With Joaquin winding its way northeast, Rumson-Fair Haven area residents are hoping it the predicted path will stay on course and not become reminiscent of Hurricane Sandy’s wrath.
Despite the lack of similarities in storms, officials area urging preparedness with a since-Sandy “better-be-safe-than-sorry” mindset.
So, as a reminder that we made it through the worst in a storm, Rumson-Fair Haven Retrospect is taking a look back at the post-Sandy scene in Rumson, Fair Haven and Sea Bright.
First graders at Fair Haven’s Sickles School were recently taught a potentially life-saving lesson, thanks to the efforts of three community volunteers.
On Sept. 17, Beverly Cochrane-Maguire and Richard Eisenbeis, both of the Volunteers In Sheriff’s Community Programs (VISCOMP) at the Monmouth County Police Academy, visited the elementary school classrooms along with county Sheriff’s Office intern Chris Wolcott to instruct students in what’s dubbed Seek 911 protocol.
The students were taught:
• how to decide if a situation warrants a 911 emergency call;
• different types of emergencies (fire, medical, and police);
• types of phones that can be used to call 911;
• and the questions that will be asked by a 911 operator.
The students viewed a short video and then placed practice 911 calls with the assistance of the volunteers.
— Edited release from the Fair Haven School District
“But I don’t wanna walk on the rope next to her!” I cried from under my fresh-cut kindergarten bangs. “I wanna walk on the rope next to Pam!”
Pam was my neighbor. She was my best buddy.
It was 1965. Our Fair Haven kindergarten class was the last to have its first year of school at what was called the Youth Center, now the Fair Haven Police Station and Community Center on Fisk Street.
We kindergarteners were also the last to be tugged down the street on a rope, yes a rope, headed by an official-looking police-type lady.
I forget what her name was, but she scared the bejesus out of us, especially a determined mini me. No, not much has changed.
However, that rope would have probably somehow been considered inhumane now, I’m thinking. Hey, they needed to keep us walking in tow.
And, guess what? They did, despite the fact that this one little girl’s small world was turned topsy turvy because she couldn’t walk next to Pam.
There were loops for our little hands to grasp onto on either side of the rope.
You see, no one drove anyone to school then.
You could say that we were more environmentally conscious. Or you could just say that we were probably poorer. Simple.
No one drove kids to school, mostly because there was only one car per family. There was no Third Street congestion problem. Nope.
Granted, a lot of moms stayed home. And when the dads went to work, unless they worked close enough to come home for lunch, mom didn’t have a car until after 5 p.m.
If moms worked, dads dropped them off and picked them up or vice versa. A lucky few had two cars. So, needless to say, the transportation for kids was that rope. That lady picked us all up, as I recall, on Hance Road somewhere.
That rope — well, that was our kiddie bus. And we liked it — sorta. We just had to.
This 1965 kindergarten class in the Retro Pic of the Day was the last to take the daily rope trek to the Youth Center.
Front and center in this photo, taken by the family of Diane Smith Carmona, are Frank Buchanan and Bobby McLellan. They’re holding the loops, but not looking all too pleased about it. I’m pitching a fit somewhere in the back. School days, rope days …
Imagine that. Mommy drops you off at the rope, not the bus, and you have to walk to school next to someone you didn’t know until the first day of school?
Oh, the trauma of it all. I guess they thought we’d be trouble makers. I wasn’t even allowed to sit near Pam in class!
Whaaaaaaa! How was your child’s first day without a rope?
As Ben Franklin said, “In this world, nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes.” Yet, if he lived in Fair Haven, he may have added “… and seeing Dale Connor when you hand over the check.”
Not too long ago, it was tax time in Fair Haven. And, for some, what can be a daunting trip to Borough Hall was not met this time with what they’ve come to know as a soothingly familiar face. For the first time in 38 years, Connor, whom residents have long known as the borough’s tax collector and court administrator, wasn’t there on the other side of the plexi-glassed drop-off spot.
It was the first time since she retired in May that the latest quarterly trek didn’t end with her and, perhaps, some sort of simpatico.
It was 50/50 announcing business as usual for John Riley on the last night of the Fair Haven Firemen’s Fair. It was also his 69th birthday.
Someone got a hold of the mic that’s usually always in Riley’s hands and announced that the birthday on Saturday.
So, Monday’s Retro Pic(s) of the Day is dedicated to Riley.
Riley is pretty modest. And he looks exactly the same as he did back in the early 1970s when this editor first met him during her childhood.
Riley has been a lifetime Fair Havenite and a decades-long member of the Fair Haven Fire Department. He also worked in the borough’s Department of Public Works seemingly forever.
