Fair Lawn, New Jersey Fair Lawn, New Jersey Borough of Fair Lawn Map highlighting Fair Lawn's locale within Bergen County.

Inset: Bergen County's locale within New Jersey Map highlighting Fair Lawn's locale within Bergen County.

Enumeration Bureau map of Fair Lawn, New Jersey Enumeration Bureau map of Fair Lawn, New Jersey Fair Lawn is a borough in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, and a suburb positioned 10 miles from New York City.

Fair Lawn was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 6, 1924, as "Fairlawn," from portions of Saddle River Township. The name was taken from Fairlawn, David Acker's estate home, that was assembled in 1865 and later became the Fair Lawn Municipal Building. In 1933, the official spelling of the borough's name was split into its present two-word form as "Fair Lawn" Borough. Radburn, one of the first prepared communities in the United States, is an unincorporated improve positioned inside Fair Lawn and was established in 1929 as "a town for the motor age." Fair Lawn is home to a large number of commuters to New York City, to which it is connected by train from two barns stations on NJ Transit's Bergen County Line, the Radburn and Broadway stations.

Fair Lawn's motto is "A great place to visit and a better place to live." Fair Lawn has been rated as one of the top 10 best places to live in New Jersey. According to Nerdwallet, Fair Lawn witnessed a 5.3% increase in its working-age populace between 2009 and 2011. In the 1800s, these five lots became nine lesser lots, and three new roads - Fair Lawn Avenue, Lincoln Avenue, and Prospect Street - were constructed to encourage mobility between them.

In the 1900s, Fair Lawn inhabitants were bitter about the schooling situation as part of Saddle River Township; the schools were either dilapidated or too far away for Fair Lawn residents, and people felt that they were not getting schools comparable to the tax cash they were paying.

Fair Lawn inhabitants petitioned to the state, asking to incorporate as an autonomous borough, and in April 1924, the borough of Fair Lawn was voted into existence.

Fair Lawn, recognized for its rich history today, is home to the following eight sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places: Berdan House, 2407 Fair Lawn Avenue Cadmus-Folly House, 19-21 Fair Lawn Avenue Fair Lawn, Berdan, and Prospect Avenues, Plaza and Radburn Roads Peter Demarest House on Fair Lawn Avenue The borough borders Paterson (in Passaic County, athwart the Passaic River) to the West; Hawthorne athwart Lincoln Avenue to the West; Glen Rock athwart Harristown Road, Maple Avenue, the Northern border of the former Nabisco plant and its extension north of Garwood Road and Naugle Drive to the North; Ridgewood athwart the Saddle River to the Northeast; Paramus athwart the Saddle River to the East; Rochelle Park athwart another point in the Saddle River to the Southeast; with Saddle Brook athwart the two longer portions of South Broadway and their extensions through Rosario Court to the South; and Elmwood Park athwart the Bergen County Line, New Jersey Route 4 (Broadway), Cyril Avenue, and Willow Street to the South. Not only is it the biggest stretch of stores inside Fair Lawn, it also homes one of the highest densities of nail and beauty salons in the United States.

The Broadway District stretches from the Route 4 split with Route 208 and continues all through Fair Lawn and includes a several blocks of Elmwood Park before closing to Downtown Paterson via the Broadway Bus Terminal.

Central Fair Lawn is bounded by Morlot and Fair Lawn Avenues on the south and north, in the order given, by River Road on the west, and Route 208 on the east and northeast.

The borough's Municipal Complex, which homes its administrative, legal, financial, and police divisions, is positioned in this neighborhood, as are the Fair Lawn Public Library, Fair Lawn High School, and John A.

Dunkerhook, the Dark Corner (Donckerhoek in old Dutch), is on both sides of a former bridge over the Saddle River, in Fair Lawn and Paramus, near Fair Lawn Avenue.

Mc - Bride Industrial District is the region incorporating the Mc - Bride Industrial Park positioned between Fair Lawn Borough's border with Glen Rock and the Chandler Houses and Fair Lawn Commons communities.

