by Jeff Johnson Jr.
Here's a Jersey factoid that is becoming less well-known with each generation: For a good part of the 20th century, Lawrence Township was a critical—at times crucial—part of the U.S. telecommunications infrastructure.
From an 812-acre plot of land that is now part of Mercer County Park Northwest, AT&T routed all outbound transatlantic telephone communications through its Overseas Transmission Facility, just off of Cold Soil Road in the northern part of the township.
Today, wildflowers grow and deer graze where once so many telephone transmission masts stood that local residents called it "The Pole Farm."
Mercer County Park Northwest now comprises more than 1,600 acres of what the county park commission bills as "Passive Recreation Space." I'm guessing that means they largely anticipate allowing the land to return to nature, as it has since AT&T dismantled all of its equipment and demolished the associated structures there in 1975.
But from the photographs above and below in this entry, I'm sure you'll agree: It's a concept that has a lot of merit.
The park is open to the public and free, and, as its website indicates, the land is perfect for hiking, biking, horseback riding, photography, and even cross-country skiing.
The county reports that an engineering and landscape architecture firm has been hired to help design the park, but that nature will remain the focus.
Directions and contact information are available from the Mercer County Parks Commission.
Photo by Ulrike Johnson

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