X-Nico

8 unusual facts about Nutley


Alix Strachey

Strachey was born in Nutley, New Jersey, USA, the daughter of Henry Smyth Florence, an American musician, and Mary Sargant Florence, a British painter.

Arthur Hoeber

Arthur Hoeber (23 July 1854 New York City – 29 April 1915 Nutley, New Jersey) was a United States painter best known for his writing on art-related subjects.

Marvin R. Sambur

Sambur worked at Bell Labs until 1977, when he joined ITT Defense Communications in Nutley, New Jersey, as senior vice president.

Nutley, East Sussex

For the township in Essex County, New Jersey, see Nutley, New Jersey.

Author Neil Gaiman lived in Nutley between 1987 and 1992, and his house there became the setting for his book Coraline.

Nutley Windmill, a rare example of an open trestle post mill, was moved to Nutley from Goudhurst, Kent around 1817, her timbers being older than this.

Philip Sargant Florence

Born in Nutley, New Jersey in the United States, hewas the son of Henry Smyth Florence, an American musician, and Mary Sargant Florence, a British painter.

William Theilheimer

Later volumes were sponsored by a number of American chemical and pharmaceutical firms, most notably Hoffmann-LaRoche, Inc., who provided library facilities at their site in Nutley, New Jersey from 1948 up to (and after) Theilheimer's retirement in 1981.


John V. Kelly

As president of Nutley Savings Bank, Kelly was known for going out of his way to find a justification to fund a mortgage for a prospective customer and was likened to Jimmy Stewart's character George Bailey in the holiday classic It's a Wonderful Life.

Misfits discography

Fiend Club Lounge, a tribute album by The Nutley Brass released in 2005.

Preston Candover

The village itself lies on the lowest ground towards the west of the parish on the road which comes northeast from Northington and the two other Candovers, and runs across the parish to enter Nutley at Axford and continues uphill to Farleigh Wallop and thence to Basingstoke.

Roche Institute of Molecular Biology

The Roche Institute of Molecular Biology was created on July 14, 1967 when Jim Burns, then the vice president of research at Hoffman-La Roche, persuaded biochemist Sidney Udenfriend to leave the National Institutes of Health and help him create a basic science institute at the Hoffman-La Roche, Nutley, New Jersey facility.


see also