Government agencies ignored and violated the National Historic Preservation Act when the 250-year-old Hugg-Harrison-Glover House in Bellmawr was torn down in early March.
The Camden County Historical Society made the allegation in a federal lawsuit filed late Wednesday in Camden.
“There is no longer anything that can be done to reverse the irreparable harm done to the Harrison House” said Chris Perks, leader of the historical society, “but those who were responsible will be held accountable, and the significant loss of this historic resource needs to somehow be restored to this community.”
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Perkins announced the suit Thursday morning.
The New Jersey Department of Transportation has admitted it did not have a required demolition permit when it ripped down the Camden County home once owned by a Colonial militia captain who fought in the Revolutionary War. The demolition came one day after the historical society had filed a lawsuit seeking emergency restraints against the demolition.
The house had been in the path of a major interstate construction project.
NJDOT, the U.S. Department of Transportation, and Federal Highway Administration are named in the suit. The lead agency, NJDOT, did not immediately respond.
The suit seeks to mitigate damage by ordering the state to build or do one or more of the following:
• Build a replica of the house
• Construct a Revolutionary War museum
• Create a monument commemorating the original house
• Create a "ghost structure" at the original site
• Place commemorative signage
• Perform archaeological excavations
The society also wants debris from the site and monetary damages.
Colonial militia Captain William Harrison owned the home. He fought a Revolutionary War battle at nearby Big Timber Creek. The Marquis de Lafayette was in command during the battle.
The site now will have a sound barrier wall for the I-676/I-295 interchange project.