He always has a smile on his face. He wears his modest, gentle demeanor and love of hometown on his sleeve and in his eyes.
Happy Birthday, John Riley! Thank you for all you’ve done for the love of Fair Haven!
Tonight was the night! It was opening night of the classic Fair Haven Firemen’s Fair.
Friends, neighbors and firemen, new and old, once again forged their connections at the fair touted to be the largest firemen’s fair in New Jersey and probably the country.
The weather was fine and so was the company. Take a look.
(And don’t forget to click on the lower right icon to enlarge for the full view of the slideshow! Enjoy! See you at the fair!)
As his 35-year career in law enforcement comes to a close, Fair Haven Police Chief Darryl Breckenridge will tell you that, in retrospect, the hat really did fit.
Well, the top cop’s cap may have been a little big in the early 1960s when Chief Carl Jakubecy visited his Fair Haven home to offer his mother Dorothy a school crossing guard job. The chief sat the then 4-and-a-half-year-old Darryl on his lap and had him try his hat on for size.
But, even then, he says, he knew the career was the right fit for him and growing into a hat and proud local police life of his own would be his dream-come-true.
The chief, who has announced that he will retire effective Oct. 1, sports a contented smile when he talks about it — the moment he knew he wanted to become a police officer, and knowing now that it all happened as planned and more.
Jakubecy “took his police chief’s hat off his head (that day he visited to offer my mother the job) and placed it on mine. It was that moment that my dream began of becoming a police officer in Fair Haven.”
More than half a century later, Breckenridge’s eyes light up as he leans back at his desk, sitting in his milestone-laden office, flush with photos and mementos of success. He realizes that it’s the place where it ironically all started. The police station once housed kindergarten classes for Fair Haven kids.
He was one of those kids. He walked down the street from his home on a rope with all his pint-sized classmates, toted by an official uniform-clad woman, to the Youth Center kindergarten class, upstairs, pretty much in the area where his office is now. Somehow, it seemed a lot more cavernous to kindergarten kids. Call it a child-like theory of relativity.
The classroom was big to kindergarteners, much like Breckenridge’s dream and that hat seemed back then.
But Jakubecy’s lid was like those iconic ruby slippers in The Wizard of Oz that, ironically enough, another Dorothy wore. A few taps later and Breckenridge was looking out from underneath his own brim and the view was one of the best of his life. No regrets. No rose-colored tinge. Only reality — sometimes harsh, oftentimes rewarding. Only gratitude.
He has nothing but real gratitude for it all — every part of fulfilling his dream, getting to his Oz, his own back yard. He is grateful for even the most difficult moments that gave him a sometimes disturbing, yet insightful focus into the work he knew he had the calling to do.
What does he see when he looks back from underneath the oversized brim of that magical chief’s hat?
He will tell you that, for one, he sees his mother, a stalwart, devoted role model who watched over many children with pride and love as they crossed the street at Knollwood School for more than 25 years.
Dorothy Breckenridge, now in her 80s, is forever remembered by longtime Fair Havenites for sounding that whistle, outstretching her arms tautly in either direction, holding up her stop-sign palms and bellowing her iconic “CROOOOOOOSSS!”
“I used to stand on the sidewalk — this little 5-year-old — and pretend I was directing traffic for her,” the chief said. “Well, I thought I really was directing traffic. I loved it.”
A mother’s advice
He will tell you that he listened to his mother. “She gave me great advice,” he said. “She told me, ‘Always speak to people. It doesn’t hurt you to stop, say hello and smile. You’ll always get something valuable from that — from caring, from taking a minute to speak to people.'”
He took that advice to heart and badge, he said, and it has always done him well in community law enforcement and life. Period. He says it’s a common sense concept that has really remained the same in police work since the days of the constable.
Regardless of the media attention negative police incidents have gotten, Breckenridge says there have always been a bad few, we just see them more now, because of advances in the internet and social media. The notion of good policing hasn’t changed, he says.
“As long as you treat people with fairness and respect, you’ll get it in return,” he said. “If you go into a situation with an open mind and treat people the way you’d want your mother, sister or any family member treated, with communication and understanding of culture, you’re doing the right thing and most often everything will be fine.”
The life in law enforcement
And that’s the advice on which Breckenridge built his career, which started in Fair Haven when Jakubecy gave a young Fair Haven Breckenridge a job as a part-time dispatcher in 1976.
He had hung onto his dream all through school. He hung on with determination and good will. And he hung out around the Fair Haven police officers in the 1970s — officers Lou DeVito, Bobby O’Neill and Ricky Towler, who all became chiefs.
