in the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Features the endangered broom crowberry (Corema conradii) and other rare plant species. | [70] |
Marina | Image | Location | Berths | Maximum vessel length | Draft | Description | Links |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Senator Frank S. Farley State Marina | - | Atlantic City, Atlantic County 39°22′40.30″N74°25′47.58″W / 39.3778611°N 74.4298833°W | 640 | 300 feet (91 m) | 12 feet (3.7 m) | Located on Clam Creek and Huron Avenue across the street from the Golden Nugget (formerly Trump Marina Hotel and Casino) in Atlantic City, access to the Atlantic Ocean through Absecon Inlet or the Intracoastal Waterway | [71] |
Forked River State Marina | - | Forked River in Lacey Township, Ocean County 39°50′05.59″N74°11′42.07″W / 39.8348861°N 74.1950194°W | 125 | 50 feet (15 m) | 6 feet (1.8 m) | Access to Atlantic Ocean via Barnegat Inlet, near "BB" Buoy, Barnegat Bay and the Intracoastal Waterway | [71] |
Fortescue State Marina | - | Fortescue, Downe Township, Cumberland County 39°14′35.5″N75°10′20.6″W / 39.243194°N 75.172389°W | 125 | 50 feet (15 m) | 9 feet (2.7 m) | Access to Delaware Bay and Atlantic Ocean. | [71] |
Leonardo State Marina | - | Leonardo in Middletown Township, Monmouth County 40°25′20.74″N74°03′40.26″W / 40.4224278°N 74.0611833°W | 176 | 50 feet (15 m) | 6 feet (1.8 m) | Located next to Sandy Hook, access to the Atlantic Ocean and New York Bay | [71] |
Liberty Landing Marina | - | Liberty State Park in Jersey City, Hudson County 40°42′35.46″N74°03′05.40″W / 40.7098500°N 74.0515000°W | 200 | 50 feet (15 m) | 18 feet (5.5 m) | Located in Liberty State Park across from Manhattan, with access to Liberty Science Center, and by ferry to the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island and New York City. | [71] |
These are state-owned historical sites in New Jersey. [72] These state-owned historical sites are open to the public year-round on Wednesdays through Sundays (10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., 1:00 p.m. to 4 p.m.)
Sussex County is the northernmost county in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Its county seat is Newton. It is part of the New York metropolitan area and is part of New Jersey's Skylands Region. As of the 2020 census, the county was the state's 17th-most-populous county, with a population of 144,221, a decrease of 5,044 (−3.4%) from the 2010 census count of 149,265, which in turn reflected an increase of 5,099 (+3.5%) over the 144,166 persons at the 2000 census. Based on 2020 census data, Vernon Township was the county's largest in both population and area, with a population of 22,358 and covering an area of 70.59 square miles (182.8 km2). The county is part of the North Jersey region of the state.
The Delaware Water Gap is a water gap on the border of the U.S. states of New Jersey and Pennsylvania where the Delaware River cuts through a large ridge of the Appalachian Mountains.
The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation is a state agency within the New York State Executive Department charged with the operation of state parks and historic sites within the U.S. state of New York. As of 2014, the NYS OPRHP manages nearly 335,000 acres of public lands and facilities, including 180 state parks and 35 historic sites, that are visited by over 78 million visitors each year.
The Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) is a state agency of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, United States, situated in the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs. It is best known for its parks and parkways. The DCR's mission is "To protect, promote and enhance our common wealth of natural, cultural and recreational resources for the well-being of all." The agency is the largest landowner in Massachusetts.
Worthington State Forest is a state forest located in Warren County, New Jersey within the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, just north of the water gap in the Skylands Region of the state. It covers an area of 6,660 acres (27.0 km2) and stretches for more than 7 miles (11 km) along the Kittatinny Ridge near Columbia.
Sterling Forest State Park is a 22,180-acre (89.8 km2) state park located in the Ramapo Mountains in Orange County, New York. Established in 1998, it is among the larger additions to the New York state park system in the last 50 years.
The Paulins Kill is a 41.6-mile (66.9 km) tributary of the Delaware River in northwestern New Jersey in the United States. With a long-term median flow rate of 76 cubic feet of water per second (2.15 m3/s), it is New Jersey's third-largest contributor to the Delaware River, behind the Musconetcong River and Maurice River. The river drains an area of 176.85 square miles (458.0 km2) across portions of Sussex and Warren counties and 11 municipalities. It flows north from its source near Newton, and then turns southwest. The river sits in the Ridge and Valley geophysical province.
Papakating Creek is a 20.1-mile-long (32.3 km) tributary of the Wallkill River located in Frankford and Wantage townships in Sussex County, New Jersey in the United States. The creek rises in a small swamp located beneath the eastern face of Kittatinny Mountain in Frankford and its waters join the Wallkill to the east of Sussex borough.
