Discover

Historic Greenwich
Township, NJ

Discover

Historic Greenwich
Township, NJ

Discover

Historic Greenwich
Township, NJ

Bayside Tract

Once a thriving commercial center, Bayside (also known as “Caviar”) is now part of the PSEG Estuary Enhancement Program, one of the country’s largest privately funded wetlands preservation efforts. Its enviornmental and cultural attributes have warrented inclusion on the NJ Bayshore Byway. With more than 4,000 acres of the Bayside Tract in Greenwich Township, visitors and residents can explore, enjoy and appreciate this remarkable open space in numerous ways.

History

Here where the ends of two railroad tracks protrude over mossy rocks, where the grass of the flats covers rotting foundations of houses battered by storms, was an industry that many have forgotten all about.

-Henry Charlton Beck, in More Forgotten Towns of South Jersey 1963

During the 1860s into the early 1900s the fishing village of Caviar (now called Bayside) was known as the caviar capital of the world. Caviar was home to approximately 400 fishermen  who lived in nearby cabins and houseboats. The village was the source of caviar (the roe or eggs of a fish called the Atlantic sturgeon, weighing as much as 400 pounds). The tiny village was home to a small general store, a post office, a large caviar processing factory, and a train station. The Central Railroad of New Jersey transported the processed seafood from Bayside to Jersey City and Philadelphia for market.

By 1925, factory and sewage pollution coupled with over fishing caused the sturgeon and caviar industry on the Delaware to crash. Though protections were then put in place, most of the sturgeon in the Bay has disappeared, and along with it, the village.

To learn more about the history of Bayside-Caviar, check out the National Park Service.

Many of these images are courtesy Rutger’s 1930 collection.

Today

The Bayside Tract is part of the PSEG Estuary Enhancement Program, one of the country’s largest privately funded wetlands preservation efforts. With more than 4,000 acres of the Bayside Tract in Greenwich Township, visitors and residents can explore, enjoy and appreciate this remarkable open space in numerous ways.

 

This private-public partnership has resulted in

  • Expanded habitat, nursery grounds, shelter, and foraging opportunities for fish and other aquatic
    species;
  • Increased fisheries and primary food source production;
  • Increased habitat availability for endangered and threatened species, and resident and migrating
    birds;
  • Increased biodiversity; and
  • Increased public use opportunities.

We invite you to discover Greenwich at the Bayside Tract!

For an overview of the the history of the tract, visit PSEG.

Visit

Open daily, year-round, between 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. for public use. 

Before visiting, please check out the site rules here

NJ Audubon's Gotta see an eagle trail

The Bayside Tract is on the NJ Audubon’s Gotta See an Eagle Trail. Birds to be seen at the site include gulls, terns and cormorants in warmer weather. In winter, waterfowl can be seen here in large numbers. Keep your eyes on the tall trees and scan the sky for bald eagles.

Learn more about the birding trail from NJ Audubon.

Greenwich, a unique example of South Jersey history
Greenwich, a unique example of South Jersey history

greenwich township

*1000 Ye Greate Street
P.O. Box 64
Greenwich, NJ 08323

*To send packages, please see Doing Business with Greenwich

Social Media

greenwich township

*1000 Ye Greate Street
P.O. Box 64
Greenwich, NJ 08323

*To send packages, please see Doing Business with Greenwich

Social Media

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