Thursday, August 6, 2015

Here are the top 10 schools in NJ:

#1
5000 KOZLOSKI RD, FREEHOLD, NJ 07728
#2
765 NEWMAN SPRINGS RD, LINCROFT, NJ 07738
#3
504 ROUTE 46 WEST, TETERBORO, NJ 07608
#4
123 COLES ST, JERSEY CITY, NJ 07302
#5
200 HACKENSACK AVE, HACKENSACK, NJ 07601
#6
2325 HECK AVE, NEPTUNE, NJ 07753
#7
151 MOORE ST, PRINCETON, NJ 08540
#8
10 WASHINGTON PLACE, NEWARK, NJ 07102
#10
Elizabeth High School                                                   
447 RICHMOND ST, ELIZABETH, NJ 07202

Monday, August 3, 2015

The Jersey Devil....

Monmouth and Ocean county home prices increased 8% and 10% respectively, even though the Jersey Devil reigns supreme. Below is the story of the Jersey devil.


Legend has it that in 1735, a Pines resident known as Mother Leeds found herself pregnant for the thirteenth time. (Leeds is the name of one of New Jersey’s earliest settlers, and many descendants of the Leeds family can still be found throughout NJ to this day.) Mother Leeds was not living a wealthy lifestyle by any means. Her husband was a drunkard who made few efforts to provide for his wife and twelve children. Reaching the point of absolute exasperation upon learning of her thirteenth child, she raised her hands to the heavens and proclaimed “Let this one be a devil!”
Mother Leeds went into labor a few months later, on a tumultuously stormy night, no longer mindful of the curse she had utter previously regarding her unborn child. Her children and husband huddled together in one room of their Leeds Point home while local midwives gathered to deliver the baby in another. By all accounts the birth went routinely, and the thirteenth Leeds child was a seemingly normal baby boy.
Within minutes however, Mother Leeds’s unholy wish of months before began to come to fruition. The baby started to change, and metamorphosed right before her very eyes. Within moments it transformed from a beautiful newborn baby into a hideous creature unlike anything the world had ever seen. The wailing infant began growing at an incredible rate. It sprouted horns from the top of its head and talon-like claws tore through the tips of its fingers. Leathery bat-like wings unfurled from its back, and hair and feathers sprouted all over the child’s body. Its eyes began glowing bright red as they grew larger in the monster’s gnarled and snarling face. The creature savagely attacked its own mother, killing her, then turned its attention to the rest of the horrified onlookers who witnessed its tempestuous transformation. It flew at them, clawing and biting, voicing unearthly shrieks the entire time. It tore the midwives limb from limb, maiming some and killing others.
The monster then knocked down the door to the next room where its own father and siblings cowered in fear and attacked them all, killing as many as it could. Those who survived to tell the tale then watched in horror as the rotten beast sprinted to the chimney and flew up it, destroying it on the way and leaving a pile of rubble in its wake. The creature then made good its escape into the darkness and desolation of the Pine Barrens, where it has lived ever since. To this day the creature, known varyingly as the Leeds Devil and the Jersey Devil, claims the Pines as its own, and terrorizes any who are unfortunate enough to encounter it.

The Jersey Devil

See more stories of the Jersey Devil tomorrow.

Friday, July 31, 2015

 
Portia Richardson:
Office: 732-549-1098x233
Cell: 973-495-5780
Fax: 732-548-3478


 
Metlar-Bodine House....
The Metlar-Bodine House is a stunning, two-story, Colonial home in Piscataway built in 1728 by wharf and storehouse owner Peter Bodine. The home changed hands several times before businessman George Metlar bought it in the 1890s. Metlar and his next-door neighbor, John Field, had a long-standing hatred of one another -- so long-standing that no one knows what caused the feud. Legend has it that George Metlar's hatred for Field carried over into the next life. Visitors report hearing unexplained noises and feeling blasts of icy cold air whenever anyone mentions Field's name.
The Metlar Bodine House is located in Piscataway Township.

 

Burrowes Mansion...
Located in Matawan, Burrowes Mansion is an early-18th century home known for its Georgian-style architecture and protective ghost. The original owners of Burrowes Mansion were American army Maj. John Burrowes Jr. and his wife, Margaret. In 1776, British troops stormed the mansion to find Maj. Burrowes, who already had fled. Margaret Burrowes blocked the entryway to the home and boldly refused when a British soldier demanded her shawl to staunch his wounds. The soldier retaliated by stabbing Margaret through the chest with his bayonet, killing her almost instantly. Visitors report seeing Margaret's ghost standing at the doorway of Burrowes Mansion, guarding her home against intruders.
Burrowes Mansion is located in Matawan, NJ
.

 
Here are some more creepy houses in NJ
RINGWOOD MANOR.......
Ringwood Manor (ringwoodmanor.com) in Ringwood is a 51-room Victorian mansion set on 479 acres in upstate New Jersey. During the Revolutionary War, Ringwood Manor was home to Col. Robert Erskine, who was George Washington's first cartographer and Surveyor General. Though Erskine died in 1780, his ghost is often seen roaming the grounds of Ringwood Manor with a lit lantern in hand. Staff members who maintain the manor house at Ringwood State Park also report mysterious footsteps, locked doors that open by themselves and a cold, angry presence in Mrs. Erskine's bedroom.
Ringwood manor is located in Passaic County.
 
Today we found one of the Scariest houses in New Jersey.
Hancock House
Built in 1734, the Hancock House (www.state.nj.us) in Hancocks Bridge, New Jersey is an imposing brick structure that was the site of the 1778 Hancock's Bridge massacre. In the early morning of March 21, 1778, British army officer John Graves Simcoe led loyalist Queen's Rangers across Alloway Creek and into Hancock House, where they slaughtered as many as 40 members of the local Patriot militia. Legend has it that the men begged for their lives as they were bludgeoned and bayoneted death by loyalist soldiers that had been their friends and neighbors before the war. Ghosts of the slain Patriot soldiers are said to patrol the grounds of Hancock House and visitors report hearing spine-tingling screams and moans. Would you want to live there???
Hancock's Bridge is a census designated place and unincorporated community located within Lower Alloways Creek Township, in Salem County, New Jersey, United States.