List of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Mercer County, New Jersey
Atlantic – Bergen (Closter, Franklin Lakes, Ridgewood, Saddle River, Wyckoff) – Burlington – Camden – Cape May – Cumberland – Essex – Gloucester – Hudson – Hunterdon – Mercer – Middlesex – Monmouth – Morris – Ocean – Passaic – Salem – Somerset – Sussex – Union – Warren |
This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Mercer County, New Jersey. Latitude and longitude coordinates of the sites listed on this page may be displayed in an online map.[1]
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted March 8, 2024.[2]
[3] | Name on the Register[4] | Image | Date listed[5] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Abbott Farm Archeological Site | December 8, 1976 (#76001158) |
John A. Roebling Park, other nearby public and private lands 40°11′10″N 74°43′37″W / 40.186°N 74.727°W | Hamilton and Bordentown Townships, Bordentown[6] | Paleoindian settlement, 500 BC-500 AD.[7] Extends into Burlington County. | |
2 | John Abbott II House | June 18, 1976 (#76001159) |
2200 Kuser Rd. 40°12′14″N 74°40′51″W / 40.203889°N 74.680833°W | Hamilton Township | Used to hide state treasury during American Revolution[8] | |
3 | Abbott-Decou House | July 1, 1976 (#76001160) |
58 Soloff Dr. 40°11′08″N 74°43′11″W / 40.185556°N 74.719722°W | Hamilton Township | Fine example of 18th century Quaker Georgian architecture.[9] | |
4 | Adams and Sickles Building | January 31, 1980 (#80002498) |
1 W. End Ave. 40°13′36″N 74°46′45″W / 40.226667°N 74.779167°W | Trenton | Focal point for West End neighborhood, remembered for soda fountain and corner druggist.[10] | |
5 | American Cigar Company Building | December 30, 2011 (#11000965) |
176 Division St. 40°12′45″N 74°44′41″W / 40.212498°N 74.744743°W | Trenton | Built in 1903 as part of Trenton's vibrant cigar industry | |
6 | Anderson-Capner House | April 3, 1973 (#73001107) |
700 Trumbull Ave. 40°14′52″N 74°44′06″W / 40.247755°N 74.734912°W | Lawrence | Pre-revolutionary farmhouse built 1764[11] | |
7 | Archeological Site No. 1-18th Century Vessel (28ME196) | August 14, 1986 (#86001508) |
Address restricted[12] | Trenton | ||
8 | Baker-Brearley House | August 31, 1979 (#79001499) |
East of Lawrenceville on Meadow Rd 40°17′33″N 74°42′03″W / 40.292504°N 74.700792°W | Lawrenceville | Georgian house built 1761[13] | |
9 | Bear Tavern Road--Jacob's Creek Crossing Rural Historic District | November 30, 2011 (#11000872) |
Bear Tavern Rd. & Jacobs Creek Rd. 40°17′21″N 74°50′29″W / 40.289151°N 74.841399°W | Hopewell Township, Ewing Township | Colonial rural landscape, route of Continental Army in 1776[14] | |
10 | Bellevue Avenue Colored School | January 2, 1997 (#96001547) |
81 Bellevue Ave. 40°13′32″N 74°46′17″W / 40.225556°N 74.771389°W | Trenton | ||
11 | Berkeley Square Historic District | November 20, 1980 (#80002499) |
Roughly bounded by W. State St., Parkside, Riverside, and Overbrook Aves. 40°13′49″N 74°47′23″W / 40.230278°N 74.789722°W | Trenton | ||
12 | Bow Hill | January 25, 1973 (#73001111) |
477 Jeremiah Ave. off Lalor St. 40°11′32″N 74°44′39″W / 40.192222°N 74.744167°W | Hamilton Township | ||
