Posted on

UPDATE: Attempted Sabotage Spotted at the Schedler Property in Ridgewood

338157727 248008467608097 5856989003569217344 n scaled

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, recent walk through of the Schedler Property reveled  electrical wiring issues at the home. It appears someone is trying to sabotage the property , perhaps burn it down as has been suggested from some corners the Village.

“As a license electrician looking at what they have there… I can assure you there is no sabotage other than bubble covers missing from 2 of the boxes. It apears 1 fell off and the 2nd one has a broken plastic hinge from the picture. There is no overload there at all there are nine circuits of which eight are visible… each twelve and fourteen gauge chord has its own circuit. This is above and beyond the rules of the NEC..” JN

20230415 161730 scaled e1681589945860

From the photos its clear that someone is attempting to over load the electrical system creating a dangerous situation as well as a major fire hazard to the property as well as the West Saddle River Road Community  .  The question is where is the Ridgewood Fire Department , the Village Engineer and PSE&G on this????

The Zabriskie-Schedler House was originally constructed circa 1825 and was the home of farmer John A. L. Zabriskie. The house is an example of a late third-period Dutch-American frame building and exhibits several characteristics of the type including a construction date of c.1752-c.1840, was built by the “Dutch” cultural group, is south facing, follows the Dutch framing tradition, uses a gambrel roof for the main block and gable roof on the wing, uses native sandstone for the foundation material, uses oak timbers for heavy framing members, has interior end fireplaces, and has plaster ceiling finishes at the interior. The house survives as one of the few remaining nineteenth-century frame homes in Ridgewood. Over the course of his lifetime through inheritance and purchases, John Zabriskie tripled the size of his landholdings. Following his death in 1864, the house and property passed to his son James Zabriskie, also a farmer, who did not realize the same level of success as his father and was forced to mortgage and eventually sell off portions of his property. The Smith family purchased the home in 1908 and over the next century made several changes including adding the south entrance, raising the original gambrel roof at the circa 1840 section, reconfiguring and refinishing the second-floor level, and upgrading the kitchen. A small addition with a bathroom and sun porch were also added during the mid-twentieth century. Florence Schedler, daughter of Carman Smith, lived in the house until her death in 2007. The Village of Ridgewood purchased the property in 2009 and has been rehabilitating the building and grounds for use as a public parks and recreation facility. 

The Trust grant will help fund interior rehabilitation and barrier-free improvements. 

338848938 6241120162601412 8138162857411018255 n

338157727 248008467608097 5856989003569217344 n 1

339637672 574417074668626 5708036216200672838 n

Tell your story #TheRidgewoodblog , #Indpendentnews #information #advertise #guestpost #affiliatemarketing ,#NorthJersey #NJ , #News #localnews #bergencounty #nj #sponsoredpost #SponsoredContent #contentplacement #guestposts #linkplacement Email: Onlyonesmallvoice@gmail.com

9 thoughts on “UPDATE: Attempted Sabotage Spotted at the Schedler Property in Ridgewood

  1. Probably the same person who went around and smashed garbage cans to support the need for their replacement.

    1
    1
    1. I was thinking the same thing. Deliberate destruction.

      2
      1
      1. Next: A squirrel infestation

        1
        1
  2. Without the house think how much bigger the field could be

  3. Well, who did the inspection?

  4. Who authorized that electric meter and receptacles to be put there. Who is in charge

  5. How about making a field at lakeview dr .

  6. What happened to the MJ that was in the garage.Humm,

  7. This is the meter to power the lights for the field. The historic preservation commission probably wants to keep things as historic as possible.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *