A blog about living in Aberdeen, New Jersey.
Sunday, August 10, 2014
Cliffwood Avenue Construction Update
The above Google Street View image is a useful Before image, probably from a few months ago. The cut away for the new lane goes as far as the telephone pole next to the light blue house in the image, leaving the nearby tree's roots exposed. Workers were up on a cherry picker on Saturday morning at the intersection, perhaps moving power or telephone lines.
The new lane matches work done last month on Cliffwood Avenue along the A&P Shopping Center side of the road. The shopping center has lost a good bit of the grassy margin, all the way up to the shrubs.
Presumably this new lane will make traversing this intersection a bit easier next school session.
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Monday, April 25, 2011
History: Cliffwood Elementary Construction Approved, December 1956
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Matawan-Aberdeen School Board Approves 2011-2012 District Calendar
Here's a few of the major items:
- Students start school next year on the Tuesday after Labor Day (6 September).
- Winter break begins with a half day on 23 December 2011 and runs through New Year's Day.
- Spring break begins with a halfday on 5 April and runs through 15 April 2012.
- The last day of school is a half day scheduled for 20 June 2012.
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Cliffwood 3rd Grade Produces Aberdeen Brochures, Meets With Mayor
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Matawan-Aberdeen Regional School District - Classes Resume Thursday!
The kids have off three days next week - Monday is Labor Day, then Rosh Hashanah is Thursday and Friday.
Back to School nights will be held at 7 pm at these locations on the following dates:
- Cambridge Park Pre-School - September 14th
- Cliffwood Elementary School (CL) - September 15th
- Ravine Drive School (RDS) - September 16th
- Lloyd Road School (LR) - September 21st
- Strathmore Elementary School (ST) - September 22nd
- Matawan Regional High School (HS) - September 23rd
- Matawan-Aberdeen Middle School (MA) - September 29th (6th Grade)
- Matawan-Aberdeen Middle School - September 30th (7th & 8th Grades)
Saturday, June 12, 2010
A Touch of Cliffwood at Firemen's Park
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Route 35 South Flooded
Friday, January 22, 2010
Cliffwood PTO Is More Than A Fundraising Auxiliary
Friday, June 26, 2009
Known Contaminated Sites in Aberdeen, NJ as of 2001
- TEXACO S S ABERDEEN TOWNSHIP (FORMER), RTE 34 & LLOYD RD
- LLOYD ROAD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, LLOYD RD
- CLIFFWOOD PLAZA, RTE 35 & CLIFFWOOD AVE
- SOUTH RIVER METAL PRODUCTS COMPANY, 100 CHURCH ST
- 29 WOODBROOK DRIVE, 29 WOODBROOK DR
- 103 MARSHALL CONCOURSE, 103 MARSHALL CONCOURSE
- NJ TRANSIT RAIL STATION, ATLANTIC AVE
- ERNST ZOBEL COMPANY, HARRISON AVE
- NJ TRANSIT ELECTRICAL SUBSTATION, 749 LLOYD RD
- L & L OIL SERVICE INCORPORATED, 740 LLOYD RD
- KASTLE KREATIONS, 657 LINE RD
- CONTAINER CORPORATION OF AMERICA, 125 HARRISON AVE
Sunday, June 21, 2009
A Need for Oversight
As might have been expected with an open salary and benefits discussion, there was much gnashing of teeth this weekend in reader comments on the Aberdeener blogsite. His post about the board's responsibilities concerning the superintendent's recent request to transfer Cliffwood Elementary School's principal to troubled Strathmore Elementary, a thoughtful discussion of divergent perceptions of the board's function, became a place for his readers to wax eloquently about these too-opaque personnel contract discussions.While Aberdeener's article focused on whether or not the board should play an aggressive oversight role in BOE personnel strategic moves, some of his readership took things in rather dark directions and eventually turned on Aberdeener himself. I marvel at how these anonymous commentators can so effortlessly provide narratives for innumerable conspiracies by persistently-ill-intentioned bureaucratic boogeymen. They should take up the mystery writer's trade. In forty posts they managed to complain of retribution against union members, the tenure of an imbecilic administrator, public corruption that pads the pockets of officials at the cost of the proper education of our youth, a possible return to croneyism, more politics as usual - including broken campaign promises by board members (read Joey) -- and even the superfluousness of the board itself.
Ignoring the jadedness and bad faith demonstrated in many of the comments, few came to the point. Maybe the board's processes aren't open enough to avoid appearances of conflict of interest. Maybe policy changes could help avoid this sort of public and professional angst? It certainly cannot be healthy. It all gets back to Aberdeener's original point -- the need for improved oversight by the board.
