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The "Friends of Rahway River Parkway," a nonprofit group, has been formed exclusively to encourage and advocate for the preservation, restoration and enhancement of the Rahway River Parkway, in accord with the ] design principles inherent in its origins, and to promote appropriate public enjoyment of the Parkway.<ref>http://www.rahwayriverparkway.org/</ref> The "Friends of Rahway River Parkway," a nonprofit group, has been formed exclusively to encourage and advocate for the preservation, restoration and enhancement of the Rahway River Parkway, in accord with the ] design principles inherent in its origins, and to promote appropriate public enjoyment of the Parkway.<ref>http://www.rahwayriverparkway.org/</ref>





==Parks along the Rahway== ==Parks along the Rahway==
A map to the Rahway River parks is available.<ref>Parks along the Rahway River Parkway A map to the Rahway River parks is available.<ref>Parks along the Rahway River Parkway
https://goo.gl/maps/bg6c4K3RyYK2.</ref> https://goo.gl/maps/bg6c4K3RyYK2.</ref>



*Essex County *Essex County
Line 43: Line 47:
**Springfield, New Jersey. Briant Park. **Springfield, New Jersey. Briant Park.
**Westfield/Mountainside. Echo Lake Park is situated on a lake formed on Nomahegan Brook, a tributary of the Rahway. **Westfield/Mountainside. Echo Lake Park is situated on a lake formed on Nomahegan Brook, a tributary of the Rahway.
**]. The Cranford section of the Rahway River Parkway follows the banks of the meandering Rahway River as it flows south through Lenape Park, Nomahegan Park, Hampton Park, MacConnell Park, Hanson Park, Sperry Park, Crane's Park, ] Park, and Mohawk Park.<ref>, Friends of Rahway River Parkway. Accessed November 7, 2016.</ref> The Cranford Canoe Club rents canoes and kayaks for trips on the Rahway River in Cranford. **]. {{further information|Cranford, New Jersey#Parks}}The Cranford section of the Rahway River Parkway follows the banks of the meandering Rahway River as it flows south through Lenape Park, Nomahegan Park, Hampton Park, MacConnell Park, the Cranford Canoe Club, Hanson Park, Sperry Park, Crane's Park, ] Park, and Mohawk Park.<ref>, Friends of Rahway River Parkway. Accessed November 7, 2016.</ref>
{{further information|Cranford, New Jersey#Parks}}

**Clark/Winfield **Clark/Winfield
**]. Rahway River Park abuts a graveyard along the river here. **]. Rahway River Park abuts a graveyard along the river here.
**] Hawk Rise Sanctuary. Hawk Rise Sanctuary is a 95-acre ecological preserve and wetland complex in Linden bordering the Rahway River, which was carved out of a former landfill through the combined efforts of the ], the city of ] and the ].<ref>http://www.njaudubon.org/SectionHawkRiseSanctuary/Introduction.aspx</ref>. The boardwalk trail system winds through the Hawk Rise forest, continues along the edge of the former Linden Landfill, and leads to an overlook viewing of the Rahway River and adjacent marshes. It has been open to the public since 2012, bringing scenic walking trails and bird-watching opportunities to a natural area once gated off and hidden behind a variety of industrial land uses. The site contains a surprising diversity of habitats for its relatively small size and urban location. These include forested wetlands, vernal pools, grasslands, shrublands, salt marsh, mudflats, a large pond, and the tidal Rahway River. 163 bird species have been spotted there. <ref>http://ebird.org/content/nj/news/birds-of-lindens-hawk-rise-sanctuary/</ref>
**] Hawk Rise Sanctuary.
*Middlesex County *Middlesex County
**Carteret. Joseph Medwick Memorial Park. Named for famous baseball player ],this park offers scenic river vistas plus ball fields, tennis courts, playgrounds & picnic groves.
**Carteret. Joseph Medwick Park.


==Recreation along the Rahway==
The Cranford Canoe Club, built in 1908, rents canoes and kayaks for trips on the Rahway River in Cranford. The Rahway Yacht Club, founded in 1904, is a private boating club docked on the river. <ref>https://goo.gl/maps/xVXEVMU75XE2</>.

