|
Important Contacts
Town Hall / Municipal
Main Street &
Redmond Avenue
P.O. Box 569
732-681-3232
Fax:732-681-8981
Lake Como Tourism Commission
1740 Main Street
732-681-3232
www.lakecomonj.org
Post Office
515 Main Street
732-775-7013
Library
511 4th Avenue
732-776-2995
Schools
Belmar Elementary School
1101 Main Street
732-681-2388
Manasquan High School (732) 528-8820
9th through 12th Grades
Broad St. Manasquan, NJ
St. Rose High School
607 7th Avenue
732-681-2858
Parks
Lake Como Park
Ocean Avenue & North Boulevard
Houses of Worship
Grace Tabernacle
2014 Main Street
Lake Como, NJ 07719
732-681-3712
Email
Website
Mount Olive Baptist
703 Seventeenth Street
Lake Como, NJ 07719
732-681-1730
|
Lake Como
.jpg)
In 1924, the Borough of South Belmar
was formed out of the boundary of old Wall. It is a small , interior
municipality, bounded on the west by the railroad, on the north by
Sixteenth Avenue, on the east by "B"street, and in the South by Lake
Como and Polly Pod Brook. One of the original settlers of the area
now making up South Belmar was Jeremiah Newman, who was born in 1798
and died in 1828. His gravestone, at the Newman Family Burial Ground
on Leslie Street, Belmar Gardens, is still legible. Mr. Newman
arrived in the area around the 1817, and as with most early
residents, devoted his original efforts to farming. But this not
always successful, and he and his neighbors soon began to turn to
the sea to make part of their living. The farmlands were eventually
divided into smaller tracts, and later were developed under numerous
subdivisions according to a much less regular pattern than is
evident in the neighboring Borough of Belmar. It is interesting to
note that the Lake Como was known as Three Cornered Pond in the
early days, and the area immediately to the west was known as Polly
Pond Bog.
When the borough's first mayor, Claude W. Birdsall, a
municipal engineer, presented his first message to Council June 3,
1924, he outlined three main areas in which the community needed
improvement. They were sanitation, street repairs, and the parks,
Mayor Birdsall put sanitation at the top of the list, because there
was no garbage or sewage disposal in the borough.
He also considered street
repairs as an immediate need, since auto traffic was increasing
and the gravel roads were inadequate. Parks were at the bottom of
the mayor's list, although he regarded Lake Como as the Borough's
chief asset
Voters Were Divided
When Mr. Birdsall presented
his message, the borough was little more than a month old. it
had been created May 6, 1924 by a referendum in which 152 voters
favored the separation of Wall Township and 115 were opposed.
However, once the borough was founded, its citizens became
fiercely proud if their new identity and have strong supporter of
local government since.
The mayor’s improvement plans were soon put into actions.
Bids were asked for trash and garbage disposal, and a pickup system
was organized. Streets were graded and widened to the proper
standards, and confusing dead-end road were extended.
Police Force Expanded
Police protection had been
scanty up until this time. Borough Council too speedy action by
appointing five special policemen to serve without pay until
December of that first year.
In June, Borough Clerk Mrs. Grace B. Hoff was instructed to
inform Coast Cities Railway Co., which operated the trolley system,
that the roadway adjacent to the tracks on F Street needed gravel.
The line then ran between Long Branch and Sea Girt and was one of
the bigger financial enterprises at the Shore.
In the summer open trolley cars were used, and on busy days
riders taking the air hung from the cars in clusters. Fleet
conductors had to be contortionists as well to collect fares,
especially on the shorter runs.
During the first month of the borough’s life, a disorderly
person ordinance was adopted to cope with intoxication, loud and
abusive language, alms collectors, indecent or immodest pictures,
gaming places, and other violations of public property.
Another measure was adopted to prevent dogs from running at
large. They were required to wear muzzles during the warmer months
when rabies was usually more prevalent. Licenses were set at $1.00
for male and $2.00 for a female.
Rich in History
Although the borough is only
38 years old, it is by no means young in history. The land was
originally a part of Shrewsbury Township, formed in 1693 by an act
of Provincial Assembly.
The township then encircled all the eastern portion of
Monmouth County from Navesink River to Little Egg Harbor, including
the greater part of what is now Ocean County.
Congregationalists from Connecticut and Quakers and Scotch
Presbyterians from New York and New England settled it.
In 1879 Neptune Township was carved out of Shrewsbury
Township and comprised all of the land between Asbury Park and
Manasquan.
One of the early settlers in the immediate area here was
Jeremiah Newman. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, he
built a cabin on the north shore of Lake Como and made his living by
farming, fishing and hunting.
Family Had Burial Plot
He was buried in the
family’s cemetery on Leslie Street, Wall Township, at a site
once used by the Leni-Lenape Indians for burials. The cemetery is
still owned by the family, but laws prevent any more burials.
