Princeton, New Jersey Explained

Princeton, New Jersey
Settlement Type:Borough
Mapsize:250x200px
Image Map1:Census_Bureau_map_of_Princeton_Township,_New_Jersey.png
Mapsize1:250x200px
Map Caption1:Census Bureau map of the former Princeton Township (and enclaved Borough in pink), New Jersey

Pushpin Map:USA New Jersey Mercer County#USA New Jersey#USA
Pushpin Label:Princeton
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Mercer County##Location in New Jersey##Location in the United States
Pushpin Relief:yes
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name: United States
Subdivision Name2:Mercer
Government Type:Borough
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Mark Freda (D, term ends December 31, 2024)[1]
Leader Title1:Administrator
Leader Name1:Bernard Hvozdovic Jr.[2]
Leader Title2:Municipal clerk
Leader Name2:Delores Williams[3]
Established Title:Incorporated
Established Date:January 1, 2013
Unit Pref:Imperial
Area Footnotes:[4]
Area Total Km2:47.69
Area Land Km2:46.48
Area Water Km2:1.21
Area Total Sq Mi:18.41
Area Land Sq Mi:17.95
Area Water Sq Mi:0.47
Area Water Percent:2.53
Area Rank:154th of 565 in state
6th of 12 in county[5]
Population As Of:2020
Population Total:30681
Population Rank:78th of 565 in state
5th of 12 in county[6]
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Sq Mi:1709.6
Population Density Rank:319th of 565 in state
8th of 12 in county
Population Est:30289
Pop Est As Of:2023
Timezone:Eastern (EST)
Utc Offset:−05:00
Timezone Dst:Eastern (EDT)
Utc Offset Dst:−04:00
Coordinates Footnotes:[7]
Coordinates:40.3582°N -74.6667°W
Postal Code Type:ZIP Codes
Postal Code:08540–08544[8] [9]
Area Code:609[10]
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank Info:3402160900[11]
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID
Blank Emblem Size:250px
Blank Emblem Type:The Municipality's Logo

Princeton is a borough in Mercer County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was established on January 1, 2013, through the consolidation of the Borough of Princeton and Princeton Township, both of which are now defunct. As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 30,681, an increase of 2,109 (+7.4%) from the 2010 census combined count of 28,572. In the 2000 census, the two communities had a total population of 30,230, with 14,203 residents in the borough and 16,027 in the township.[12]

Princeton was founded before the American Revolutionary War. The borough is the home of Princeton University, one of the world’s most acclaimed research universities, which bears its name and moved to the community in 1756 from the educational institution's previous location in Newark. Although its association with the university is primarily what makes Princeton a college town, other important institutions in the area include the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton Theological Seminary, Opinion Research Corporation, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Siemens Corporate Research, SRI International, FMC Corporation, Educational Testing Service, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Amrep, Church and Dwight, Berlitz International, and Dow Jones & Company.

Princeton is roughly equidistant from New York City and Philadelphia.[13] It is close to many major highways that serve both cities (e.g., Interstate 95 and U.S. Route 1), and receives major television and radio broadcasts from each. It is also close to Trenton, New Jersey's capital city, New Brunswick and Edison.

The New Jersey governor's official residence has been in Princeton since 1945, when Morven (in what was then Princeton Borough) became the first governor's mansion. In 1982, it was replaced by the larger Drumthwacket, a colonial mansion located in the former township, but not all have actually lived in these houses. Morven became a museum and garden, owned and operated by the New Jersey Historical Society.[14]

Throughout much of its history, the community was split into two separate municipalities: a township and a borough. The central borough was completely surrounded by the township. The borough seceded from the township in 1894 in a dispute over school taxes; the two municipalities later formed the Princeton Public Schools, and some other public services were conducted together before they were reunited into a single Princeton in January 2013. Princeton Borough contained Nassau Street, the main commercial street, most of the university campus, and incorporated most of the urban area until the postwar suburbanization. The borough and township had roughly equal populations. Major streets include Harrison, Witherspoon, Nassau, Bayard, and Stockton.[15]

History

Early history

The Lenape Native Americans were the earliest identifiable inhabitants of the Princeton area.