It presently homes the former Nabisco cookie factory, which has played a primary part in not only Fair Lawn's identity itself, but also Glen Rock, Ridgewood, Paterson, Prospect Park, Haledon, Hawthorne, and Western Paramus near the Dunkerhook and Saddle River Areas, causing those venturing throughout these areas to coin the nickname "Cookie-City" as a general region term, describing the fragrance of freshly baked cookies that filled these areas on baking days.

In the past, the Mc - Bride Industrial District took up both sides of Route 208, stretching from Fair Lawn Avenue to the intersection at Maple Avenue and Harristown Road, running up to the Bergen County Line train tracks via the Radburn District, and housing companies such as Nabisco, Kodak, Maxell, and others.

With its safe and easy access to small-town businesses and schools, and Fair Lawn's biggest U.S.

The entrance street from Fair Lawn Avenue has an entrance pillar on each side displaying the name.

The neighborhood stretching along both sides of Saddle River Road in Fair Lawn is not officially titled but has its own character as another well-to-do enclave.

This neighborhood includes a portion of the Saddle River, Saddle River County Park, and Fair Lawn's easterly border with Paramus.

The neighborhood south of Morlot Avenue is referred to as the "Saddle River section", which borders Saddle Brook in addition to Paramus, and which shares access to the Saddle River as well as bike trails for leisure or access the Westfield Garden State Plaza mall in Paramus.

There also exist more intricate micro-neighborhoods inside macro-neighborhoods throughout the borough, such as "Fair Lawn Commons" (The Commons) off Route 208, positioned inside the Radburn Historical District, yet which has a separate, more well-to-do feel and undivided look and subculture; Radburn's El Dorado Village, which is known for its Eastern European immigrant residents; and just to its west, the "Chandler Houses".

Fair Lawn's newest neighborhood is Fair Lawn Promenade (The Promenade), a highly engaged mixed-use evolution extending northward from The Commons along Highway 208 North, consisting of apartements, shops, offices, and restaurants, with the motto to be able to "live, shop, work, and play" in one locale.

These distinct communities are positioned throughout the borough, and each has its own flair, making Fair Lawn not just ethnically, racially, and religiously diverse , but also an experientially diverse borough notable even amidst Bergen County's range on a larger scale.

Continuing steady immigration from Eurasia, Asia, Europe, and Latin America has transformed Fair Lawn into an global melting pot, and over 50 languages and dialects are spoken in the borough.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russian Jews began to migrate to Fair Lawn. Fair Lawn's Jewish American populace has therefore maintained an at least one-third existence overall for a several decades.

The size of Fair Lawn's Russian American existence prompted an April Fool's satire titled, "Putin Moves Against Fair Lawn". Fair Lawn also has the biggest Israeli American improve in Bergen County. On November 22, 2015, the Jewish Historical Society of North Jersey jubilated the grand opening of a permanent home at 17-10 River Road in Fair Lawn, after being homed at various locations, mostly in neighboring Paterson, for decades. Fair Lawn has historically also had a large Italian American population, 19.7% in 2000, but this number is decreasing as the descendants of the initial Italian immigrants are being displaced by immigrants from around the globe.

Fair Lawn's reputable school district, safe and well-policed neighborhoods, and the borough's convenient access to commercial centers and hospitals, a complex network of highways, transit lines, New York City, and Newark Liberty International Airport, have all made Fair Lawn a magnet for new immigrants from a several regions around the world.

The enhance library in Fair Lawn holds storytelling programs in Hindi and Hebrew languages, while Mandarin Chinese has been taught in the school precinct since the 2007-08 school year. A number of places for congregation cater to different nationalities in Fair Lawn, including three Korean churches, one Taiwanese church, Young Israel of Fair Lawn, Saint Leon Armenian Church, and the (Italian American) Cosmos Club of Fair Lawn.

Given the established existence of Russian Americans in the borough, immigrant nationalities native to other republics of the Former Soviet Union, including Ukrainian Americans, Georgian Americans, Armenian Americans, and Uzbek Americans have also established an increasing existence in Fair Lawn.

