List of New Jersey Forest Fire Service fire towers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The New Jersey Forest Fire Service erected the "Four Mile Tower", a simple tripod of wooden poles, in 1910. It was replaced by the Lebanon Station.[1]

In order to aid its efforts in wildland fire suppression and fire protection, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service operates a system of 21 fire towers at locations throughout the state of New Jersey in the United States.[2] From these fire towers, using an instrument called the Osborne Fire Finder, or an alidade, and topographical maps, trained fire observers are able to spot and triangulate the location of possible wildfires. After ascertaining the location, the observer will file a "smoke report" which will be investigated and appropriate action taken by a local firewarden.[2]

Founded in 1906, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service is the largest firefighting department within New Jersey and is an agency within the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry, a division of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. With 85 full-time professional firefighters (career civil service positions), and approximately 2,000 trained part-time on-call wildland firefighters throughout the state, its mission is to protect "life and property, as well as the state's natural resources, from wildfire."[3] The agency covers a primary response area of 3,719,638 acres (1,505,284 ha) comprising 77% of the state's land area and administered by three regional divisions. This primary response area includes the state's rural and suburban areas, as well as its public state parks and forests. In 2014, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service responded to 1,063 wildfire events that destroyed 6,692 acres (2,708 ha). The service conducted controlled burns or prescribed burns on 15,326 acres (6,202 ha) statewide.[4]

The first fire lookout towers were often privately constructed during the late nineteenth century—many by large-tract landowners or corporations. However, after the creation of the Forest Fire Service, the state began erecting towers—some temporary, others permanent. The oldest erected by the Forest Fire Service that is in continuing operation is Culvers Station (then called the Normanook Fire Tower), first used in 1908, along the ridge of Kittatinny Mountain near Culver's Lake and the Culver's Gap.[a] Many of the state's fire towers were built during the Great Depression by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). More were erected during World War II, to aid both the Forest Fire Service and to the Aircraft Warning Service, operating from mid-1941 to mid-1944, in which fire observers were assigned additional duty as enemy aircraft spotters. During World War II, the Lakewood Station was "used to listen to German U-boat communications in the Atlantic Ocean 12 miles to the east".[6] Fire towers are located at key points of observation and on diverse terrain from northern New Jersey's mountain-and-valley terrain to the comparatively flat and low-elevation coastal plains in the south and central sections of the state. Today, these 21 towers provide New Jersey an inexpensive and effective first response system that aids the New Jersey Forest Fire Service in quickly suppressing and in preventing damage caused by reported wildfires. The Forest Fire Service estimates that 25 percent of wildfires within the state every year are first spotted by a lookout.[7]

A number of these fire towers are listed on the National Historic Lookout Register.