Friday, June 12, 2009
Personnel Changes in the Matawan Aberdeen Regional School District for 2009/2010
Matawan Regional High School will have a half dozen new faces among its teachers this fall, according to the superintendent's 2009/2010 school year personnel recommendations that were to be presented at the 8 June 2009 MARSD Workshop Meeting.- Craig Burfeindt - TV Production (replacing Kaiserman/Kress)
- Michael Craparo - Social Studies (replacing McCabe)
- Marc Komito - Math (replacing Leggett)
- James Smith - Chemistry (replacing Chapman)
- Timothy McGovern - Chemistry (replacing Samitt)
- Michele Lambly - Social Studies (replacing Rosiello-Leach)
There are many other details in this lengthy document; you may wish to peruse the agenda for items of particular interest. A sampling of what you will find: A new social studies textbook was approved. Over $3.3 million in payroll expenditures in May. Summer school. Summer theatre. Home schooling. Work study. An agreement that allows school buses to be used for Aberdeen Township summer recreation program, but the Twp must pay all expenses for use of the buses and drivers. Contract for an alarm system at the district. Dining services contract. Board vehicles maintenance contract.
I noticed the current Mission and Vision Statements in the attached agenda. Since they will be discussed at an upcoming workshop, I thought I would include the texts here:
Mission Statement
- To provide every child with the highest quality of instruction, curricula, and services;
- To treat every child with respect and dignity;
- To give every child the opportunity to learn and mature, to acquire a thirst for knowledge, to experience the satisfaction of accomplishment, and to anticipate becoming a productive member of a democratic society.
Upon leaving the Matawan Aberdeen Regional School District, all children will credit us with having given them what they need educationally to help them succeed in life in the pursuit of their own goals.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
A Brief History of Aberdeen & Matawan - APP 2007
About a century ago, Cliffwood Beach, a section of Aberdeen, boasted a bustling boardwalk, played host to social activities such as baby pageants and was home to a swimming pool. There, visitors could compete with famous athletes such as Johnny Weissmuller, an Olympic swimmer who later became known for his role in "Tarzan" films, said Edward Fitzgerald, township historian.
It was around the same time that neighboring Matawan began to burgeon as a manufacturing hub for products such as ceramic tiles, while trains passed through the area to bring goods to other destinations, said Helen Henderson, a former president of the Matawan Historical Society who has written books on the Matawan-Aberdeen area.
"Today those factories are no longer manufacturing sites and, most of them, the buildings are no longer standing," said Henderson of Keyport.
Today, Matawan and Aberdeen are two different municipalities with two different forms of government, but they share a common past, both originating from Middletown Township, said Fitzgerald, 46, of Aberdeen.
The founding of the Matawan-Aberdeen area took place in the 1680s, when 24 Scottish Presbyterians settled in what is now known as the Freneau section of Aberdeen, according to "Matawan and Aberdeen: Of Town and Field," a book published in 2003 by Henderson and the Matawan Historical Society.
Like many Monmouth County communities, both municipalities have a strong agricultural background, Henderson said.
Established as Matawan Township in 1857, Aberdeen was part of an area that is now Matawan borough. In 1896, Matawan borough and Matawan township split, Fitzgerald said.
In November 1977, the voters of Matawan Township voted to changed the municipality's name to Aberdeen, creating a community identity separate from Matawan.
Aberdeen was, and still is, home to various neighborhoods that developed their own unique characteristics, Fitzgerald said.
The Oak Shades section, along Lower Main Street, began developing in the 1860s and at the turn of the 20th century saw an influx of Italian immigrants, whose descendents still are in the area. Developer William J. Levitt could be considered the father of the Strathmore section, Fitzgerald said."It was set up as a planned development, a community that would stand on its own," Fitzgerald said of the neighborhood, which included what are now Strathmore Elementary School and the Strathmore Bath and Tennis Club on Lloyd Road.
A notable event in Matawan's history was the shark attacks of July 12, 1916, at Matawan Creek.
While swimming with a group of boys in the Matawan Creek, just west of where it intersects with the train trestle, 11-year-old Lester Stillwell of Matawan was mauled and killed by a great white shark, according to Dr. Richard Fernicola, an expert on the attacks. When news of the attack spread, a group of men including W. Stanley Fisher, 25, of Matawan hurried to the creek. While Fisher was in the creek searching for Stillwell, he was attacked by a shark and nearly dismembered, according to newspaper reports at the time. The shark tore Fisher's right leg almost off his body. He died later at the hospital. Stillwell's body washed up near the train trestle two days later, Fernicola said during an interview last summer as the borough remembered the 90th anniversary.
A Matawan landmark is the Burrowes Mansion, which is listed on both the state and national Registers of Historic Places. The Main Street structure was built around 1723. It was later owned by John Burrowes, a businessman who had come to be known as the "Corn King." His son, John Burrowes Jr., was a major with George Washington's Revolutionary War army. On May 27, 1778, the younger Burrowes returned home from Massachusetts to visit his wife, Margaret Forman, who was living in the mansion with the elder Burrowes and family. In a skirmish, a company of British loyalists pursued junior through the house, firing muskets into the attic. He escaped through a window.
"Over the years, it has had many lives," Henderson said, adding that ownership changed several times. The house is now a museum.
The Burrowes Mansion is one of the few artifacts left that serve as a reminder what life was like centuries ago, she said.
Today Matawan, like other communities near major urban areas, has become a busy municipality home to many commuters, she said.
"Instead of a village with a farming development, it is now a suburban bedroom community," Henderson said.