The global ethnic melange that describes Paterson, Fair Lawn's neighbor, has now permeated Fair Lawn itself.

Muslim immigrants, including Albanian Americans and Macedonian Americans, as well as Latino Americans, including Peruvian Americans and Puerto Rican Americans, have settled in Fair Lawn's flank, in the Memorial Park neighborhood between the River Road Improvement District and the Passaic River, where there is also a small but stable African American minority.

Businesses headquartered or positioned in Fair Lawn include: Columbia Bank (New Jersey), the fourth biggest mutual financial institution in the United States, and the biggest mutual bank domiciled inside the State of New Jersey, is also headquartered in Fair Lawn. Zerega's Sons Inc., established in 1848 in Brooklyn and presently based in Fair Lawn, describes itself as the fifth-largest pasta manufacturer in the United States, producing 100 million pounds of pasta annually. The Filipino American Festival, Inc., a non-profit corporation describing its mission to include educating Filipino Americans to engage in improve partnership, is headquartered in Fair Lawn.

Fair Lawn Promenade is a mixed-use retail / residentiary / company complex that opened on April 1, 2014.

Fair Lawn has one of the initial organized street hockey/Dek - Hockey programs in the state.

Fair Lawn Lanes includes 32 bowling lanes, an arcade, and a lounge. Fair Lawn operates inside the Faulkner Act (formally known as the Optional Municipal Charter Law) under the Council-Manager plan E form of New Jersey municipal government, as implemented as of January 1, 1986, based on direct petition. The governing body is a five-member Borough Council.

Standard Borough Council meetings, Government-access tv (GATV), are televised on small-town cable TV when held in the Council chambers in the Fair Lawn Municipal Building.

Fair Lawn is positioned in the 5th Congressional District and is part of New Jersey's 38th state legislative district. Prior to the 2010 Census, Fair Lawn had been part of the 9th Congressional District, a change made by the New Jersey Redistricting Commission that took effect in January 2013, based on the results of the November 2012 general elections. New Jersey's Fifth Congressional District is represented by Josh Gottheimer (D, Wyckoff). New Jersey is represented in the United States Senate by Cory Booker (D, Newark, term ends 2021) and Bob Menendez (D, Paramus, 2019). Gordon (D, Fair Lawn) and in the General Assembly by Tim Eustace (D, Maywood) and Joseph Lagana (D, Paramus). The Governor of New Jersey is Chris Christie (R, Mendham Township). The Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey is Kim Guadagno (R, Monmouth Beach). The Fair Lawn Public Schools serves students in kindergarten through twelfth grade.

Milnes Elementary School (377; K-5), Radburn Elementary School (447; K-5), Warren Point Elementary School (398; K-5), Westmoreland Elementary School (348; K-5), Memorial Middle School (460; 6-8), Thomas Jefferson Middle School (660; 6-8) and Fair Lawn High School (1,465; 9-12). In both the 1990-91 and 1997-98 school years, Fair Lawn High School received the National Blue Ribbon Award from the United States Department of Education, the highest honor that an American school can achieve. In 2016, Lyncrest Elementary School was one of ten schools in New Jersey recognized as a National Blue Ribbon School by the United States Department of Education, a recognition celebrating excellence in academics. In December 2014, Fair Lawn voters allowed by a greater than 2-to-1 margin a $12.8 million expansion and capital enhancement popular vote to be implemented by the Fair Lawn Public Schools.

Public school students from the borough, and all of Bergen County, are eligible to attend the secondary education programs offered by the Bergen County Technical Schools, which include the Bergen County Academies in Hackensack, and the Bergen Tech ground in Teterboro or Paramus.

Fair Lawn has an all-volunteer fire department. The department has four stations Company 1 on George Street, Company 2 at Route 208 South (before Maple Avenue Bridge), Company 3 positioned at the corner of Plaza Road and Rosalie Street and Company 4 on Radburn Road. Fair Lawn inhabitants are served by the all volunteer Fair Lawn Volunteer Ambulance, Inc., which provides 24/7 emergency medical services.

