NMHA History
NMHA's history dates back to 1999 when volunteer members of the
Monmouth Boat Club organized a family and community boat building
event in Red Bank during the RiverFest weekend.
More about the planning, source materials, and early history is in this
essay by Charles Ladoulis.
This event was quite a success and it was immediately apparent that events of
this type would result in greater appreciation of the Navesink River and the
local river heritage. Most of all it was discovered that wooden boatbuilding did
not only provide for a fun and fullfilling recreational event, but also that the
activities associated with boatbuilding, restoration and river exploration
provided a very powerful setting for training in teamwork, environmental
appreciation, hands on skills and planning.
This resulted in the formation of the Navesink Martime Heritage Association.
Intitially NMHA was an informal association that ran a variety of informal
programs that included lectures, boatbuilding classes, a wooden boat rendezvous
and river exploration excursions. Once it became apparent that there were
significant community benefits from NMHA's activities, NMHA became a 501c3
charitable organization and has become an important facilitator of boatbuilding,
restoration, river education and community outreach programs.
Today NMHA runs a wide variety of programs, alone, or in partnership with many
other organizations, and this website provides a sampling of the type of
programs that NMHA is involved in.
The organization is run by a unpaid volunteer board of trustees and depends on
interested volunteers, partner organizations, and its members for support in the
programs it organizes, and draws in participants from the public at large, local
schools and community organizations.
Day to day, NMHA continues to promote community spirit, improvements in
educational methods and plain river fun.