13 | Charles Brearley House | April 14, 1995 (#95000407) |
73 N. Clinton Ave. 40°13′23″N 74°45′18″W / 40.223056°N 74.755°W | Trenton | ||
14 | Broad Street National Bank | January 17, 2008 (#07001404) |
143 E. State Street 40°13′12″N 74°45′43″W / 40.219907°N 74.762068°W | Trenton | ||
15 | Camden and Amboy Railroad Right of Way Site | June 16, 2016 (#16000252) |
N. side of Rogers Ave. about 100 yds. W. of Mercer St. 40°16′09″N 74°31′31″W / 40.269291°N 74.525172°W | Hightstown | ||
16 | Carver Center | July 7, 2022 (#100007871) |
40 Fowler Street 40°13′29″N 74°46′07″W / 40.2248°N 74.7686°W | Trenton | Known as Sunlight Elks Lodge | |
17 | Henry Clay and Bock & Co. Ltd. Cigar Factory | June 12, 1979 (#79001500) |
507 Grand St. 40°12′11″N 74°44′45″W / 40.203056°N 74.745833°W | Trenton | Most architecturally distinctive industrial building in Trenton[15] | |
18 | Grover Cleveland Home | October 15, 1966 (#66000463) |
15 Hodge Road 40°21′05″N 74°40′04″W / 40.351389°N 74.667778°W | Princeton | Known as Westland Mansion | |
19 | Crosswicks Creek Site III | November 26, 1990 (#87001795) |
Address restricted[12] | Hamilton Township | Extends into Burlington County | |
20 | Delaware and Raritan Canal | May 11, 1973 (#73001105) |
Follows the Delaware River to Trenton, then E to New Brunswick 40°19′55″N 74°39′09″W / 40.331930°N 74.652628°W | Princeton | ||
21 | Gen. Philemon Dickinson House | May 17, 1974 (#74001172) |
46 Colonial Ave. 40°13′36″N 74°47′01″W / 40.226667°N 74.783611°W | Trenton | ||
22 | Douglass House | December 18, 1970 (#70000387) |
Corner of Front and Montgomery Streets 40°13′08″N 74°45′42″W / 40.218913°N 74.761726°W | Trenton | George Washington's headquarters prior to the Battle of Princeton[16] | |
23 | Drumthwacket | June 10, 1975 (#75001142) |
344 Stockton Rd. 40°20′22″N 74°40′29″W / 40.339444°N 74.674722°W | Princeton | Official residence of the governor of New Jersey[17] | |
24 | East Trenton Public Library | March 5, 2008 (#08000134) |
701 N. Clinton Ave. 40°14′00″N 74°44′30″W / 40.233255°N 74.741769°W | Trenton | ||
25 | Albert Einstein House | January 7, 1976 (#76002297) |
112 Mercer St. 40°20′40″N 74°39′59″W / 40.344444°N 74.666389°W | Princeton | ||
26 | First Presbyterian Church | September 9, 2005 (#05000967) |
120 East State Street 40°13′14″N 74°45′48″W / 40.220446°N 74.763312°W | Trenton | Includes churchyard cemetery | |
27 | First Presbyterian Church of Pennington | August 24, 2011 (#11000591) |
13 S. Main St. 40°19′39″N 74°47′25″W / 40.3275°N 74.790278°W | Pennington | ||
28 | Golden Swan-True American | April 30, 2008 (#08000361) |
101-107 S. Warren St. 40°13′09″N 74°45′58″W / 40.2192°N 74.766011°W | Trenton | ||
29 | William Green House | December 4, 1973 (#73001106) |
Metzger Drive 40°15′54″N 74°46′39″W / 40.26502178604058°N 74.77741373763769°W | Ewing Township | Historic farmhouse, dating to 1717. On Preservation New Jersey's list of 10 most endangered historic sites[18] | |
30 | Green-Reading House | March 12, 1998 (#98000237) |
107 Wilburtha Rd. 40°15′38″N 74°49′32″W / 40.260427°N 74.825467°W | Ewing Township | Federal style farmhouse from ca. 1797[19] | |
31 | Harbourton Historic District | December 31, 1974 (#74001167) |