This service is equipped with four state of the art ambulances stocked with all necessary supplies to handle any medical emergencies. Fair Lawn is also served by the all-volunteer Fair Lawn Rescue Squad.

Route 208 northbound approaching Morlot Avenue in Fair Lawn Fair Lawn is interwoven by a robust network of roads.

As of May 2010, the borough had a total of 99.60 miles (160.29 km) of roadways, of which 84.00 miles (135.18 km) were maintained by the municipality, 11.13 miles (17.91 km) by Bergen County and 4.47 miles (7.19 km) by the New Jersey Department of Transportation. Fair Lawn is traversed by two state highways, New Jersey Route 4, which joins Fair Lawn to New York City via the George Washington Bridge, and New Jersey Route 208, which links Fair Lawn to the New York City bypass highway Interstate 287.

Fair Lawn has a several main roads crossing through it forming a rough 3x3 grid.

Running north south are Saddle River Road, Plaza Road, and River Road (County Route 507) while Broadway, Morlot Avenue, and Fair Lawn Avenue run east west, and Route 208 runs northwest southeast.

Running east west between and alongside to Morlot and Fair Lawn Avenues is Berdan Avenue, a residentiary thoroughfare which is bisected by Route 208 into two discontinuous segments, the one of which contains Fair Lawn High School.

Fair Lawn Avenue is considered the borough's chief street, including its Borough Hall, Police Station, and Public Library.

The road goes west over the Passaic River into Paterson, and on the east, Fair Lawn Avenue ends at Saddle River Road, which through Dunkerhook Park becomes Dunkerhook Road, and becomes Century Road once in Paramus, at Paramus Road.

The intersection of Fair Lawn Avenue and Plaza Road form what could be considered a "town center", with a several shopping plazas and the Radburn train station all inside walking distance.

Route 208 has its southern end in Fair Lawn and bisects the borough from the northwest to the southeast, where it eventually merges with Broadway to turn into Route 4 just west of Fair Lawn's border with Paramus.

Taken the other direction, Route 208 flows northwest to Interstate 287 in Oakland. Numerous commercial establishments and office buildings line Route 208 along the northwestern half of this limited access highway's trajectory through Fair Lawn.

South of Route 4, Saddle River Road goes through the easterly side of Fair Lawn and into Saddle Brook, where it provides a link to both the Garden State Parkway and Interstate 80.

On the opposite side of the Passaic River, Route 20 southbound leads to both Route 21 southbound and the Garden State Parkway southbound in Clifton, as well as Route 80 East and Westbound and Route 46 westbound, which is used by citizens in the river neighborhoods to access Downtown Paterson via Route 19 to avoid Broadway traffic.

Fair Lawn uses a street address numbering fitness in which most Fair Lawn addresses are given hyphenated numbers, such as 10-13 Some Street.

Less than 1% of addresses in New Jersey use this kind of numbering fitness and Fair Lawn's nearly 10,000 hyphenated addresses account for nearly half of them.

Exceptions to this numbering fitness generally exist on the Glen Rock, Hawthorne, and Saddle Brook sides of Fair Lawn and inside the Radburn development.

Radburn train station in Fair Lawn Fair Lawn is served by the Radburn and Broadway train stations on the NJ Transit Bergen County Line, which offers service to Lower Manhattan via the Hoboken Terminal, and connections at Secaucus Junction to Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan and to most other NJ Transit train lines. Fair Lawn lies 20 miles (32 km) north of Newark Liberty International Airport, approaches to which are directly over Fair Lawn, and 8 miles (13 km) northwest of Teterboro Airport.

In the 1976 film Taxi Driver, when Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro) is talking to a Secret Service agent, he provides a false name (Henry Krinkle), and a false address (154 Hopper Avenue, Fair Lawn, New Jersey).