Cranford's The Riverside Inn and the River and Rail Cantina sit aside the river with outdoor seating near parkland. The Hanson Park Conservancy hosts an annual "rubber ducky race" in the river, over the Hansel Dam falls next to Sperry Park, as a fundraiser.

The Great Pumpkin Sail is held on November 1st in Echo Lake on All Saints' Day. At this annual event, on the day after Halloween, families bring their Halloween Jack-O-Lanterns, light them, and set them afloat on Echo Lake Park's lower lake. The burning faces reflect in the water as families enjoy free hot chocolate, marshmallows, and entertainment around the campfire.

==Historic uses of the Rahway River==
Beginning in the 1880s, the Cranford River Improvement Association and other Cranford organizations held various water carnivals and regattas on the river. <ref>http://cranfordhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Heritage-Broadside6.pdf<ref> According to an 1886 ] article, the carnival's decorations illuminated the night: "nearly a hundred boats will be gaily decorated with ], the river banks will be illuminated with colored lights, the bridges will be lit up, there will be bands of music and a display of fireworks." <ref>Venetian Carnival at Cranford NJ, Charles Leo Abry, Part 2, NY Times, Aug. 3, 1886, pg. 6</ref>

The Rahway was once host to a variety of sawmills and gristmills. ] is the last remaining mill on the Rahway.

==Flooding, environmental rehab and flood control==
The highly urbanized Rahway River watershed in New Jersey suffers from frequent flooding due to extensive development and destruction of riparian wetlands and floodplains.

Floods have caused damage to houses, businesses, municipal facilities and public infrastructure. Portions of the Rahway River Basin have also suffered environmental degradation and opportunities exist for restoration.

The most damaging floods of record within the Rahway River Basin resulted from the storms of July 1938, May 1968, August 1971, August 1973, July 1975, June 1992, October 1996, July 1997, ] in September 1999 , ], and ] in August 2011. During the April 2007 storm, 70 to 100 homes suffered major damage to first floor and foundations. Union County and the Township of Cranford were declared federal disaster areas as a result of the April 2007 storm. As a result of Hurricane Irene, residents and business owners along the Rahway River have suffered extensive financial losses and personal hardship than in most severe prior storms.<ref>http://www.anjec.org/NJRivers-RahwayRiverWatershed.htm</ref>

Organizations fighting for flood control and protection of the Rahway River watershed include:

*The Mayors Council on Rahway River Watershed Flood Control. After Hurricane Irene in 2011, mayors of towns along the Rahway River established this organization to find solutions to flooding in the Watershed. <ref>http://www.cranford.com/uploads/township/flood/Rahway_River_Watershed_Needs_Statement.pdf

*The Cranford Flood Advisory Committee (CFAC) was formed as an official committee of the Township and has been active on current issues since mid 1997.<ref>http://cranford.com/fac/</ref>

<The Cranford Environmental Commission ("My Green Cranford") is a statutory board of seven regular Cranford-resident members and two alternates Cranford resident-members.<ref>http://www.mygreencranford.org/stormwater.html</ref>

*Rahway River Association. The purpose of the Rahway River Association is to protect and restore the Rahway River and its ecosystem. <ref>http://www.rahwayriver.org/

*Rahway River Watershed Storm Water Advisory Board.
With continued concerns about flooding, a regional board was formed in early 2013 to advise Rahway River Watershed towns and advocate for changes to ordinances and implementation of best storm water management practices that can protect water quality and reduce the quantity of uncontrolled runoff. <ref>http://www.nj.com/suburbannews/index.ssf/2013/02/rahway_river_watershed_storm_w.html

*1000 Rain Gardens. This initiative aims to develop, through public and private means, at least 1000 rain gardens in the Rahway River Watershed from West Orange in Essex County to Woodbridge in Middlesex County. <ref>https://www.facebook.com/1000RainGardensProject?fref=ts</ref>


==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 18:06, 21 November 2016

File:Map of the Rahway River Watershed in Northern New Jersey by the Rahway River Watershed Association.jpg
Map of the Rahway courtesy of the Rahway River Watershed Association
Looking northwest at City of Rahway water works, September 22, 2005

The Rahway River is a tributary of the Arthur Kill in Essex, Middlesex and Union Counties, New Jersey in the United States.