Junction of Harbourton/Rocktown and Harbourton/Mt. Airy Roads 40°21′08″N 74°51′12″W / 40.352222°N 74.853333°W | Harbourton | ||
32 | John D. Hart House | October 18, 1972 (#72000800) |
54 East Curlis Avenue, Pennington 40°19′18″N 74°46′59″W / 40.321667°N 74.783056°W | Hopewell Township | Built c. 1800, fine example of a clapboard house[20] | |
33 | Hart-Hoch House | March 14, 1973 (#73001109) |
Southwest of Pennington on CR 546 and Scotch Rd. 40°18′34″N 74°48′43″W / 40.309444°N 74.811944°W | Hopewell Township | Federal style home, ca. 1800[21] | |
34 | Joseph Henry House | October 15, 1966 (#66000464) |
Princeton University campus 40°20′58″N 74°39′32″W / 40.349444°N 74.658889°W | Princeton | ||
35 | Donald Grant Herring Estate | January 17, 1992 (#91001927) |
52, 72 and 75 Arreton Rd., Princeton 40°22′56″N 74°39′57″W / 40.382222°N 74.665833°W | Princeton | ||
36 | Higbee Street School | April 14, 1995 (#95000409) |
20 Bellevue Ave. 40°14′04″N 74°45′57″W / 40.234444°N 74.765833°W | Trenton | ||
37 | Highfields | September 23, 1994 (#94001096) |
End of Lindbergh Rd., East Amwell Township 40°25′26″N 74°46′04″W / 40.423889°N 74.767778°W | Hopewell Township | Home of Charles and Anne Lindbergh. Site of the Lindbergh kidnapping.[22] Extends into Hunterdon County | |
38 | Hog Island Cranes | June 17, 1980 (#80002500) |
Trenton Marine Terminal 40°11′27″N 74°45′22″W / 40.190833°N 74.756111°W | Trenton | ||
39 | Hopewell Station | June 22, 1984 (#84002728) |
Railroad Place 40°23′29″N 74°45′48″W / 40.391389°N 74.763333°W | Hopewell | part of the Operating Passenger Railroad Stations TR | |
40 | House at 379 West State Street | January 23, 1980 (#80002501) |
379 W. State St. 40°13′29″N 74°46′41″W / 40.224722°N 74.778056°W | Trenton | Queen Anne revival house[23] | |
41 | Hunt Farmstead | October 28, 1988 (#87002555) |
197 Blackwell Rd. 40°19′18″N 74°45′39″W / 40.321778°N 74.760718°W | Hopewell Township | ||
42 | In and Out Social Club | March 26, 1987 (#87000513) |
714-716 S. Clinton Ave. 40°12′34″N 74°45′06″W / 40.209444°N 74.751667°W | Trenton | Built in 1893 for "social, intellectual, and recreative purposes."[24] | |
43 | Jugtown Historic District | January 22, 1987 (#86003670) |
Nassau and Harrison Sts., Harrison St. N, and Evelyn Pl. 40°21′14″N 74°38′49″W / 40.353889°N 74.646944°W | Princeton | ||
44 | King's Highway Historic District | December 21, 2000 (#00001493) |
NJ 27, US 206 40°20′54″N 74°39′52″W / 40.348261°N 74.664502°W | Lawrenceville, Princeton | Extends into Middlesex and Somerset Counties | |
45 | Kingston Mill Historic District | April 10, 1986 (#86000707) |
Roughly bounded by Herrontown, River, Princeton-Kingston Roads 40°22′25″N 74°37′14″W / 40.373577°N 74.620630°W | Princeton | Extends into Middlesex and Somerset Counties, includes Kingston Bridge | |
46 | Rudolph V. Kuser Estate | August 24, 1979 (#79001501) |
315 W. State St. 40°13′23″N 74°46′36″W / 40.223056°N 74.776667°W | Trenton | ||
47 | Lake Carnegie Historic District | June 28, 1990 (#90001000) |
Roughly bounded by Lake Carnegie shoreline from Conrail bridge at west end to dam west of Kingston at east end 40°20′51″N 74°38′12″W / 40.3475°N 74.636667°W | Princeton | ||