There is a Hopper Avenue in Fair Lawn, but 154 Hopper Avenue does not exist, and the ZIP code he provides is also incorrect (61045, which is actually in Kings, Illinois). In the 1996 Mel Gibson movie Ransom, Fair Lawn is seen when Gibson is told to turn from Route 4 onto Saddle River Road (Fair Lawn) and into the modern quarry (which is actually positioned in Haledon, New Jersey). The two chief characters travel to Fair Lawn, New Jersey to get accounting files. See also: Category:People from Fair Lawn, New Jersey.

People who were born in, inhabitants of, or otherwise closely associated with Fair Lawn include: Nicholas Felice (born 1927), served in the New Jersey General Assembly and was mayor of Fair Lawn. Ganz (born 1951), attorney, author and politician who was mayor of Fair Lawn from 1999 2006 and has served on the Bergen County Board of Chosen Freeholders since 2003. Gordon (born 1950), member of the New Jersey Senate since 2008, who served in the New Jersey General Assembly from 2004 2008 and was mayor of Fair Lawn from 1988 1991. Sacir Hot (born 1991), soccer player for the New York Red Bulls, the United States U-20 team, and Boston College; attended Fair Lawn High School. A momentous historic site in Fair Lawn is the Passaic River Fishing Weir, a prominent archaeological feature just north of the Fair Lawn Avenue Bridge.

Fair Lawn is home to the following locations on the National Register of Historic Places: Berdan House - 24-07 Fair Lawn Avenue (added 1983): Purchased by Richard J.

Cadmus-Folly House - 19-21 Fair Lawn Avenue (added 1983) House - 41-25 Dunkerhook Road (added 1983): Constructed in Dutch contemporary by Jacob Vanderbeck in the 1750s, the home has had a number of prominent owners, including Fair Lawn mayor and Assemblyman Richard Vander Plaat.

Owned by a developer who has sought to use the site to construct a large-scale assisted-living facility, the home has been listed on Preservation New Jersey's 2013 list of the 10 Most Endangered Historic Places in New Jersey. Fair Lawn also has a close association with two historic areas along the Saddle River in Paramus.

2010 Enumeration Gazetteer Files: New Jersey County Subdivisions, United States Enumeration Bureau.

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GCT-PH1: Population, Housing Units, Area, and Density: 2010 - State -- Place and (in chose states) County Subdivision from 2010 Enumeration Summary File 1 for New Jersey, United States Enumeration Bureau.

Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Borough of Fair Lawn, Geographic Names Information System.

DP-1 - Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 for Fair Lawn borough, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States Enumeration Bureau.

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Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2010 for Fair Lawn borough, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development.

PEPANNRES - Annual Estimates of the Resident Population: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2015 - 2015 Population Estimates for New Jersey municipalities, United States Enumeration Bureau.

GCT-PH1 Population, Housing Units, Area, and Density: 2010 - State -- County Subdivision from the 2010 Enumeration Summary File 1 for New Jersey, United States Enumeration Bureau.

Look Up a ZIP Code for Fair Lawn, NJ, United States Postal Service.

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Area Code Lookup - NPA NXX for Fair Lawn, NJ, Area-Codes.com.

"Fair Lawn: Change from the 1990 to 2010 census", The Record (Bergen County), February 6, 2011.

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Dutch Door Genealogy - Bergen County New Jersey Municipalities, accessed February 9, 2006.

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7 in NJ For Job Seekers - Fair Lawn has received various accolades this year.", Fair Lawn - Saddle Brook Patch, November 19, 2013.

NEW JERSEY - Bergen County, National Register of Historic Places.

"New Jersey Register of Historic Places Listings and Other Determinations as of April 5, 2013 with Recommendations for Listing on the Register by the Staff of the Bergen County Historic Sites Survey, 1986, updated through June 10, 2013" Bergen County, New Jersey, June 10, 2013.

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"In Fair Lawn, Getting to Know a New Language and a New Land; ON THE MAP", The New York Times, July 7, 1996.