Europeans settled into the area in the late part of the 17th century, arriving from Delaware to settle West Jersey, and from New York to settle East Jersey, with the site destined to become Princeton being amid the wilderness between these two boroughs.[16] The first European to find his home in the boundaries of the future municipality was Henry Greenland. He built his house in 1683 along with a tavern, where representatives of West and East Jersey met to set the boundaries between the two provinces.[17] Greenland's son-in-law Daniel Brimson inhabited the area by 1690, and left property in a will dated 1696.

Then, Princeton was known only as part of nearby Stony Brook.[18] [19] Nathaniel Fitz Randolph, a native of the town, attested in his private journal on December 28, 1758, that Princeton was named in 1724 upon the making/construction of the first house in the area by James Leonard, who first referred to the community as Princetown when describing the location of his large estate in his diary.[20] The community was later known by a variety of names, including: Princetown, Prince's Town and finally Princeton.[21] The name Princeton was first used in 1724 and became common within the subsequent decade.[17] Although there is no official documentary backing, the municipality is said to be named after Prince William of Orange.[22] Another theory suggests that the name came from a large land-owner named Henry Prince, the son-in-law of a well-known English merchant, but no evidence backs this contention. A royal prince seems a more likely eponym for the settlement, as three nearby towns had names for royalty: Kingston, Queenstown (in the vicinity of the intersection of Nassau and Harrison Streets) and Princessville (Lawrence Township).

Princeton was described by William Edward Schenck in 1850 as having attained "no very considerable size" until the establishment of the College of New Jersey in the town. When Richard Stockton, one of the founders of the township, died in 1709 he left his estate to his sons, who helped to expand property and the population. Based on the 1880 United States Census, the population of Princeton comprised 3,209 persons (not including students). Local population has expanded from the nineteenth century. According to the 2010 census, Princeton Borough had 12,307 inhabitants, while Princeton Township had 16,265.[23] [24] The numbers have become stagnant; since the arrival of the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University, in 1756, the town's population spikes every year during the fall and winter and drops significantly over the course of the summer.

Revolution

In the pivotal Battle of Princeton in January 1777, George Washington forced the British to evacuate southern New Jersey.[17] After the victory, Princeton hosted the first Legislature under the State Constitution to decide the State's seal, governor and organization of its government. In addition, two of the original signers of the Declaration of Independence—Richard Stockton and John Witherspoon—lived in Princeton. Princetonians honored their citizens' legacy by naming two streets in the downtown area after them.

On January 10, 1938, Henry Ewing Hale called for a group of citizens to establish a "Historical Society of Princeton." Later the Bainbridge House, constructed in 1766 by Job Stockton, would be dedicated for this purpose. Previously the house was used once for a meeting of Continental Congress in 1783, a general office, and as the Princeton Public Library. The House is owned by Princeton University and is leased to the Princeton Historical Society for one dollar per year.[25] The house has kept its original staircase, flooring and paneled walls. Around 70% of the house has been unaltered. Aside from safety features such as wheelchair access and electrical work, the house has been restored to its original appearance and character.

Government history

During the most stirring events in its history, Princeton was a wide spot in the road; the boundary between Somerset County and Middlesex County ran right through Princeton, along the high road between New York and Philadelphia, now Nassau Street. When Mercer County was formed in 1838, part of West Windsor Township was added to the portion of Montgomery Township which was included in the new county, and made into Princeton Township; the area between the southern boundary of the former Borough and the Delaware and Raritan Canal was added to Princeton Township in 1853. Princeton Borough became a separate municipality in 1894.

In the early nineteenth century, New Jersey boroughs had been quasi-independent subdivisions chartered within existing townships that did not have full autonomy. Princeton Borough received such a charter in 1813, as part of Montgomery and West Windsor Townships; it continued to be part of Princeton Township until the Borough Act of 1894, which required each township to form a single school district; rather than do so, Princeton Borough petitioned to be separated. (The two Princetons combined their public school systems in the decades before municipal consolidation.) Two minor boundary changes united the then site of the Princeton Hospital and of the Princeton Regional High School inside the Borough, in 1928 and 1951 respectively.[26] See the section on "government and politics" for more details about the 2011 merger of borough and township.