48 | Lawrence Township Historic District | September 14, 1972 (#72000799) |
Lawrenceville and vicinity N, including both sides of U.S. 206 40°18′01″N 74°43′12″W / 40.300278°N 74.72°W | Lawrence Township | Includes Lawrenceville School | |
49 | Lawrenceville School | February 24, 1986 (#86000158) |
Main St. 40°17′45″N 74°43′49″W / 40.295833°N 74.730278°W | Lawrenceville | ||
50 | Ichabod Leigh House | March 4, 1975 (#75001139) |
953 Cherry Valley Road 40°22′21″N 74°43′55″W / 40.3725°N 74.731944°W | Hopewell Township | ||
51 | Thomas Maddock's Sons Company | March 14, 2008 (#08000178) |
American Metro Boulevard 40°15′27″N 74°42′17″W / 40.257383°N 74.704672°W | Hamilton Township | Sanitary pottery manufacturing plant built 1924-25[25] | |
52 | Mansion House | February 6, 1973 (#73001112) |
Cadwalader Park 40°14′12″N 74°47′22″W / 40.236667°N 74.789444°W | Trenton | Also known as Ellarslie and the McCall House, home to the Trenton City Museum | |
53 | Maybury Hill | November 11, 1971 (#71000502) |
346 Snowden Lane 40°22′02″N 74°38′34″W / 40.367222°N 74.642778°W | Princeton | ||
54 | Mercer Street Friends Center | August 12, 1971 (#71000505) |
151 Mercer St. 40°13′02″N 74°45′40″W / 40.217222°N 74.761111°W | Trenton | ||
55 | Mill Hill Historic District | December 12, 1977 (#77000880) |
Roughly bounded by Clay, Jackson, Front, Market, Broad, and Greenwood Streets 40°13′01″N 74°45′40″W / 40.216944°N 74.761111°W | Trenton | Includes Douglass House and Mercer Street Friends Center | |
56 | Morven | January 25, 1971 (#71000503) |
55 Stockton St. 40°20′51″N 74°40′01″W / 40.3475°N 74.666944°W | Princeton | ||
57 | Mott School and Second Street School | April 15, 1986 (#86000809) |
Centre and 643-645 Second Sts. 40°12′07″N 74°45′24″W / 40.201944°N 74.756667°W | Trenton | ||
58 | Mount Rose Distillery | December 12, 1996 (#96001471) |
Address restricted[12] 40°22′02″N 74°44′49″W / 40.367361°N 74.747083°W | Hopewell Township | ||
59 | Mountain Avenue Historic District | February 2, 1995 (#94001604) |
73-143 Mountain Ave. 40°21′25″N 74°40′25″W / 40.356944°N 74.673611°W | Princeton | ||
60 | Nassau Hall, Princeton University | October 15, 1966 (#66000465) |
Princeton University campus 40°20′55″N 74°39′34″W / 40.348611°N 74.659444°W | Princeton | ||
61 | New Jersey Division of Motor Vehicles Building | March 20, 2023 (#100008729) |
25 South Montgomery Street 40°13′10″N 74°45′42″W / 40.2195°N 74.7618°W | Trenton | ||
62 | Old Barracks | January 25, 1971 (#71000506) |
S. Willow St. 40°13′10″N 74°46′07″W / 40.219444°N 74.768611°W | Trenton | ||
63 | Old Eagle Tavern | November 3, 1972 (#72000801) |
431, 433 S. Broad St. 40°12′47″N 74°45′34″W / 40.2131°N 74.7594°W | Trenton | ||
64 | Old Ryan Farm | September 10, 1971 (#71000507) |
27 Federal City Road 40°16′47″N 74°46′15″W / 40.2798°N 74.7709°W | Ewing Township | Known as the Benjamin Temple House | |
65 | Isaac Pearson House | February 1, 2006 (#05001568) |
Hobson Ave. at Emiline Ave. 40°11′16″N 74°42′44″W / 40.1878°N 74.7122°W | Hamilton Township | ||
66 | Pennington Railroad Station | December 31, 1974 (#74001170) |
Corner of Franklin and Green Ave. 40°19′58″N 74°47′41″W / 40.3328°N 74.7947°W | Pennington | ||