"They appeared in Fair Lawn strangers in a strange land, Jews from Russia who have carved out a shtetl among the other 30,500 inhabitants of this Bergen County suburb." "In a move certain to carry dire geopolitical consequences for the world, the Russian Federation has moved troops into the 32,000-person borough of Fair Lawn, New Jersey, only days after annexing Crimea and strengthening its troop positions along the Ukrainian border." "Jewish Historical Society exhibition opens in permanent Fair Lawn home".

DP-1: Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: 2000 - Enumeration 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data for Fair Lawn borough, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States Enumeration Bureau.

"Italian-American Club Re-Focuses on Charity - The Cosmos Club formed in Fair Lawn in the 1950s, followed a several years later by the Ladies Auxiliary.", Fair Lawn-Saddle Brook Patch, August 27, 2012.

DP03: Selected Economic Characteristics from the 2006-2010 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates for Fair Lawn borough, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States Enumeration Bureau.

"Chinese program burgeoning in Fair Lawn School District", Community News (Fair Lawn), September 11, 2013.

"With more than 200 students already enrolled, the Fair Lawn School District's Chinese program is now expanding to third grade....

"The Handang Tumulong Foundation, based in Fair Lawn, continually accepts donations to help those in the Philippines and typically holds fundraisers in the fall, said its former president and board member Nelsie Parrado of Fair Lawn." About Us, Filipino-American Association of Fair Lawn - "Committed to Community".

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Enumeration 2000 Profiles of Demographic / Social / Economic / Housing Characteristics for Fair Lawn borough, New Jersey, United States Enumeration Bureau.

"Mondelez International Inc., Fair Lawn's biggest private employer and the borough's top payer of small-town real estate taxes, is going to invest tens of millions of dollars to modernize the old Nabisco bakery, a landmark on Route 208 since the 1950s, the business said." "US Technologies, Inc corporate command posts is positioned with other technology zone companies in beautiful Fair Lawn NJ" "Fair Lawn ice-making business CALMAC Manufacturing helps buildings keep their cool", The Record (Bergen County), October 6, 2014.

"Fair Lawn pasta manufacturer predicts price hikes amid flour shortage", The Record (Bergen County), October 29, 2014.

"First Promenade Businesses to Open About April 1; The owners of the Fair Lawn Promenade have already signed a several tenants for retail and office spaces.", Fair Lawn-Saddle Brook Patch, January 2, 2014.

"Fair Lawn evolution to include area's first Noodles and Habit Burger locations", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, February 18, 2014.

"Habit Burger, a California burger chain, will open its first New Jersey locale at the Fair Lawn Promenade, and Noodles & Company, a Colorado fast-casual chain will open its first Bergen County restaurant, Scott Loventhal, director of evolution of Garden Homes, said." Brunswick Zone Fair Lawn Bowl, Brunswick Zone.

"The Faulkner Act: New Jersey's Optional Municipal Charter Law" Archived October 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine., New Jersey State League of Municipalities, July 2007.

Government Type, Borough of Fair Lawn.

"The Borough of Fair Lawn operates under the Council-Manager form of government as provided in New Jersey's Optional Municipal Charter Law generally referred to as the Faulkner Act.

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Live Video Streaming of Regular Council Meetings, Borough of Fair Lawn.

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Alliance for Substance Abuse Prevention, Borough of Fair Lawn.

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Warren Point Elementary School, Fair Lawn Public Schools.

Westmoreland Elementary School, Fair Lawn Public Schools.

Memorial Middle School, Fair Lawn Public Schools.

Thomas Jefferson Middle School, Fair Lawn Public Schools.

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"Residents invited to offer input on Fair Lawn Avenue plan", Community News (Fair Lawn edition), October 7, 2015.

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"Fair Lawn's number maze: Hyphenated addresses can be confusing", The Record (Bergen County), February 1, 2015.

Fair Lawn, New Jersey.' "If you had to point to Fair Lawn on a map of New Jersey, could you do it? "Axel, who interval up in Bergen County and graduated from Fair Lawn High School, isn't a showy pianist.

