| Here you will find comprehensive
information regarding real estate in South Orange. Being
that I have been a South Orange Realtor for many years
I can offer some of my sound advice regarding buying
or selling a home in South Orange. You may also find
mls listings in South Orange as well as any local information
in South Orange. Over the years South Orange Real Estate
has grown in high demand, and my expertise in the area
will help you become more familiar with the surroundings
of this beautiful town. I am familiar with listings
in South Orange as well as negotiated deals for those
looking to buy homes in South Orange. So whether you
are looking to buy a house in South Orange, sell a house
in South Orange, or just research local information
about South Orange you will find everything you need
with Sue "Suki" Marsh-Shikiar your expert South Orange Realtor.
If you are looking for a home for sale in the South
Orange area, I can help. I have years of experience
in this area of New Jersey. If you just want some information
about South Orange you came to the right place. The
following is a small featurette of South Orange taken
from the South
Orange Official Website.
South
Orange is a 2.8 square-mile community spread out east of New Jersey’s
South Mountain. Thought fully developed, South Orange retains some vestiges
of village life, including gas street lighting. Utility lines are in the back
yards, rather than cluttering streets. The town of 16,390 people has an active
downtown business section and several popular restaurants.
The Montrose Section of town provides the setting for mostly large, vintage
homes, replete with interesting and varied split-levels, sitting atop South
Orange is an elegant setting. S9outh Mountain offers diversity in housing, with
most homes dating back to the turn of century, set along the side of the mountain.
These three areas offer homes from $300,000 to the upper ranges. There are also
homes available from the low $100’s in pleasant neighborhoods around town.
South Orange shares a quality school system with Maplewood. There are six elementary
schools two middle schools and one high school and a reputation for academic
excellence. Columbia high School offers advanced placement, college prep and
vocational courses, as well as classes in filmmaking and journalism. Columbia
offers 25 clubs, from astronomy to chess and 23 varsity sports.
Sixty-two acres of parkland, two thirds of which consist of Meadowland Park
and adjacent Cameron Field, Provide five baseball diamonds, 15 lighted tennis
courts, a soccer field, duck pond, playgrounds, Baird Community Center and a
fine outdoor pool complex and favorite sledding hill.
Every four years in a non-partisan election a village president and six trustees
are elected.
South Orange is thirty-five minutes from Manhattan via NJ Transit train or bus.
South Orange is a quaint residential community boasting authentic Tudor, Colonial,
and Victorian homes, streets dotted with gaslights, beautiful parks, and a bustling
Village center. The history of our town dates back to May 21, 1666, when Connecticut
settlers landed on the shores of the Passaic River. Guided by Captain Robert
Treat and Lieutenant Samuel Swaine, the group purchased land, now known as Newark,
from the Lenni Lenape Indians on July 11, 1666. Those families wishing to farm
moved westward into South Orange and surrounding areas. In 1678, the Lenapes
sold the settlers a second parcel of land running from the East Branch of the
Rahway River to the mountain top.
South Orange Avenue, an Indian trail, served as the main thoroughfare. But
in 1705, road statutes required landowners to maintain the first primitive highways.
These included Main Street and Valley and Ridgewood roads. Washington and his
troops often traversed the latter during the American Revolution.
The mode of transportation graduated from horseback, to ox-cart, to stage coach.
Then in 1836, the Morris and Essex Railroad developed a single track between
the Village and Orange and operated a horse-drawn cart. A year later the line
was extended and two cars were pulled by a wood-burning steam locomotive. The
advent of the railroad established South Orange as a suburb of Newark and a
summer resort. Just after the railroad was continued through to Hoboken in 1868,
the Village began its rapid transformation from a rude settlement of farms and
mills to a polished residential railroad suburb of New York and Newark.