Part of the extended area of New York-New Jersey Harbor Estuary, draining part of the suburban and urbanized area of New Jersey west of Staten Island, New York, the river is approximately 24 mi (48 km) long. The upper reaches are lined with several urban parks while the mouth serves as an industrial access channel.

The river is the source of drinking water for the City of Rahway. Each spring, the river is stocked with approximately 6,000 trout.

The river is also the source of the name for the Rahway Valley Railroad which has a bridge over it on the Springfield/Union border.

The American painter Hugh Bolton Jones (1848–1927) depicts the Rahway River in his 1880s work "Spring," part of the collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Several landscape artists of the 19th century also painted the Rahway River's woodland scenes en plein air, including Frank Townsend Lent and Bruce Crane, who painted in Cranford, and the aforementioned Hugh Bolton Jones.

Route

Rahway River in Cranford, New Jersey.

The Rahway River rises in Essex County as two separate branches.

The two branches meet at Hobart Gap near Interstate 78, continuing south through the Union County communities of Springfield, Union, Cranford and Clark. In Rahway the river receives the Robinson's Branch and South Branch, which are approximately 10 mi (16 km) long. The South Branch starts in Roosevelt Park in Edison behind the Menlo Park Mall, and flows through Edison, Iselin, and Rahway. The river's mouth is at Arthur Kill between Carteret (on the south) and Linden (on the north) and opposite Port Mobil on Staten Island.

Rahway River Parkway

The Rahway River Parkway is a greenway of parkland that hugs the Rahway River and its tributaries. It was designed in the 1920s by the Olmsted Brothers firm, who were the sons of the landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.


The "Friends of Rahway River Parkway," a nonprofit group, has been formed exclusively to encourage and advocate for the preservation, restoration and enhancement of the Rahway River Parkway, in accord with the Olmsted design principles inherent in its origins, and to promote appropriate public enjoyment of the Parkway.



Parks along the Rahway

A map to the Rahway River parks is available.


  • Essex County
  • Union County, New Jersey
    • Springfield, New Jersey. Briant Park.
    • Westfield/Mountainside. Echo Lake Park is situated on a lake formed on Nomahegan Brook, a tributary of the Rahway.
    • Cranford, New Jersey. Further information: Cranford, New Jersey § ParksThe Cranford section of the Rahway River Parkway follows the banks of the meandering Rahway River as it flows south through Lenape Park, Nomahegan Park, Hampton Park, MacConnell Park, the Cranford Canoe Club, Hanson Park, Sperry Park, Crane's Park, Droeschers Mill Park, and Mohawk Park.
    • Clark/Winfield
    • Rahway, New Jersey. Rahway River Park abuts a graveyard along the river here.
    • Linden, New Jersey Hawk Rise Sanctuary. Hawk Rise Sanctuary is a 95-acre ecological preserve and wetland complex in Linden bordering the Rahway River, which was carved out of a former landfill through the combined efforts of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, the city of Linden and the New Jersey Audubon Society.. The boardwalk trail system winds through the Hawk Rise forest, continues along the edge of the former Linden Landfill, and leads to an overlook viewing of the Rahway River and adjacent marshes. It has been open to the public since 2012, bringing scenic walking trails and bird-watching opportunities to a natural area once gated off and hidden behind a variety of industrial land uses. The site contains a surprising diversity of habitats for its relatively small size and urban location. These include forested wetlands, vernal pools, grasslands, shrublands, salt marsh, mudflats, a large pond, and the tidal Rahway River. 163 bird species have been spotted there.
  • Middlesex County
    • Carteret. Joseph Medwick Memorial Park. Named for famous baseball player Joe Medwick,this park offers scenic river vistas plus ball fields, tennis courts, playgrounds & picnic groves.


