You’ve got to love a town where the official seal bears the image of a show jumper, neatly clearing a vertical obstacle of red and white rails. That municipality is Far Hills, N.J., which has quite a history with horses.
The name Far Hills has long been linked with an equestrian lifestyle, as part of the greater Somerset Hills area that includes the U.S. Equestrian Team Foundation’s Gladstone facility and the Essex Foxhounds’ home in Peapack.
Although it is less than five square miles, Far Hills may ring a bell with you because it is the home of the Far Hills Race Meeting, which each autumn draws as many as 30,000 visitors (about 30 times the number of its residents) and more recently, the site of the revived Essex Horse Trials (essexhorsetrials.org), scheduled for this coming weekend..
Matthias Hollberg, who competed at the Essex Horse Trials last year, will be back this weekend. (Photo © 2021 by Lawrence J. Nagy)Although it is less than five square miles, Far Hills may ring a bell with you because it is the home of the Far Hills Race Meeting, which each autumn draws as many as 30,000 visitors (about 30 times the number of its residents) and more recently, the site of the revived Essex Horse Trials (essexhorsetrials.org), scheduled for this coming weekend.
Both take place on a former estate, Moorland Farm. This year, however, the dressage and show jumping portions of Essex will run on Friday, July 1, a few miles down the road at the USET Foundation, while the cross-country will be held the following day over the varied terrain at Moorland.
Tickets are $10 per carload each day, and if you’re unfamiliar with this corner of the state, it’s the perfect occasion to visit. There are plenty of vendors and in addition, a car show at Moorland for those who want something to do besides watching the horses.
Competitors in the featured Open Preliminary division, which offers $10,000 in prize money, include local stars Meg Kepferle of Long Valley, N.J., on Cooley Renegade and Arielle Aharoni of Bedminster, N.J., with Furst Queen and Littlebitadominic, as well as Chumley. That’s the hunting horse owned by dressage rider Alice Tarjan of Oldwick, who contributed to the Dutta U.S. Dressage Team’s second-place finish in Rotterdam last weekend. (Read about it in the second feature on this website.)
Also entered is Hannah Sue Burnett, winner of the division last year. This time, she’s riding Stakkato Bronx, and her new husband, Matthias Hollberg, will be on J. Both horses are owned by Jacqueline Mars, a great benefactor of the sport. Sarah Kozumplik-Murphy, two-time winner of the Devon eventing derby, will be aboard Devil Munchkin.
There won’t be any horses going over the striped colored poles as depicted in the Far Hills logo during the Moorland portion of the competition, however, since the segments using that equipment will be at the Team. But the logo is still an appropriate image to associate with both the town and the races as they pass their century milestones.
The steeplechase marked its 100th anniversary in 2021, when the borough of Far Hills did the same, though the steeplechase was actually100 in 2020 but precluded from celebrating that year when it was cancelled due to Covid.
Eminent historian Barry Thomson, appearing at the Clarence Dillon library in Bedminster recently, gave a lecture about Far Hills’ history, quoting a 1986 article in Town & Country magazine that cited the borough’s “patrician style.”
The piece described Far Hills this way: “Tucked away in leafy western New Jersey is a horsey enclave with a distinctly blueblood character all its own. Since the 1890s, fashionable New Yorkers and ardent foxhunters have been drawn to its rolling hills and verdant meadows.”
As Barry noted, “That’s not all of what Far Hills is about, but it’s certainly a big part of what Far Hills is about and has been for a long time.”
Horse-drawn carriages would line up at the Far Hills train station at the end of the 19th Century and beginning of the 20th, as business leaders arrived from New York each weekend and in the summers to enjoy the countryside in a special part of the state.
By 1921, rising taxes had led the 200 residents of Far Hills to separate from Bernards Township and incorporate as a borough. The local property tax rate jumped from $2.72 in 1919 to $3.53 in 1920. (Those were the days!)
Both the villagers and Far Hills estate owners objected to sharing the costs of road upkeep in the 60-square-mile township with its population of 5,100 and also to the school taxes for educating the township’s 800 children, of whom only 90 were from Far Hills. And that led to formation of the borough.
The fairgrounds in Far Hills, now probably best known as the venue for the Visiting Nurse Association of the Somerset Hills’ spring and fall rummage sales, once hosted many horse and livestock shows. The little grandstand from those days is still on site.
Oh, and one more thing about the Far Hills borough seal. No way of knowing for sure if its show jumper is unique among municipalities across the country, but it should be noted that Wellington, Fla., home of the Winter Equestrian Festival, merely has a horse’s head on its logo–despite the fact that it draws thousands of horses from around the world for its shows.