Geography

Princeton is located just south of a long, curving ridge known as Princeton Ridge.[27] As Princeton is in a low-lying area, there have been issues with cell phone signals.[28] According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Princeton had a total area of 18.41 square miles (47.69 km2), including 17.95 square miles (46.48 km2) of land and 0.47 square miles (1.21 km2) of water (2.53%).[5]

Cedar Grove,[29] Port Mercer, Princeton Basin, and Jugtown are unincorporated communities that have been absorbed into Greater Princeton over the years, but still maintain their own community identity.[30]

Princeton borders the municipalities of Hopewell Township, Lawrence and West Windsor Townships in Mercer County; Plainsboro Township and South Brunswick Township in Middlesex County; and Franklin Township and Montgomery Township in Somerset County.[31] [32] [33]

United States Postal ZIP codes for Princeton include 08540, 08541 (Educational Testing Service), 08542 (largely the old Borough), 08543 (PO boxes), and 08544 (the University).

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, Princeton falls within either a hot-summer humid continental climate (Dfa) if the isotherm is used or a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) if the isotherm is used. During the summer months, episodes of extreme heat and humidity can occur with heat index values at or above 100F. On average, the wettest month of the year is July which corresponds with the annual peak in thunderstorm activity. During the winter months, episodes of extreme cold and wind can occur with wind chill values below 0F. The plant hardiness zone at the Princeton Municipal Court is 6b with an average annual extreme minimum air temperature of -0.9F.[34] The average seasonal (November–April) snowfall total is 24to and the average snowiest month is February which corresponds with the annual peak in nor'easter activity.

Ecology

According to the A. W. Kuchler U.S. potential natural vegetation types, Princeton, New Jersey, would have an Appalachian Oak (104) vegetation type with an Eastern Hardwood Forest (25) vegetation form.[35]

Demographics

2010 census

As of the 2010 United States census, the borough and township had a combined population of 28,572.[36] [37]

According to the website Data USA, Princeton has a population of 30,168 people, of which 85% are US citizens. The ethnic composition of the population is 20,393 White residents (67.6%), 4,636 Asian residents (15.4%), 2,533 Hispanic residents (8.4%), 1,819 Black residents (6.03%), and 618 Two+ residents (2.05%). The most common foreign languages are Chinese (1,800 speakers), Spanish (1,429 speakers), and French (618 speakers), but compared to other places, Princeton has a relatively high number of speakers of Scandinavian languages (425 speakers), Italian (465 speakers), and German (1,000 speakers).

Government and politics

Local government

Princeton is governed under the borough form of New Jersey municipal government, which is used in 218 municipalities (of the 564) statewide, making it the most common form of government in New Jersey.[38] The governing body is comprised of the mayor and the borough council, with all positions elected at-large on a partisan basis as part of the November general election. The mayor is elected directly by the voters to a four-year term of office. The borough council includes six members elected to serve three-year terms on a staggered basis, with two seats coming up for election each year in a three-year cycle. The borough form of government used by Princeton is a "weak mayor / strong council" government in which council members act as the legislative body with the mayor presiding at meetings and voting only in the event of a tie. The mayor can veto ordinances subject to an override by a two-thirds majority vote of the council. The mayor makes committee and liaison assignments for council members, and most appointments are made by the mayor with the advice and consent of the council.[39] [40] [41]

The mayor is elected directly by the voters to a four-year term of office, serves as Princeton's chief executive officer and nominates appointees to various boards and commissions subject to approval of the council. The mayor presides at council meetings and votes in the case of a tie or a few other specific cases.[41] The council consists of six members elected to serve three-year terms on a staggered basis, with two seats coming up for election each year in a three-year cycle. The council has administrative powers and is the policy-making body for Princeton. The council approves appointments made by the mayor. Council members serve on various boards and committees and act as liaisons to certain departments, committees or boards.[41]

, the mayor of Princeton is Democrat Mark Freda, who is serving a four-year term expiring on December 31, 2023.[42] Members of the Princeton Council are Council President Mia Sacks (D, 2025), David F. Cohen (D, 2023), Leticia Fraga (D, 2023), Michelle Pirone Lambros (D, 2025), Leighton Newlin (D, 2024) and Eve Niedergang (D, 2024).[43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49]