Fire towers in active service

US# NJ# Image Tower Name Elevation Height NJFFS Division
Sections covered[8]
Location of tower County Notes
441Culvers Station
(previously Normanook Fire Tower)
1,509 feet (460 m)47 feet (14 m)Div. A
Sec. A1 (PA, NY)
Stokes State Forest,
Sandyston Township
41°11.270′N 74°45.988′W / 41.187833°N 74.766467°W / 41.187833; -74.766467 (Culvers Station)
Sussex[9][10]
452-Ramapo Station
(previously Wind-beam Lookout)
1,011 feet (308 m)50 feet (15 m)Div. A
Sec. A2 (A5&NY)
Ramapo Mountain State Forest
N41°03.521' W074°15.330'
Passaic[9][11]
2446Bearfort Station1,331 feet (406 m)68 feet (21 m)Div. A
Sec. A2, A5 (A1)
Bearfort Mountain
West Milford Township
41°06.254′N 74°25.044′W / 41.104233°N 74.417400°W / 41.104233; -74.417400 (Bearfort Station)
Passaic[9][12]
2468-Budd Lake Station
(previously 95 Mile Tree Lookout)
1,182 feet (360 m)60 feet (18 m)Div. A
Sec. A6, A3,(A4, A8, A7)
Mount Olive Township
N40°53.704' W074°45.026'
Morris[9][13]
2479Catfish Station1,555 feet (474 m)60 feet (18 m)Div. A
Sec. A3 (A6, PA)
Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area
near Blairstown
N41°02.855' W074°58.347'
Warren[9][14]
55312-Greystone Station909 feet (277 m)92 feet (28 m)Div. A
Sec. A7 A8,(A5, B10)
Union Hill, Denville
N40°51.341' W074°30.690'
Morris[9][15]
56316-Milton Station1,341 feet (409 m)80 feet (24 m)Div. A
Sec. A4(A5)
Morris County Park
Jefferson Township
N41°00.520' W074°32.433'
Morris[9][16]
2435Bass River Station47 feet (14 m)80 feet (24 m)Div. B
Sec. B4, B2, C7
Bass River State Forest
39°36.694′N 74°26.197′W / 39.611567°N 74.436617°W / 39.611567; -74.436617 (Bass River Station)
Burlington[6][17]
56417Apple Pie Hill Station179 feet (55 m)60 feet (18 m)Div. B
Sec. B1, B2, B3
Tabernacle Township
N39°48.443' W074°35.363'
Burlington[6][18]
56518-Batsto Station70 feet (21 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. B
Sec. B2(B4, C8, C6)
Wharton State Forest
N39°38.976' W074°38.567'
Burlington[6][19]
24810-Cedar Bridge Station204 feet (62 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. B
Sec. B7, B5, B4, B2
Lacey Township
N39°50.380' W074°22.836'
Ocean[6][20]
55413-Jamesburg Station
(previously Old Bridge Fire Tower)
48 feet (15 m)60 feet (18 m)Div. B
Sec. B10, A7 (B9, A8)
Thompson County Park
Monroe Township
N40°20.233' W074°26.318'
Middlesex[6][21]
55514-Lakewood Station136 feet (41 m)80 feet (24 m)Div. B
Sec. B7, B8, B9(B5, B6, B10)
Lakewood
N40°04.234' W074°13.674'
Ocean[6][22]
55615-Lebanon Station136 feet (41 m)80 feet (24 m)Div. B
Sec. B3, B6,(B5, B2)
Brendan T. Byrne State Forest
N39°53.531' W074°34.880'
Burlington[1][6]
56821-Medford Station141 feet (43 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. B
Sec. B1, B3(B2, C11)
Piper's Corner, Medford Township
N39°50.504' W074°47.375'
Burlington[6][23]
2457-Belleplain Station56 feet (17 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. C
Sec. C2(C4, C5, C6)
Belleplain State Forest
near Woodbine
N39°17.036' W074°50.948'
Cape May[24][25]
24911McKeetown Station75 feet (23 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. C
Sec. C6, C7,(C4, C5)
Egg Harbor Township
N39°26.304' W074°37.039'
Atlantic[24][26]
56619-Blue Anchor Station152 feet (46 m)86 feet (26 m)Div. C
Sec. C11, C6, C9
Winslow Township
N39°40.978' W074°53.348'
Camden[24][27]
56720-Dias Creek Station13 feet (4.0 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. C
Sec. C1, C2
Middle Township
N39°06.271' W074°52.699'
Cape May[24][28]
56922-Millville Station83 feet (25 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. C
Sec. C3, C10,(C9)
Millville
N39°23.939' W075°04.436'
Cumberland[24][29]
57023-Mizpah Station106 feet (32 m)100 feet (30 m)Div. C
Sec. C4, C5,(C9)
Mizpah, Hamilton Township
N39°28.989' W074°50.851'
Atlantic[24][30]

Fire towers not in service

US# NJ# Image Tower Name Elevation Height NJFFS Division
Sections covered
Location of tower County Notes
793"Batsto Mansion with Fire Tower on roof"Batsto Mansion House Station
(also known as Batsto Manor House Station)
72 feet (22 m)-Div. BBatsto Village State Historic Site
N39°38.604' W074°38.893'
Burlington[6][31]
834Green Pond Mountain Lookout
(or Picatinny Arsenal Tower)[b]
1,240 feet (380 m)-Div. APicatinny Arsenal
Jefferson Township
N40°57.003' W074°34.132'
Morris[8][33]

See also

References

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