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John G. Ackerson House

Houses in Bergen County, New JerseyHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in New JerseyNational Register of Historic Places in Bergen County, New JerseyNew Jersey Register of Historic PlacesNew Jersey Registered Historic Place stubs
Park Ridge, New Jersey
JOHN G. ACKERSON HOUSE, PARK RIDGE, BERGEN COUNTY, NJ
JOHN G. ACKERSON HOUSE, PARK RIDGE, BERGEN COUNTY, NJ

The John G. Ackerson House is located in Park Ridge, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article John G. Ackerson House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

John G. Ackerson House
Maple Avenue,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.028333333333 ° E -74.041944444444 °
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Address

Park Ridge High School Baseball Field

Maple Avenue
07656
New Jersey, United States
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JOHN G. ACKERSON HOUSE, PARK RIDGE, BERGEN COUNTY, NJ
JOHN G. ACKERSON HOUSE, PARK RIDGE, BERGEN COUNTY, NJ
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Park Ridge High School

Park Ridge High School is a six-year comprehensive community public high school with an integrated two-year middle school located in the borough of Park Ridge in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, serving students in seventh through twelfth grades as the lone secondary school of the Park Ridge Public Schools. The school is accredited by the New Jersey Department of Education. The school is located on the corner of Park Avenue and Pascack Road in the center of Park Ridge. The school is one of the three public schools in the town of Park Ridge, along with East Brook Elementary School and West Ridge Elementary School, which both serve grades K-6. Park Ridge High School's building has two sections: the "main" building of three floors and the "A-wing" of two. The main building contains a multipurpose venue known as the "little theater," which hosts arts events such as the annual Middle School Variety Show, including seasonal theatrical productions. The A-wing branches off into two gymnasiums through its lower floor. As of the 2021–22 school year, the school had an enrollment of 548 students and 59.4 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 9.2:1. There were 26 students (4.7% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and none eligible for reduced-cost lunch.Park Ridge offers several Advanced Placement (AP) classes, run by the College Board. Average SAT scores for the class of 2013-14 were 528 in Critical reading, 559 in Mathematics and 546 on the Writing component for a composite score of 1633, compared to statewide averages of 496 / 521 / 497 respectively, and a composite score of 1514. There were 59.0% of students who met the standard of a 1550 composite score on the SAT, which College Board research shows to be indicative of college success, vs. 44.6% statewide.

Woodcliff Lake Reservoir

Woodcliff Lake is the name of a reservoir in Woodcliff Lake and portions of Hillsdale and Park Ridge, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. It was created circa 1903 by damming the Pascack Brook and is also fed by the Bear Brook which joins the Pascack at the reservoir. The creation of the lake led what had been the Borough of Woodcliff to change its name to Woodcliff Lake, to match the name of the new reservoir. The reservoir is owned by Suez North America, a private utility. The reservoir has a capacity of approximately 871 million US gallons (3,300,000 m3) of water. Water released into the Pascack Brook flows downstream into the Oradell Reservoir. When the water levels become low, the old stone bridge over the Pascack Brook becomes visible just south of the causeway. Several species of fish inhabit the reservoir including largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, carp, pumpkinseed, bluegill, brown and yellow bullheads, as well as large schools of both yellow and white perch. Fishing is restricted to those with a valid New Jersey Fishing License and a Watershed Permit obtained by payment of a yearly fee to the owner of the reservoir, Suez North America. Numerous waterfowl including various species of ducks and heron also live on and around the reservoir.The reservoir may be crossed at two points, either by a narrow road over the dam, originally Dam Road and changed to Church Road when Christ Lutheran Church was built at the Pascack Road entrance, or a higher traffic county road over a causeway, Woodcliff Avenue. On the eastern side of the reservoir is the New Jersey Transit Pascack Valley Line, with the Woodcliff Lake station stop at Woodcliff Avenue. On March 11, 2003, Governor of New Jersey Jim McGreevey visited the nearby Lake Tappan reservoir and proposed protecting it, Woodcliff Lake and their tributaries with Category 1 water purity status.