Special Preserves Announcement
While recognizing that open spaces are vital resources for health and wellness, HLT reminds visitors to adhere to the following protocols to ensure the safety and well being of everyone: -- Do not [...]
While recognizing that open spaces are vital resources for health and wellness, HLT reminds visitors to adhere to the following protocols to ensure the safety and well being of everyone: -- Do not [...]
Hunterdon Land Trust preserved 127 acres of the Charlie Brown Christmas Tree Farm in Holland Township in 2017 to ensure it would remain farmland for generations to come. This farm is also the [...]
To offer a safe shopping experience, Hunterdon Land Trust has created a list of market safety protocols during the Covid-19 outbreak. We ask you to review these protocols before visiting us. Copies will [...]
Aerial view of the newly preserved Goeckeler Farm. Photo by Jarred Goeckeler. KINGWOOD -- You would be hard pressed to find a more peaceful place than William and Susan Goeckelers’ [...]
Horseshoe Bend Preserve in Kingwood Township. One thing that unites us as a nation is land: Americans strongly support protecting the places they love. Since 1996, Hunterdon Land Trust has [...]
In the September 1891 edition of The Jerseyman, a locally published historical magazine, author Elias Voseller jotted down the below retrospect of the family of Johan Philip Kase (later Anglicized to Case). We [...]
Ariel Hylton created this podcast tour of the Dvoor Farm House for her Girl Scout Gold Project. She is the granddaughter of Melvin Dvoor and great-granddaughter of Jacob Dvoor, who purchased the farm [...]
(Continuing our series on the history of the Dvoor Farm by looking at the last Case family member to farm there. Above: Catherine Pownall Ballance Case, wife of John Case.) The historic Case-Dvoor [...]
You might not expect two New Jersey farmers visiting the Midwest to get chased down by reporters for “a good story,” but that’s exactly what happened to George and Jacob Dvoor in early [...]
If you lived in Hunterdon County in the late 1700s, you likely would have attended several "frolics" a year. Frolics were a social custom at that time. The basic premise was if your [...]