Recreation along the Rahway

The Cranford Canoe Club, built in 1908, rents canoes and kayaks for trips on the Rahway River in Cranford. The Rahway Yacht Club, founded in 1904, is a private boating club docked on the river. Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

The Rahway was once host to a variety of sawmills and gristmills. Droeschers Mill is the last remaining mill on the Rahway.

Flooding, environmental rehab and flood control

The highly urbanized Rahway River watershed in New Jersey suffers from frequent flooding due to extensive development and destruction of riparian wetlands and floodplains.

Floods have caused damage to houses, businesses, municipal facilities and public infrastructure. Portions of the Rahway River Basin have also suffered environmental degradation and opportunities exist for restoration.

The most damaging floods of record within the Rahway River Basin resulted from the storms of July 1938, May 1968, August 1971, August 1973, July 1975, June 1992, October 1996, July 1997, Tropical Storm Floyd in September 1999 , April 2007 Nor’easter, and Hurricane Irene in August 2011. During the April 2007 storm, 70 to 100 homes suffered major damage to first floor and foundations. Union County and the Township of Cranford were declared federal disaster areas as a result of the April 2007 storm. As a result of Hurricane Irene, residents and business owners along the Rahway River have suffered extensive financial losses and personal hardship than in most severe prior storms.

Organizations fighting for flood control and protection of the Rahway River watershed include:

  • The Mayors Council on Rahway River Watershed Flood Control. After Hurricane Irene in 2011, mayors of towns along the Rahway River established this organization to find solutions to flooding in the Watershed. Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

<The Cranford Environmental Commission ("My Green Cranford") is a statutory board of seven regular Cranford-resident members and two alternates Cranford resident-members.

  • Rahway River Association. The purpose of the Rahway River Association is to protect and restore the Rahway River and its ecosystem. Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

See also

References

  1. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Watershed Management Area 7, accessed December 1, 2006
  2. United Water Rahway data on City of Rahway Municipal Water Utility, accessed October 11, 2006
  3. NJDEP Division of Fish & Wildlife 2006 Spring Trout Allocations and In-Season Stocking Days, accessed October 11, 2006
  4. Artist:H. Bolton Jones (1848–1927) Date:1885–86 Medium:Oil on canvas Dimensions:24 1/4 x 40 1/8 in. (61.6 x 101.9 cm) Classification:Paintings Credit Line:Gift of George I. Seney, 1887 Accession Number:87.8.9 http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/11279 http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/11279
  5. American Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: A catalogue of works. Edited by Kathleen Luhrs (noting that Hugh Bolton Jones used the Rahway River as a subject); In "Souvenir of Cranford" (1894), Lent discusses his experiences with other landscape artists depicting the Rahway River in Cranford, New Jersey:

    The first the writer ever heard of Cranford was back in 1880, when his artist friend Bruce Crane (1857–1937)] told him that he was packing up his sketching apparatus and impedimenta preparatory to going to sketch in the neighborhood of Cranford, which he considered one of the most delightfully picturesque sections of country anywhere around or near New York City. The National Academy of Design, as well as other metropolitan art exhibitions, have contained many charming landscapes by such men as Bruce Crane and Hugh Bolton Jones, the material for which was gathered in Union County."

  6. Paths, Trails and Greenways: Rahway River, Union County, New Jersey. Accessed November 7, 2016.
  7. Historic Olmsted Design, Friends of Rahway River Parkway. Accessed November 7, 2016.
  8. http://www.rahwayriverparkway.org/
  9. Parks along the Rahway River Parkway https://goo.gl/maps/bg6c4K3RyYK2.
  10. The Inception of a Parkway, Friends of Rahway River Parkway. Accessed November 7, 2016.
  11. http://www.njaudubon.org/SectionHawkRiseSanctuary/Introduction.aspx
  12. http://ebird.org/content/nj/news/birds-of-lindens-hawk-rise-sanctuary/
  13. http://www.anjec.org/NJRivers-RahwayRiverWatershed.htm
  14. http://www.mygreencranford.org/stormwater.html

External links

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