Arts & Entertainment

A 'Telling Eye's Glimpse into Somerset Hills' History

Previously inaccessible photos at Bernardsville Public Library and Peapack and Gladstone town hall will display local scenes as they were.

Throughout September, "surprising, beautiful and historic" century-old images of the Somerset Hills will be display during a shared exhibit at the Bernardsville Public Library and in the Peapack-Gladstone Municipal Building.

The exhibit, so described by the Bernardsville Library's staff, will include more than 80 photographs taken by Fred Pitney Crater, who lived in Peapack-Gladstone in the early 20th century.

Reception at Bernardsville Library, which holds hundreds of Crater negatives

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An opening reception for the Bernardsville Library exhibition will be held Sunday, September 9, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the library’s community room, where the Crater photographs will be view on during regular library hours unless a meeting is in progress.

For additional information, contact the Bernardsville Public Library at 908-766-0118 or visit the library website.

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With his camera, Crater captured people, places, vistas and events from throughout the area with artistry and skill. The exhibit will bring out into the public eye photographs that were printed from century-old negatives in the Local History collection of the Bernardsville Public Library which were previously inaccessible to the public.

The Crater Collection now numbers close to 500 negatives, all donated to the library by family members and friends. 
 
In Bernardsville, the Crater photographs highlight bucolic agricultural scenes, well-known buildings, and community life: Horses and carriages await the arrival of “The Millionaire’s Express” outside the Bernardsville railroad station. Athletes jump through barrels at what appears to be the Far Hills fairgrounds. A photo taken high above Ravine Lake shows a miles-long view across the distant hills.  Two massive oxen pull a wagon through a barnyard—the cat at their feet seeming completely unconcerned.
 
The exhibition also includes several scenes from farther afield, including a view of Grant’s Tomb taken from across the Hudson River when the West Side was a bare palisade; a log cabin in nearby Chester, which was built before the Revolutionary War but was still being lived in when the photo was shot; and roadside action shots of the Vanderbilt Cup auto race on Long Island, N.Y.

Images enrich Peapack and Gladstone's 100th anniversary celebration
 
The Peapack and Gladstone exhibit includes images from that borough exclusively, as part of a centennial anniversary celebration of the borough’s founding. The photographs include shots of the Firemen’s Carnival, a young couple in a carriage trotting along “Lover’s Lane,” and many still-recognizable buildings and streetscapes, including sweeping views of the Blairsden and Natirar estates.

“Fred Crater had a great eye for the telling detail,” says Local History Committee Chairwoman Pat Bankowksi. “There is a photograph of the Peapack Baseball Club where the nine players and their coach are standing outside a building. It was only while examining the photographic details that we noticed the young boy peeking out of the window behind them.”

The exhibit is sponsored by the Peapack-Gladstone Historic Preservation Commission and the borough’s 100th Anniversary Committee as one of a number of celebrations taking place in the borough throughout the centennial year.
 
In Peapack-Gladstone, the photos will be on display during normal business hours throughout September at the Municipal Building on School Street.  For additional information, visit the borough’s website at www.pgborough.com.


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