“I hung out around the police station all the time,” he reminisced. “They used to take me on ride-alongs. Lou DeVito was a sergeant when I first met him. Bobby O’Neill was a lieutenant and then there was Ricky Towler.”
Towler was chief right before Breckenridge. He still lives in town. DeVito and O’Niell are deceased.
Those ride-alongs and all that hanging out at the PD prompted a 14-year-old Breckenridge to join the Middletown Police Explorers. In 1972 as a teen he also became the first president of the Fair Haven Future Firemen. In 1976, he became a full-fledged volunteer fireman in Fair Haven, and remains one. He was chief of the fire company in 1996. In fact, that’s yet another community hat he filled. It hangs on his office wall.
Then there was that 1976 dispatch job. Breckenridge left the dispatch job to go into the U.S. Army in 1977 where he served for three years in the 3rd I.D. Military Police as an undercover investigator.
In 1980, when Breckenridge returned, he joined the Fair Haven Police Department as a Special Officer Class I, part-time, while he worked full-time at Steinbach’s as a regional loss prevention manager. After ending up working for a stint in the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, it didn’t take long for Breckenridge to get on his own Yellow Brick Road right back to Fair Haven.
“I realized (what I guess I always knew) that I wanted to become a uniform cop in my hometown,” he said. “Ever since that day at 4-and- a-half, I knew that’s what I wanted.”
And he did what he wanted. He stuck with his dream of community policing. By 1985 he was being sworn in as a patrolman in Fair Haven. In 1996, he became a detective. In 2000, he was promoted to the rank of sergeant. And, in 2002, he rose up to lieutenant rank. Then, in 2005, Breckenridge became chief. He will have been chief for nearly 11 years by the time of his retirement.
The greater good in small-town law enforcement
Fair Haven is a small town. To ask Breckenridge how it is a big dream realized to be on the job in such a small space where everybody knows your name is to hear that “it makes it all the more fulfilling to help people in your own community.
“I know it sounds cliche, but you can really help people and make a positive difference when you’re a police officer, and it’s all the more special when you’re serving the community in which you grew up.”
He grinned as he recalled a time in the 1980s when he knew of families that were too poor to afford Christmas gifts. He took it upon himself to wrap presents — knowing who they were, not wanting them to feel embarrassed, and wanting the kids to have something to unwrap with everyone else on Christmas — and leave the surprise packages on their doorsteps.
“The parents would call (the station) and ask if we knew where they came from,” he said. “I would just smile and say, ‘Santa.'”
Then there was a time when a family was in need of help with their home. Infested with bugs and rodents, it had become uninhabitable. The parents did not have the money to make repairs and there were small children in the family. They wanted to stay in the community they loved. He rallied volunteers to do some fixing.
Within no time, volunteers and retail sponsors, such as Builders General and other companies, made donations and the home was revamped, gutted, painted, new furniture and appliances installed. “If you could have seen their faces when they walked into their ‘new’ house … what an amazing feeling it was to help this family.”
And that’s what it’s really all about for the chief.
Assumptions that small town policing is a small-time challenge are something he dismisses with pride. In fact, he doesn’t even acknowledge such notions.
It’s not all about getting cats out of trees. There have been some serious cases to be cracked in the borough. One, in particular that Breckenridge worked on as a detective was a cold case murder involving a 13-year-old boy who had shot and killed his father and buried him in a shallow grave in his back yard out of state. The boy had ended up living with family in Fair Haven when the murder was solved years later.
His office strewn with commendations and awards — among them three honorable service awards, an exceptional duty award and and certification for attending the National FBI Academy in 2008 — the accolades mean a lot to him.
His uniform, which he loves to wear, is now adorned with stripes and a lot of brass.
The right time to hang the police hat
Darryl Breckenridge is a proud man. He emulates, with dignity, the men who have served as chief before him. He hopes those officers he has seen rise through the ranks will wish to emulate him, too, in some way. He has fulfilled his dream. It is their time now. He says he knows that to be true.
Why retire now? An officer’s job of protecting and serving is never done. There’s always more to do, right?
The answer was a tough call for Breckenridge to make after answering the worst two of his career. The calls came within the past five years. He responded with the unabashed strength he had always summoned without a flinch — as a chief, an officer, a mentor, but, finally, a broken-hearted human being.
There was the call when retired Patrolman John Lehnert was found dead at 46 in 2010.
Then there was the tragic call when a young 23-year-old officer, Robert J. Henne — who the chief has described as having the young, eager love of being on the job similar to his and wearing his hat proudly, always beaming the happiest of smiles from underneath its brim — had died suddenly at his home in March.
“While on the scene of Henne, I knew I was done and it was time for me to move on,” he said.