67 | Penns Neck Baptist Church | December 28, 1989 (#89002160) |
US 1 at Princeton-Hightstown Road 40°19′55″N 74°38′15″W / 40.3319°N 74.6375°W | Penns Neck | ||
68 | Pennsylvania Railroad Bridge | June 6, 1979 (#79001502) |
Spans Delaware River 40°12′24″N 74°46′09″W / 40.2067°N 74.7692°W | Trenton | ||
69 | Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Freight Station | May 14, 1979 (#79001503) |
260 N. Willow St. 40°13′34″N 74°46′03″W / 40.2261°N 74.7675°W | Trenton | ||
70 | Joseph Phillips Farm | May 2, 1977 (#77000879) |
North of Titusville on Hunter Road 40°20′23″N 74°53′56″W / 40.3397°N 74.8989°W | Hopewell Township | Started by Joseph Phillips in 1732, now the Howell Living History Farm, which operates and preserves it as it was in 1900[26] | |
71 | Pleasant Valley Historic District | June 14, 1991 (#91000676) |
Centered on junction of Pleasant Valley Road with Woodens Lane and Hunter Road 40°20′18″N 74°53′44″W / 40.3383°N 74.8956°W | Hopewell Township | Extends into Hunterdon County, includes Joseph Phillips Farm | |
72 | President's House | July 17, 1971 (#71000504) |
Nassau St. 40°20′56″N 74°39′36″W / 40.3489°N 74.66°W | Princeton | ||
73 | Princeton Battlefield | October 15, 1966 (#66000466) |
Princeton Battlefield State Park; also Roughly Quaker Rd. from Stockton Rd. to Stony Brook 40°19′45″N 74°40′36″W / 40.3292°N 74.6767°W | Princeton | Boundary increases approved October 10, 1989 and April 26, 2019 | |
74 | Princeton Historic District | June 27, 1975 (#75001143) |
Irregular pattern between Lytle St. and Haslet Ave. from Lovers Lane to Olden Sts. 40°20′48″N 74°39′51″W / 40.3467°N 74.6642°W | Princeton | ||
75 | Princeton Ice Company | August 28, 2007 (#07000874) |
57 Mountain Ave. 40°21′26″N 74°40′17″W / 40.3573°N 74.6713°W | Princeton | ||
76 | Prospect | February 4, 1985 (#85002434) |
Princeton University campus 40°20′49″N 74°39′24″W / 40.3469°N 74.6567°W | Princeton | ||
77 | Riverview Cemetery | March 27, 2017 (#100000810) |
870 Centre Street 40°11′42″N 74°45′12″W / 40.19492°N 74.75344°W | Trenton | ||
78 | Roebling Machine Shop | September 4, 1997 (#97000932) |
675 S. Clinton Ave. 40°12′35″N 74°45′11″W / 40.2097°N 74.7531°W | Trenton | Oldest surviving building in the Roebling complex, built innovative wire rope making machines[27] | |
79 | John A. Roebling's Sons Company, Trenton N.J., Block 3 | August 22, 2012 (#12000528) |
Bounded by Hamilton Ave., Clark, Elmer, & E. Canal Sts. 40°12′46″N 74°45′19″W / 40.2127°N 74.7552°W | Trenton | Northern portion of Roebling complex, built wire for North Sea Mine Barrage, Golden Gate Bridge, among other structures | |
80 | John Rogers House | January 31, 1978 (#78001770) |
South of Princeton on S. Post Rd. 40°15′45″N 74°38′52″W / 40.262414°N 74.6479°W | West Windsor | ||
81 | V. Henry Rothschild-F.A. Straus and Co.-Atlantic Products Corporation Mill Complex | November 19, 2020 (#100005815) |
1 North Johnston Ave. 40°13′58″N 74°44′00″W / 40.2329°N 74.7333°W | Hamilton Township | ||
82 | Sacred Heart Church | May 2, 2002 (#02000434) |
343 S. Broad St. 40°12′59″N 74°45′40″W / 40.2164°N 74.7611°W | Trenton | ||
83 | Samuel Sloan House | March 28, 1974 (#74001168) |
238 S. Main St. 40°15′58″N 74°31′32″W / 40.2661°N 74.5256°W | Hightstown | ||
