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Welcome to Interlaken
Text and Photos Courtesy of Peter Lucia noweverthen.com
The
cozy, nestled, peninsular borough of Interlaken sits between Branches
One and Two of Deal Lake. If you look at the Deal Lake Reference View,
Interlaken appears a wooded medallion of land striped east-to-west with
four roads. A fifth east-to-west street (Bridlemere Avenue) winds along
its northern edge.
The
population of Interlaken hovers around 1000. Except for tiny Borough
Hall (which holds the police station), the town is completely residential.
It has two small parks: an undeveloped rectangle of land on the northwest
side (where the yearly picnic is held) and a little corner arboretum
just past the entrance pillars.

The bridge off Monmouth Road is the north entrance to Interlaken.
The
name Interlaken (which a few older folks pronounce Interlocken)
comes from the famous Swiss resort (which is now the "sister city"
of New Jersey's Interlaken). The name means between the lakes.
History has it that Mr. And Mrs. Francis Weld, a well-traveled couple
from the Boston area, visiting the newborn Jersey resorts, wound up
on the wooded tract after adventurously wandering off the roads that
were usually prescribed for Deal Beach and Asbury Park visitors. The
wooded peninsula stole their heart; they purchased it, intent on making
it their permanent home.
What
to call a place that is between the branches of a lake? Switzerland's
Interlaken was fresh on Mrs. Weld's mind, as she and her husband had
honeymooned at that resort. So there you go.
Perhaps tending to blue ribbon cattle did not suit the Welds. After
a few years they decided to turn the area into a "high-class year-round
residential community." Several of the Welds' prominent New York
acquaintances joined the venture, and by 1888 a pattern of streets was
laid out. (The east to west streets are named after the British Lakes
and the north-to-south streets after the Scottish Isles.)
In 1922, some of the pioneers, most of them artists and writers, decided
to make Interlaken an official municipality. Interlaken seceded from
Ocean Township and became an independent borough.
You
can find some beautiful houses, of various styles, in this little peninsular
borough.

A tall and elegant Victorian-style house as seen
(zoomed in a little) from
at RR tracks in Loch Arbour
Aside
from Grace Trocchia losing her cat, about the most spectacular thing
that has ever happened in Interlaken was the air show. You remember
it, don't you? Billed as "The Greatest Aviation Meet", this
event took place in August, 1910, over a period of ten days on an undeveloped
northside tract of land (the only remaining piece of which is Interlaken's
little park). Orville and Wilbur Wright directed the show but stayed
firmly on the ground. Though the show was a great success, it was not
without unfortunate incident. Pioneer flyer Walter Benjamin flew his
plane into the grandstand, injuring himself and a few spectators. Balloon
trapeze performer "Benny" Prinz was killed when his trapeze
bar broke. He fell 4000 feet and landed in a tree on Wickapecko Drive.
The tree, I understand, is still standing.

Kids playing baseball in Interlaken's little park,
site of the famous aviation meet
Interlaken
has always been a town of artists. The first mayor was Frank Stick,
the editor of Field and Stream magazine, who painted and also
wrote. To name only a few, there was the painter Percy Couse (one of
whose works I saw at an auction recently in California) and his sister
Emily Birdsall. W.H.D. Koerner (1904-1988), well known and influential
for his western art (and whose illustrations often appeared on Saturday
Evening Post covers), was also an Interlaken resident (and member
of the early Interlaken Council). Listen to this: The Whitney Gallery
of Western Art, in Cody, Wyoming, contains an exact recreation of his
Interlaken studio.
Here
are a few more images of Interlaken.

A shot of Interlaken from Loch Arbour

A magical Interlaken Tudor

Another very pleasant one

An Interlaken cove, on the south side of town
(looking toward Asbury Park High School)

On the north side of town, Bridlemere Avenue

One of the shorter Interlaken avenues (Fernmere)
Here
are a few more images of Interlaken.

The north entrance to Interlaken

. Autumn on Grasmere Avenue
(and you better not go over 25 M.P.H.).

Borough Hall (part of it, anyway).

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A dramatic shot of the 1910 Interlaken Air Meet!
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