Chief Breckenridge is known for being resilient, professional in the face of adversity. But it is in his own face that the love of his hometown and his on-the-job dedication to his dream and the dreams of those officers who will follow him peers through in a soft light in his eyes.
He has a hope. “I hope the officers and future officers continue on the path of community policing … taking care … taking care of people … taking care of kids and seniors … I hope they always speak to people.”
Chief Darryl Breckenridge’s retirement celebration will be held on Thursday, Oct. 15 at the Raven and Peach restaurant in Fair Haven.
For more information on the event and tickets, and/or to place a congratulatory message in the ad journal, please contact Detective Stephen Schneider at [email protected] or Whitney Breckenridge at [email protected].
For former longtime Fair Havenites Ray Miller and his wife Irene, love endured 75 years.
Aptly, the love story between the 60-year Exxon station owner and his wife started with a first date on Valentine’s Day all those years ago when they were teens. They married after an eight-year courtship and never separated for 67 of the 75 years they knew one another — until Ray’s death in May.
As anyone can imagine, the two did a lot together. A lot can happen in 75 years, including the little things, like enjoying their summers at the beach.
So, since the season fits and the love of this Fair Haven couple is timeless, the Retro Pic of the Day honors both summer and love with a fun loving photo of Ray and Irene enjoying a day of frolicking at the beach decades ago.
We’re not certain whether or not it’s Sea Bright, but it’s likely.
Thanks to their daughter, Peggy, for providing the photo.
Hmmmm. Do you think he was about to toss her in? And what do you think they were saying to one another as this photo was shot? Ray was known for his jokes. Hmmmm.
The RFH Class of 1980 is having its 35th reunion this weekend.
What better time than to take a look back at some grads of that class?
So, in honor of the Class of ’80 and friendships formed many years ago that are still going strong, the Retro Pic of the Day takes a look back at a 1971 gathering of Fair Haven girls of the class when such bonds were forged.
Nothing like an old buddy.
Who in this crew do you think was considered the best dressed? Remember what the “in” style was then?
Thanks to longtime Fair Havenite Sandi Richards VonPier for this photo contribution!
It’s that time again — anniversary party time on Thursday for Coastal Decor in Fair Haven.
And with the River Road store’s annual anniversary/summer celebration comes some socializing, snacking and special prices.
The shopping party starts at 5:30 p.m. and ends at 10:30. “Bring a friend,” the store owners said in a Facebook release.
Coastal Decor is a favorite small business among Rumson-Fair Haven area residents specializing in shore-inspired interior design, furniture, accessories and jewelry.
The Rumson-Fair Haven Retrospect Coastal Decor pick of the week for Business Buzz is the sterling silver New Jersey sea glass necklace.
There’s been a bit of a delay in bringing one long-awaited passive riverfront park to Fair Haven.
That park is the one slated for the foot of DeNormandie Avenue where the historic Williams/Robards estate sat until April.
After its demolition then, officials figured it wouldn’t take all that long to clear the lot of demolition debris and unhealthy trees before the landscaping plans started to take hold.
“DPW was a little off track on the progress with the park,” Mayor Ben Lucarelli said. “The reason for that was that they have been short on help in the department. There have since been new hires, so they should be able to get back on track.”
In the meantime, people are free to stroll onto the beach by the river there and, when the fencing is removed, they may walk on the property that will eventually house the passive park.
The mayor went on to say that the landscaping plan is well in the works and its implementation will soon follow with the tree removal, turfing and then landscape architecture and finishing touches.
All told, the mayor said, it will realistically take up to another two years to see the completed park with finishing touches.
“We have to wait for the next grant cycle,” Lucarelli said. “We will probably go for a Monmouth County Open Space Grant. We have to close out other grants first and make certain there’s nothing else in the works. If we decide that this project is a priority for the next cycle, it could be done by next spring or so.
“If we get in on the next cycle, it would be another year. But that would be for the full flushing out of the park and all the amenities (such as the landscaping, benches, walkways). The trees (that the arborist decides may be taken) will come down next. It’s clear enough to take a walk on for now and enjoy, though.”
That final phase of the plan will include a plaque commemorating the significance of Williams family and its Robards descendants and the site.
Charles Williams, a freed African-American slave, built the house on the land that was deeded to him and his family.
Winifred Robards, the last in the family line to live in the home that fronted the Navesink River, was known to invite children to play on her property. She told many that she wanted them to enjoy the riverfront location and it was her wish that the land, when she left, be preserved with public access for all to enjoy.
Taxpayers contributed roughly $200,000 to the acquisition of the $1.2 million swath of land. The remainder of the money to purchase it came from state, county and non-profit grants — all of which were contingent upon a commitment to eternally preserve the land as open space.
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