The Newman family flourished and eventually owned most of the
land known as the greater Belmar area. Some of the family took to
the sea, as did George Newman, born in 1849. Others took up trades
or farming.
By the middle of the 19th Century Issac Newman was selling
Belmar beachfront property for a dollar an acre. The land was
gradually divided and drifted out of the family. Today the Newman
Street here is a landmark that testifies to the family’s early
importance in the community.
In 1856, the Newman children were attending Pleasant Hill
grade school in Wall Township for about 1 ½ cents a day. They paid
an extra penny a day for janitorial services, and another penny for
firewood, unless they brought their own.
Houses Still Stand
Members of the Newman family
once owned some of the oldest houses here. The house at 504 18th
Ave., about 150 years old, was built from sea timbers found on the
beach by a Newman.
Another house at 814 Oak Terr. is some 110 years old, and the
one at 398 New Bedford Rd., is more than 100 years old.
In more recent years, Capt. Jordan Newman, a retired
carpenter, with an inventive knack, built a houseboat and docked it
in Shark River. The craft included a special hatch through which he
fished on rainy days. He boasted that the trap door was right next
to the stove and skillet.
During the hurricane of 1938 the boat broke its mooring and
the captain was barely rescued as the craft swept down the inlet
toward the open sea.
Before the turn of the century, people began "discovering"
the Shore and flocked here in droves. Low priced living quarters
were in demand, and tent colonies bloomed as the answer to the
shortage.
Tent Colony Founded
The Parkway Association,
a group of city residents, who banded together for common interests,
founded a tent colony at Lake Como on land bought for $3000. It is
harder to imagine a choicer Shore spot, with the sea a few miles to
the east and the lake sparkling under the bright sun.
Many residents still remember the fire ring and sledge hammer
on White Street that was once used as an alarm. It was later moved
to 18th Ave. in front of a building that formerly served as borough
hall and is now occupied by Gallegher’s Tavern.
Still later, a fire bell was installed and, in June 1924 the
volunteer fire company was formed. Today, the company has two fire
trucks and about 40 members headed by Chief Henry Poland. It is
located in its own building on F Street nest to the Borough Hall.
Built in 1935, the present Borough Hall contains five rooms and the
police Department.
The regular four-man police force was organized in 1938, and
now is directed by Chief Bradford Behrman who has been on the force
30 years.
Donald E. Newman, a descendent of the pioneer family and a
member of the police force is captain of the first aid squad. The
volunteer group was founded in 1938 and has its own building on 18th
Ave. off of F Street. It has 25 members and two ambulances.
Playground Created
Four years ago the South
Belmar Youth Center built the playground on the south side of
Borough Hall. The borough owns the land, but the center is charged
with keeping it in shape.
Chief Behrman, the center’s president, relates that the group
gives a barbecue each year to raise money for the playground. After
its expenses are met, the extra money goes to local civic groups.
Mayor Walling, who is chaplain for the police force and Fire
Company, served as councilman for five years before coming mayor.
Before that, he was active in the First Aid and Fire Company.
He sees little expansion for the borough, with its year –
around population of around 1,500 persons.
The community is pretty well built up now, Mayor Walling
says, and there is little vacant land left. Mayor Walling says, "I
would say we have just about reached out limits here."
But the community – often called the "Little Borough" – will
probably continue its way of life for years to come in the tradition
of American independence.
Report Discouraging
In September 1924 Norris J.
Wolley, borough collector, gave his first official report. It
was discouraging, to say the least, for a new borough intent on
improvements. The cash balance was 141.03 and outstanding notes
totaled $500. It was necessary for the Council to authorize a $500
emergency note to pay the bills.
It was not until July 1926 that the borough was ready to
float a $20,000 bond issue for sewage disposal, and a $75,000 issue
for improving the water supply.
Residents had been using cesspools and wells, and the bond
issues provide them with sewage and water services from Belmar.
Wait 26 Years for a Park
The shore of Lake Como,
the last goal on Mayor Birdsall’s initial list, was not made into a
park until 1950. World War II had been over five years and it was
dedicated as the Denman, Fisher, and Perkins Memorial Park in honor
of those who died in service.
Mayor Leroy F. Walling, who had held his office for the past
10 years, observes that through the years Mr. Birdsall has witnessed
the fulfillment of the pro-proposals made in that initial message.
It was just this year, continues Mayor Walling, that Mr. Birdsall
designed the storm drains laid in F Street to carry off water from
flash rains, and the mayor expects that Mr. Birdsall will continue
to play a significant part in the borough’s development in years to
come.
|
Avon by the Sea
Belmar
Bradley Beach
Brielle
Lake Como
Manasquan
Neptune City
Neptune Township
Ocean Grove
Sea Girt
Spring Lake
Spring Lake Heights
Wall Township
Lake Como Members
Select Home Systems, Inc.
1615 Main Street
732-280-1211 Website
WRAT 95.9 FM- Greater Media Radio
1731 Main Street
732-681-3800 x206 Website
|