Swartswood State Park is a 3,460-acre (14.0 km2) protected area located in the Swartswood section of Stillwater and Hampton townships in Sussex County, New Jersey, in the United States. Established in 1915 by the state's Forest Park Reservation Commission, it was the first state park established by the state of New Jersey for the purposes of recreation at the state's third-largest freshwater lake. Today, Swartswood State Park is operated and maintained by the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry.
Stokes State Forest is a state park located in Sandyston, Montague and Frankford in Sussex County, New Jersey, United States. Stokes comprises 16,447 acres (66.56 km2) of mountainous woods in the Kittatinny Mountains, extending from the southern boundary of High Point State Park southwestward to the eastern boundary of the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area. The park is operated and maintained by the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry.
In the state of New Jersey, the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry is an administrative division of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. In its most visible role, the Division is directly responsible for the management and operation of New Jersey's public park system which includes 42 state parks, 11 state forests, 3 recreation areas, and more than 50 historic sites and districts. However, its duties also include protecting state and private lands from wildfire, managing forests, educating the public about environmental stewardship and natural resources, as well as growing trees to maintain and restore forests in rural and urban areas, and to preserve the diversity of the trees within the forests.
Watchung Reservation is the largest nature reserve in Union County, New Jersey, United States. The Watchung area is located on a ridge within northern-central New Jersey, as it consists mainly of the upper valley of Blue Brook, between the ridges of the First Watchung Mountain and Second Watchung Mountains. A dam near the headwaters of the creek creates Lake Surprise.
Campgaw Mountain is the northernmost ridge of the volcanically formed Watchung Mountains, along the border of Franklin Lakes, Oakland, and Mahwah in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. Located almost entirely within the bounds of Campgaw Mountain Reservation, the mountain offers numerous outdoor recreational opportunities, including the only ski slope in the Watchungs. Campgaw Mountain is commonly considered to be part of the greater Ramapo Mountains region, but the flora and geology of the mountain is quite different from the surrounding area and more closely resembles the nearby Preakness Range to the south.
The Wapack Wilderness is a 1,400-acre (6 km2) tract of forest in the towns of Rindge and New Ipswich, New Hampshire. The land is owned by the Hampshire Country School, a small, private school for students who do not thrive in traditional settings. It abuts Binney Pond Natural Area and land conserved by the New England Forestry Foundation. Watatic Mountain Wildlife Area is two miles (3 km) to the southeast, and Annett State Forest is two miles (3 km) to the northeast. The headwaters of the Millers River flow from the area, feeding into Converse Meadows and Lake Monomonac before entering Massachusetts.
Rendezvous Mountain State Park is a 1,800-acre (7.3 km2) North Carolina state park in Purlear, North Carolina. It was originally established as North Carolina's third state park. From 1984 to early 2022, the park was operated by the North Carolina Forest Service as Rendezvous Mountain Educational State Forest.
Goffle Hill, also referred to as Goffle Mountain and historically known as Totoway Mountain and Wagaraw Mountain, is a range of the trap rock Watchung Mountains on the western edge of the Newark Basin in northern New Jersey. The hill straddles part of the border of Bergen County and Passaic County, underlying a mostly suburban setting. While hosting patches of woodlands, perched wetlands, and traprock glades, the hill is largely unprotected from development. Extensive quarrying for trap rock has obliterated large tracts of the hill in North Haledon, and Prospect Park. Conservation efforts seeking to preserve undeveloped land, such as the local Save the Woods initiative (2007–present), are ongoing.
The Kittatinny Valley is a section of the Great Appalachian Valley in Sussex and Warren counties in northwestern New Jersey that is bounded on the northwest by Kittatinny Mountain, and in the southeast by the New Jersey Highlands region. The valley is roughly 40 miles (64 km) long, with a breadth of 10 to 13 miles.
The New Jersey Forest Fire Service (NJFFS) is an agency within the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. Founded in 1906 with a focus on wildland fire suppression and fire protection, the Forest Fire Service is the largest firefighting department within the state of New Jersey in the United States with 85 full-time professional firefighting personnel, and approximately 2,000 trained part-time on-call wildland firefighters throughout the state. Its mission is to protect "life and property, as well as the state's natural resources, from wildfire".
The Mount Tammany Fire Road is an unpaved 4.5-mile (7.2 km) road on the eastern ridgeline of Kittatinny Mountain from Upper Yards Creek Reservoir to Mount Tammany, the 1,527-foot (465 m) prominence on the New Jersey side of the Delaware Water Gap. The fire road, located within Worthington State Forest, is maintained as a firebreak and access road for wildfire suppression efforts by the New Jersey Forest Fire Service. There are three helispots along the fire road used by the Forest Fire Service.