



Branch Brook Park is distinguished by being the first county park to be opened for public use in the United States. It has been placed on both the New Jersey (1980) and National (1981) Registers of Historic Places. Located in the City of Newark and bordered at the southern end by U.S. Route 280, the park crosses Bloomfield Avenue, Park Avenue, and Heller Parkway, terminating near the Newark/Belleville line.
The park is nearly 4 miles long and averages 1/4 mile in width. At 359.72 acres, it is the largest developed park in the County. It features a combination of open meadowland and small patches of woodland on gently rolling terrain. Named for a branch brook that flowed through the valley into the Passaic River, the park was originally intended to remain for passive recreation, but today is used largely for athletics activities as well as strolling, birdwatching and more passive activities.
More than 2,000 cherry trees that blossom during April are greater both in variety and number than the famed Washington, D.C., display--the result of a 1927 gift from Mrs. Felix Fuld and the Bamberger family. At its height the Cherry Blossom Festival attracts over 10,000 people a day. In 1895, the same year the New Jersey State Legislature authorized creation of the Essex County Park Commission, a former Civil War Army training ground was dedicated to "park use." A large part of the land was a dismal marsh known as Old Blue Jay Swamp. To add to the dismal air of the swamp, bleak, unhealthy tenements crowded in on parts of the area. The swamp water was used for both drinking and sewage disposal, one of the sources of cholera epidemics that plagued 19th century Newark. In sharp contrast, the southern portion of the proposed park contained a circular reservoir basin that supplied clean, fresh water to a "private" association of Newark citizens.
In July of 1895 the City of Newark transferred approximately 60 acres of this land to the Essex County Park Commission, at a cost of $350,687. "Reservoir Park" became the nucleus of Branch Brook Park. Additional acquisitions extending the park northward were aided by the generosity of "several public spirited Newark families," such as the Ballantine Family who donated 32 acres of their property. Another 50 plus acres were given by Z.M. Keene, William A. Righter and the Messrs. Heller. The Park doubled in size through acquisitions and purchases between 1924 and 1929. Branch Brook Park, the first county park in the United States became one of the largest "city" parks in the country.
The public contributed in 1898 by voting a 1.5 million dollar appropriation for the continuation of construction work begun in 1895. Old Blue Jay Swamp was transformed into a lake, flower gardens, and expanses of lawns by 1900. The firm of John Bogart and Nathan F. Barrett had been hired in 1895, to provide plans and advise for development of the park. Their design was romantic in style, and was dominated by geometrical patterned gardens and arbors. In 1898, Robert Ballantine presented the park with a handsome beaux-arts entrance gateway erected at the corner of Lake Street and Ballantine Parkway. In 1900, the cornerstone for Sacred Heart Cathedral was laid and in the same year, the firm of Frederick Law Olmsted was retained to revise the original plans for the park. It was refined into more naturalistic lines with gracefully curving paths and roadways. One of the outstanding aspects of the design was the concert area in the southern portion bordering Branch Brook Lake. Directly across the lake on a projection of land known as Meeker Mound, the Olmsted firm built an octagonal gazebo. The greenhouse, now Maintenance Garage, was constructed in 1910.
A proposal for the erection of a new administration building was approved in 1914, when the N.J. Legislature passed a bill that included the necessary $100,000. The exterior was described as Italian in character with brick and terra cotta, with paintings on canvas just under the eaves of the tile roof. The architect was Harold Van Buren Magonigle from New York. In the 1920's Harmon Hendricks presented the Park Commission a gift of 20 acres of land that extended the park northward into Belleville and was eventually made into an 18-hole golf course. During WWI and WWII the park was used as a tent city for the Army where they held training exercises and recruited volunteers from the area. Once it was a landing site for the US Postal Service. Bi-winged airplanes carrying mail landed on a short field within the park where bails of hay rimmed the end of the runway to prevent accidents. The old Morris Canal that ran alongside the Park, from Newark to the Delaware River, was abandoned and became the Newark subway. With two stops on its western edge, at Davenport Avenue and Heller Parkway, the subway became an important linkage to the Park.
Distinguishing Features:As a living thing, a park is always changing. Trees grow tall. Strong winds and storms shear branches to the ground. Seeds travel from distant shores to settle into the fertile soil at the lake's edge, and grow into unintended plants.
But how different a park is from a natural area! In nature, plants wax and wane, grow to maturity, crowd one another out of existence, or are trampled by human intervention. Though, inevitably, the cycle of death and rebirth is repeated again and again, we notice little - unless devastation occurs. A park, however, is planned and managed to please the eye. Its trees, shrubs, features, and buildings have all been carefully and systematically placed in order to give us, the viewer, a sense of nature, and a sense of peace - all without leaving the city. We enjoy parks so much because they capture within defined boundaries what we are seeking - a breath of fresh air, the upright majesty of the forest, a bird skimming the water's surface. It is as if we can see nature in its idealized form.
source: branchbrookpark.org