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With the
creation of Brick Township on February 15, 1850 came the need for a
governing body. A five member committee type government was formed and
held its first meeting on March 12, 1850 at the home of Richard Burr in
Burrsville. The Township’s government changed with the growth of the
community. The committee-type government of 1850 with five elected
committeemen served the township until 1954. From 1954 to 1967 a
committee-mayor government served the community.
In November, 1965, a charter commission was formed to study the
needs of the community and to select the type of government which would
best serve Brick Township. The charter commission recommended that a
mayor-council type government be adopted. The Commission’s
recommendations were approved by the voters in November 1965 and took e
The Township government never had a home until a town hall was
constructed in 1954 on the corners of Cedarbridge and Moore (Brick Blvd)
Roads. During those one hundred and four years without a home the
committee members met in the homes and businesses of various town
officials, most frequently the home of the Township Clerk.
Other committee
meetings were held in the home of James Patterson, Adam Clayton’s Shoe
Store, Lecompt & Loomis in Lakewood, The Times and Journal Office in
Lakewood, Charles Hance’s store
and B. L. Garrison’s Hotel in West Point Pleasant. In 1885 and
1886, meetings were held in Point Pleasant Beach Borough Hall to discuss
the division of properties during its secession from Brick Township.
There were also meetings in the West Point Pleasant School and at Sidney
Herbert’s Store in Herbertsville. Between 1902 and 1917 most meetings
were held at Mrs. Thomas Havens Building in West Point Pleasant, Mrs.
Havens was Township Clerk during that period. Between 1918 and 1920
meetings were held at A.M. Allen’s store and the Schoolhouse in West
Point Pleasant. During this period without a town hall, the various
township departments worked out of the residence of its respective
appointed department head.
On April 21, 1920, West Point Pleasant seceded from Brick
Township, becoming Point Pleasant Borough, and the Brick Township
government had to relocate its meeting place. On August 2, 1920 the
Township government began meeting at Laurelton Hall and remained there
until 1926. On May 4, 1926, the Township Committee held its first
meeting in Ivy Hall on the campus of the Orient Baptist Church of
Laurelton (First Baptist Church of Laurelton).
It was during those years of meeting at Ivy Hall that the Township
Committee had to
For 104 years the Township
government did not have a home until 1954, a town hall was erected on
the corners of Moore Road (Brick Boulevard) and Cedar Bridge Road (where
Towne Hall Shoppes are today) Town Hall opened January 1, 1955 and
housed the Township government, the Municipal Court and the New Jersey
State Police. No longer would township documents have to be kept in the
homes of town employees.
The last Township meeting at Ivy Hall took place on December 29,
1954. On January 1, 1955 the Township government not only had a new
municipal building, but also a new form of government, a Committee-Mayor
type government. The three committeemen present at that Meeting on
January 1, 1955 selected Ernest Hulse as mayor for a one year term.
By the 1970’s the Township government had outgrown its 1955
building so plans were made for a new town hall to be constructed on
Chambers Bridge Road. The new Town Hall which was dedicated on May 31,
1976, just weeks before the Nation’s Bicentennial, housed the
Township Government, the Justice Department and the Brick Branch of the
Ocean County Library.
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Photos: Brick Township Historical Society, and Gene Donatiello |
![]() Brick Township |
![]() Brick Township Historical Society |