Swamps were drained, roads were constructed and gas lines were laid in the
1890s. Sewers and running water were later added. Street lamps in the town's
center burned sperm oil until 1860 when gas service became available. Electric
power was brought into the Village about 1888, although most of the streets
are still lit by gas lamps. The first telephone exchange was opened in Orange
on December 6, 1879. In 1899, a Village central office was established.
The transition of South Orange from vast farm lands to a prestigious residential
community is due in large part to the vision of one man, New York attorney John
Gorham Vose. Taken with the rich mountain scenery, he purchased a home on Scotland
Road in 1858. In 1862, he began to buy large plots of land to begin his conversion.
As building got underway, Villagers took great interest in the development of
each magnificent home. In just a few years, 175 acres between Scotland Road
and Center Street were complete. Vose christened the area Montrose. Other successful
businessmen, Turrell, Kingman, Connett, Mead, Speir, and Mayhew, also bought
farms, carved out streets, and helped change the face of the community.
The Village Hall, built in 1894, housed the fire department until 1930 when
it was moved to Sloan and First Streets. The police department then moved from
its 1872 building just west of the railroad into the newly vacated space in
Village Hall. In March, 1972, a separate police station and Municipal Court
building on South Orange Avenue was completed.

The first U.S. Post Office was opened in 1841 in Freeman's Store at 71 South
Orange Avenue but the Postmaster reported "receipts so dreadfully small"
that business was suspended. In 1843, another office was opened to serve the
thirty families nearby. In all, six different sites were used until 1937 when
our present first class Post Office was opened on Vose Avenue in a new building
of its own. Free mail delivery started in 1899.
Built about 1680, the Stone House is the oldest in the Village and is still
standing on South Orange Avenue near Grove Road. The colonial house at 167 North
Ridgewood Road was built by Henry Squier in 1774 and acquired by William Redmond
when he bought the Squier farm in 1850. Later the house was leased to a dairyman
named Flood who pastured his cows in what is now Meadowland Park. Flood's Hill
in the park, used for winter coasting, was named for this family. William Redmond
built the brownstone mansion for his home which is used today by the Orange
Lawn Tennis Club. Another landmark, said to have been built around 1830 and
standing until after 1881 when it was destroyed by fire, was The Mountain House,
a fashionable water-cure supervised by two physicians, where spring water piped
down the mountain to it, was thought beneficial. A large wooden structure with
two wings, set in spacious grounds on Ridgewood Road, at the foot of the present
Glenside Road, the hotel accommodated 150 guests. Mr. Lord of Lord & Taylor
owned it in 1850 and leased it to G. Baird. The Eclipse Stage Line operated
in 1830 between the hotel and Newark. Today the sole reminders of the resort
are Mountain Station and Mountain House Road, both established to accommodate
hordes of visitors who once flocked here.
South
Orange was part of Newark until 1806, when what is now the Oranges and Maplewood
were set off as "Orange Township." The name Orange came into use in
the second half of the 18th century, and was officially adopted by a meeting
of the inhabitants in 1780. The name South Orange first appeared in print in
a newspaper ad in 1793 in "Wood's Gazette." It replaced such old names
as Chestnut Hill and the Mountain Plantation.
Village government has changed dramatically from theocracy to democracy since
the 1600's. In 1776, there were only a cluster of houses, a grist mill, a black-smith
shop, a store or two and a tavern but South Orange inhabitants were united in
defense of home and country. In 1872, civic indifference reached a peak when
only 235 votes were cast in a presidential election. Population has steadily
increased: 7,200 in 1920, 13,000 in 1928 and over 16,300 in 1995. The creation
of the South Orange Township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature in 1861,
led to the granting of the Village Charter in 1869, but not until 1872 was it
given authorization to levy taxes and borrow money. In 1904, complete separation
of Village and Township was effected by action of the State Legislature, after
South Orange had agreed to remain in the school district. A copy of the 1869
Charter and its amendments, variances and supplements was printed in 1906. In
November, 1977, South Orange voters passed a new Charter for South Orange and
changed its name to The Township of South Orange Village.
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