84 | Smith-Ribsam House | June 9, 1988 (#88000722) |
45 Pine Knoll Dr. 40°16′27″N 74°43′28″W / 40.274167°N 74.724444°W | Eldridge Park | ||
85 | Somerset Roller Mills | November 19, 1974 (#74001171) |
NJ 29 40°16′45″N 74°51′13″W / 40.279167°N 74.853611°W | Titusville | ||
86 | St. Michael's Episcopal Church | April 29, 1982 (#82003280) |
140 N. Warren St. 40°13′20″N 74°45′55″W / 40.222222°N 74.765278°W | Trenton | ||
87 | State House Historic District | August 27, 1976 (#76001161) |
Roughly bounded by Capitol Plaza, Willow, State and Lafayette Sts. • Boundary increase (listed April 2, 1992, refnum 92000295): W. State St. south side, west of New Jersey State House 40°13′14″N 74°46′15″W / 40.220556°N 74.770833°W | Trenton | ||
88 | Israel Stevens House | March 15, 2005 (#05000176) |
2167 Brunswick Ave. 40°15′19″N 74°44′00″W / 40.255278°N 74.733333°W | Lawrence | ||
89 | Stockton Street Historic District | November 25, 2005 (#05001331) |
126-136 Stockton St., 219-237 Rogers Ave. 40°16′15″N 74°31′42″W / 40.2709°N 74.5284°W | Hightstown | ||
90 | Stokely-Van Camp Industrial Complex | March 11, 1983 (#83001603) |
Lalor Street at Stokely Ave. 40°11′59″N 74°45′16″W / 40.199722°N 74.754444°W | Trenton | ||
91 | Joseph Stout House | October 29, 1974 (#74001169) |
Province Line Road 40°24′34″N 74°44′44″W / 40.409444°N 74.745556°W | Hopewell Township | ||
92 | Titusville Historic District | March 17, 1983 (#83001604) |
River Drive 40°18′22″N 74°52′44″W / 40.306111°N 74.878889°W | Titusville | ||
93 | William Trent House | April 15, 1970 (#70000388) |
15 Market Street 40°12′46″N 74°45′58″W / 40.212778°N 74.766111°W | Trenton | ||
94 | Trenton and Mercer County War Memorial-Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial Building | December 11, 1986 (#86003480) |
W. Lafayette St. 40°13′06″N 74°46′06″W / 40.218333°N 74.768333°W | Trenton | ||
95 | Trenton Battle Monument | May 6, 1977 (#77000881) |
Warren and Broad Streets 40°13′33″N 74°45′53″W / 40.225833°N 74.764722°W | Trenton | Commemorates the Battle of Trenton | |
96 | Trenton Central Office of the Bell Telephone Company | April 3, 2017 (#100000826) |
214-218 E. State St. 40°13′14″N 74°45′40″W / 40.220513°N 74.761001°W | Trenton | ||
97 | Trenton City Hall | January 30, 1978 (#78001771) |
309 State St. 40°13′12″N 74°45′34″W / 40.22°N 74.759444°W | Trenton | ||
98 | Trenton City/Calhoun Street Bridge | November 20, 1975 (#75001621) |
Spans Delaware River between Morrisville, PA and Trenton, NJ 40°13′11″N 74°46′42″W / 40.219722°N 74.778333°W | Trenton | ||
99 | Trenton Ferry Historic District | June 26, 2013 (#13000355) |
Roughly bounded by South Broad and Federal Streets, the Delaware River and the Amtrak Northeast Corridor 40°12′36″N 74°45′34″W / 40.210000°N 74.759444°W | Trenton | Working class urban mixed-use neighborhood of row houses, duplexes, churches, and commercial buildings[28] | |
100 | Trenton Friends Meeting House | April 30, 2008 (#08000362) |
142 E. Hanover St. 40°13′16″N 74°45′46″W / 40.221181°N 74.762644°W | Trenton | ||
101 | Trenton Jewish Community Center Bath House and Day Camp | February 23, 1984 (#84002730) |
