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Henry Family Saves 175-Year-Old New Jersey Farm From Government Seizure
America First Report ^ | October 26, 2025 | Belinda Johnson

Posted on 10/26/2025 8:32:42 AM PDT by Red Badger

For nearly two centuries, the Henry family has worked the same soil in Bedminster, New Jersey — a 175-year-old farm passed from one generation to the next. But earlier this year, their heritage came under attack. Local officials, invoking the state’s “affordable housing” laws, sought to seize part of the Henrys’ land through legal maneuvering that would have handed it to developers.

The battle lasted months. It was draining, personal, and emblematic of a deeper national struggle between individual liberty and government overreach. At its heart was a simple question: do Americans still have the right to protect their property from the encroaching power of the state?

The Henrys said yes — and refused to back down.

Bedminster Township officials claimed the family’s land was needed to satisfy New Jersey’s affordable housing requirements, part of the state’s “Mount Laurel doctrine,” which forces municipalities to set aside areas for low- and moderate-income housing. In practice, that mandate often translates to deals between town governments and private developers — deals that profit politically connected insiders while displacing long-time property owners.

For the Henrys, compliance wasn’t an option. The farm had been in the family since before the Civil War, and to lose it to bureaucratic manipulation would have been a betrayal of everything their ancestors built. “This isn’t just land,” patriarch John Henry said. “It’s our home, our history, and our future. We weren’t going to let the government take that away.”

The family took their fight to court, arguing that the township’s actions amounted to an unconstitutional land grab disguised as “public good.” Their legal team showed that the town’s plan violated both the spirit and the letter of eminent domain law — which allows government to take private property only for legitimate public use, not for private development masked as social policy.

After months of hearings, the judge ruled in favor of the Henry family, halting the township’s attempt to rezone and seize the property. It was a rare victory for ordinary citizens in an era when small landowners are routinely bulldozed by regulation and corporate collusion.

The case may have unfolded in a quiet corner of New Jersey, but its implications stretch nationwide. Across the country, similar battles are erupting as state and local governments exploit “housing equity,” “green energy,” and “climate resilience” initiatives to justify taking or restricting private land. What happened in Bedminster is a warning: government power, once expanded, rarely retreats — unless citizens are willing to fight back.

The Henrys did just that. Their courage reaffirms a truth that runs deeper than politics — that freedom is inseparable from property. The ability to own, cultivate, and preserve what one’s family has built is not a mere privilege; it is a cornerstone of self-government and human dignity.

Their victory isn’t only about acres of farmland. It’s about preserving a way of life rooted in responsibility, faith, and independence — values that have long defined America’s heartland and are increasingly under assault by bureaucrats who see people as obstacles to policy.

For now, the Henry farm stands tall — a quiet symbol of resistance against an ever-expanding state. It remains in the hands of the family that has cared for it since 1850, proof that perseverance still matters and that liberty, though embattled, can still triumph when ordinary Americans refuse to yield.


TOPICS: Agriculture; History; Outdoors; Society
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To: Red Badger

God Bless the Henrys for fighting the good fight. It might not be over if appealed under the Kelo travesty. if that happens, I hope they fight it and I would gladly contribute to that defense in the hopes that SCOTUS regains its mind and overturns Kelo.


21 posted on 10/26/2025 10:24:14 AM PDT by NonValueAdded (First, I was a clinger, then deplorable, now I'm garbage. Feel the love? )
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To: Red Badger

Through legal maneuvering that would have handed it to developers.

New Jersey’s affordable housing requirements, part of the state’s “Mount Laurel doctrine,” which forces municipalities to set aside areas for low- and moderate-income housing.

Who says we don’t have socialism with Marxism muscle backing?.


22 posted on 10/26/2025 11:25:13 AM PDT by Vaduz
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To: Red Badger

Yay!


23 posted on 10/26/2025 11:58:50 AM PDT by sauropod
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To: HYPOCRACY

Bankrupt them and THEN burn their houses down.

I live in NJ.

Bedminster is very, very upscale.


24 posted on 10/26/2025 4:29:47 PM PDT by jmacusa ( Liberals. Too stupid to be idiots.)
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To: Red Badger

Outstanding!


25 posted on 10/26/2025 6:49:28 PM PDT by Steely eyed killer of the deep (When in the course of human events...)
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