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This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Ocean County, New Jersey. Latitude and longitude coordinates of the sites listed on this page may be displayed in an online map. [1]
A total of 32 houses built in the 1880s are part of the current historic district, including one built by Ocean City Association member Ezra B. Lake. More houses were built in the succeeding decades, aided by improved transportation. By the 1920s, most available lots in the originally settled northern portion of Ocean City were already built.
City or town Description 1: Anderson House: May 17, 1972 (#72001498) December 23, 1976: East of Manalapan on NJ 33: Manalapan Township: Destroyed by fire in 1975. 2: Elberon Railroad Station: June 9, 1978 (#78001777) October 30, 1990: Lincoln Ave. Long Branch City: Destroyed by fire on May 27, 1988. [6] 3: Mayfair Theatre: December 2, 1974
Ocean City City Hall is a three-story building that is located at the corner of the intersection of Ninth Street and Asbury Avenue on a 0.3 acre lot. It faces Asbury Avenue, and is along the main corridor that enters the city. In 1914, the same year the building was finished, a causeway connecting Ocean City with Somers Point was opened. [4]
Ocean City is a city in Cape May County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.It is the principal city of the Ocean City metropolitan statistical area, which encompasses all of Cape May County, and is part of the Philadelphia-Wilmington-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD combined statistical area, also known as the Delaware Valley or Philadelphia metropolitan area. [21]
Ocean Township is a township situated on the Jersey Shore in east central Monmouth County, within the U.S. state of New Jersey. The township is a bedroom suburb of New York City . [ 19 ] Ocean Township has no central downtown and consists of three main unincorporated communities: Oakhurst , Wanamassa , and Wayside .
Gillian's Wonderland Pier was a historic amusement park in Ocean City, New Jersey. It was founded in 1929 by Roy Gillian, son of David Gillian who first came to Ocean City in 1914. [ 2 ] It was located near the beginning of the commercial boardwalk on 6th street.
The Ocean City Life-Saving Station (also known as U.S. Life Saving Station 30 and U.S. Coast Guard Station No. 126) is the only life-saving station of its design in New Jersey still in existence. Designed by architect James Lake Parkinson in a Carpenter Gothic style, the building is one of 25 stations built of the 1882 life-saving type.