Monmouth Battlefield State Park preserves a rural eighteenth-century landscape of orchards, fields, woods and wetlands, encompassing miles of trails for hiking and horseback riding, space for picnic areas, and a restored Revolutionary War
farmhouse called the Craig House. The park's visitor center rests atop Combs Hill, a hill commanded by the
Continental Army artillery. Within the park's visitor center an array of excavated artifacts from battle are on display. On December 5, 2011, the Monmouth Battlefield Visitor Center was closed for renovations through Spring 2013. The renovated Visitors Center was officially reopened on June 13, 2013. Every second weekend of June (usually Father’s Day weekend), an annual reenactment of the 1778 American Revolutionary War battle is performed and has been so for decades. The battlefield is traversed by the
rights-of-way (ROW) used by the
Farmingdale and Squan Village Railroad/
Freehold and Jamesburg Agricultural Railroad and is under consideration for use as part of the
Monmouth Ocean Middlesex Line. ==History of the battlefield==