Dohms graduated from Fair Lawn High School in New Jersey in 1966." He interval up in Fair Lawn, N.J., where he attended Fair Lawn High School and went on to graduate summa cum laude from Tufts University." "Geographically, he can trace his roots to Passaic, where he was born, to Fair Lawn, where he was raised, and to Kendall Park, then a muddy no-man's-land between New Brunswick and Princeton that he couldn't wait to get out of." "When he signed with the Giants in March, they wondered if he would beat out the incumbent fullback, Charles Stackhouse, and fretted about whether he could handle playing in the spotlight of New York, just miles from where he interval up in Fair Lawn, N.J." Ganz, who is presently a third-term member of the Bergen County Board of Chosen Freeholders, presented his latest book, Rare Coin Investing: An Affordable Way to Build Your Portfolio to the Fair Lawn Public Library." "Governor makes campaign stop in Fair Lawn", Community News (Fair Lawn), October 30, 2013.

"When Larry Gates and Larry Hochman were burgeoning up in Fair Lawn, they used to walk home from school singing Beatles music together." "Red Bulls sign Fair Lawn's Sacir Hot", The Record (Bergen County), February 1, 2011.

"'How do you give back until you get,' said Malzberg, who lives in Fair Lawn and did not name the school declining to show the speech." "He moved to New Jersey and was active in church and Republican Party affairs in the Fair Lawn, New Jersey, region where he made his home." "Hometown: Fair Lawn, N.J.; High School: Fair Lawn" "Meredith -- so convincing as the Swedish tease -- was born and raised Judi-Lee Sauls in Fair Lawn, and adopted her stage name right before The Producers." "Fair Lawn actress gets starring part in Joss Whedon's take on Shakespeare's 'Much Ado About Nothing'", The Record (Bergen County), June 18, 2013.

"'For me, the whole experience was a dream,' says Jillian Morgese, 23, a Fair Lawn native who can be seen in her first primary film part in a funky new version of the Shakespeare comedy, opening nationwide on Friday." "But at his apartment in Fair Lawn, New Jersey, Maurice ('Moe') Purtill recalls: 'You could have shot deer in the Glen Island Casino that first evening.

"Fair Lawn's Charlie Schlatter on his new TV project", The Record (Bergen County), February 12, 2010.

"Fair Lawn's Ira Thor Wins Sports Writing Award", New Jersey City University, August 23, 2001.

New Jersey: Bergen County, National Register of Historic Places.

"Fair Lawn bought the 1776 Naugle House three years ago, snatching it from the jaws of a developer with plans to build town homes on the property.

"Fate of Fair Lawn historic homes becomes clearer", The Record (Bergen County), July 29, 2013.

"Fair Lawn bought the home in 2010 for $1.7 million using municipal and county open space funds.

"Fate of old Fair Lawn home rests with proposal for senior complex", The Record (Bergen County), May 27, 2014.

Municipal Incorporations of the State of New Jersey (according to Counties) prepared by the Division of Local Government, Department of the Treasury (New Jersey); December 1, 1958.

Municipalities and communities of Bergen County, New Jersey, United States Allendale Alpine Bergenfield Bogota Carlstadt Cliffside Park Closter Cresskill Demarest Dumont East Rutherford Edgewater Elmwood Park Emerson Englewood Cliffs Fair Lawn Fairview Fort Lee Franklin Lakes Glen Rock Harrington Park Hasbrouck Heights Haworth Hillsdale Ho-Ho-Kus Leonia Little Ferry Lodi Maywood Midland Park Montvale Moonachie New Milford North Arlington Northvale Norwood Oakland Old Tappan Oradell Palisades Park Paramus Park Ridge Ramsey Ridgefield River Edge Rockleigh Rutherford Saddle River Tenafly Teterboro Upper Saddle River Waldwick Wallington Westwood Wood-Ridge Woodcliff Lake

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Fair Lawn, New Jersey - 1924 establishments in New Jersey - Boroughs in Bergen County, New Jersey - Faulkner Act (council manager)Populated places established in 1924 - Russian-American culture in New Jersey - Russian communities in the United States - Ukrainian communities in the United States - Ukrainian-American culture in New Jersey