999 Lower Ferry Rd. 40°15′33″N 74°47′58″W / 40.259167°N 74.799444°W | Ewing Township | ||
102 | Trenton Watch Company Building-Circle F Manufacturing Company Building | April 3, 2017 (#100000827) |
720 Monmouth St. 40°13′02″N 74°44′48″W / 40.217111°N 74.746644°W | Trenton | ||
103 | Tusculum | January 5, 1978 (#78003171) |
North of Princeton on Cherry Hill Rd. 40°21′58″N 74°40′17″W / 40.366111°N 74.671389°W | Princeton | ||
104 | U.S. Post Office and Courthouse | May 24, 2012 (#12000309) |
402 E. State St. 40°13′16″N 74°45′26″W / 40.221132°N 74.757314°W | Trenton | ||
105 | University Cottage Club | November 19, 1999 (#99001315) |
51 Prospect Ave. 40°20′53″N 74°39′07″W / 40.348056°N 74.651944°W | Princeton | ||
106 | Colonel John Van Cleve Homestead | February 16, 1983 (#83001605) |
Northwest of Pennington on Poor Farm Road 40°21′11″N 74°49′27″W / 40.353056°N 74.824167°W | Hopewell Township | ||
107 | Jeremiah Vandyke House | March 29, 1978 (#78001769) |
Featherbed Lane 40°24′34″N 74°46′51″W / 40.409444°N 74.780833°W | Hopewell Township | ||
108 | Washington Crossing State Park | October 15, 1966 (#66000650) |
Titusville, New Jersey, on the Delaware River 40°17′57″N 74°52′07″W / 40.299167°N 74.868611°W | Titusville | ||
109 | Washington Road Elm Allée | January 14, 1999 (#98001571) |
Washington Rd., bet. the Penns Neck Circle and The D&R Canal 40°20′08″N 74°38′37″W / 40.335556°N 74.643611°W | West Windsor | ||
110 | Isaac Watson House | January 21, 1974 (#74001173) |
151 Westcott Street 40°11′26″N 74°43′38″W / 40.190556°N 74.727222°W | Hamilton Township | ||
111 | John Welling House | March 14, 1973 (#73001110) |
Curlis Ave. at Birch St. 40°19′17″N 74°46′58″W / 40.321389°N 74.782778°W | Pennington | Rare example of a Dutch clapboard and shingle house[29] | |
112 | West Trenton Station | June 22, 1984 (#84004031) |
Sullivan Way 40°15′27″N 74°48′57″W / 40.2575°N 74.815833°W | West Trenton | part of the Operating Passenger Railroad Stations TR | |
113 | John White House | January 29, 1973 (#73001108) |
Cold Soil Road, Lawrenceville 40°18′52″N 74°43′42″W / 40.314444°N 74.728333°W | Lawrence Township | ||
114 | Windsor Historic District | April 10, 1992 (#88001710) |
Roughly bounded by properties along Main St. and Church St. 40°14′27″N 74°35′06″W / 40.240833°N 74.585°W | Robbinsville | ||
115 | Witherspoon Street School for Colored Children | March 9, 2005 (#05000125) |
35 Quarry St. 40°21′19″N 74°39′46″W / 40.355278°N 74.662778°W | Princeton | ||
116 | Jeremiah Woolsey House | January 27, 1975 (#75001140) |
Southwest of Pennington on Washington Crossing Road 40°18′32″N 74°49′36″W / 40.308889°N 74.826667°W | Hopewell Township | Dutch Colonial house built 1765. Jeremiah Woolsey served as a commissioner to recruit men to serve in the Continental Army during the American Revolution.[30] |
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hutchinson House | January 25, 1973 (#73002201) | March 6, 1975 | 1 mi. NE of Hutchinson Mill-Pond Rd. | Hamilton Square | Destroyed by fire in 1974. | |
2 | Princessville Inn | June 27, 1980 (#80002497) | June 11, 1982 | E of Lawrenceville at 3510 Princeton Pike | Lawrence Township | Destroyed by fire on January 6, 1982.[31] Adjacent cemetery is extant. |