In 2018, Princeton had an average property tax bill of $19,388, the highest in the county, compared to an average bill of $8,767 statewide.[50]

Merger of borough and township

People in the township tried unsuccessfully to merge borough and township in a struggle that lasted nearly fifty years. The first failed attempt to consolidate borough and township was made in 1953, with 63% of township voters in favor of a merger and 57% of borough voters opposed.[51] Subsequent attempts were voted down by borough residents, in large part due to different zoning needs of the densely populated borough versus the more widely-spaced properties of the township (surrounding the borough). An attempt to consolidate in 1979 passed with 70% support in the township but failed in the borough by 33 votes, a result that was upheld after a recount.[52] [53] [54] Although township voters again supported a 1996 merger referendum by an almost 3–1 margin, about 57% of borough voters rejected the consolidation proposal, marking the sixth such failure.[55]

The residents of both the Borough of Princeton and the Township of Princeton voted on November 8, 2011, to merge the two municipalities into one. This was the first referendum when university student voters were encouraged and allowed to register to vote locally, and that likely contributed strongly to the measure passing, as the students were not home owners concerned with zoning matters, and they all counted as part of the borough and not the township. In Princeton Borough, 1,385 voted for and 902 voted against, while in Princeton Township 3,542 voted for and 604 voted against. Proponents of the merger asserted that when the merger is completed the new municipality of Princeton would save $3.2 million as a result of some scaled down services including layoffs of 15 government workers including 9 police officers (however the measure itself does not mandate such layoffs). Opponents of the measure challenged the findings of a report citing a cost savings as unsubstantiated, expressed concerns about differing zoning needs between borough and township, and noted that voter representation would be reduced in a smaller government structure. The merger was the first in the state since 1997, when Pahaquarry Township voted to consolidate with Hardwick Township[56] The consolidation took effect on January 1, 2013.[57]

Federal, state and county representation

Princeton is located in the 12th Congressional District[58] and is part of New Jersey's 16th state legislative district.[59] [60] [61]

Politics

As of March 2011, there were a total of 18,049 registered voters in Princeton (a sum of the former borough and township's voters), of which 9,184 (50.9%) were registered as Democrats, 2,140 (11.9%) were registered as Republicans and 6,703 (37.1%) were registered as unaffiliated. There were 22 voters registered as Libertarians or Greens.[62]

Presidential Elections Results*
YearRepublicanDemocraticThird Parties
2020[63] 14.1% 1,98184.3% 11,8581.6% 235
2016[64] 14.1% 1,81781.8% 10,5484.1% 527
2012[65] 23.0% 2,88275.4% 9,4611.6% 205

In both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, the Democratic nominee received over 80% of the vote. In the 2012 presidential election, Democrat Barack Obama received 75.4% of the vote (9,461 cast), ahead of Republican Mitt Romney with 23.0% (2,882 votes), and other candidates with 1.6% (205 votes), among the 14,752 ballots cast by the municipality's 20,328 registered voters (2,204 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 72.6%.[66] [67]

Gubernatorial Elections Results
YearRepublicanDemocraticThird Parties
2021[68] 18.6% 1,55380.5% 6,7211.0% 79
2017[69] 17.9% 1,49180.0% 6,6482.0% 169
2013[70] 39.2% 2,78058.8% 4,1722.7% 145

In the 2013 gubernatorial election, Democrat Barbara Buono received 58.8% of the vote (4,172 cast), ahead of Republican Chris Christie with 39.2% (2,780 votes), and other candidates with 2.0% (145 votes), among the 7,279 ballots cast by the municipality's 18,374 registered voters (182 ballots were spoiled), for a turnout of 39.6%.[71] [72]

Education

Colleges and universities

Princeton University, one of the world's most prominent research universities, is a dominant feature of the community. Established in 1746 as the College of New Jersey and relocated to Princeton ten years later, Princeton University's main campus has its historic center on Nassau Street and stretches south from there. Its James Forrestal satellite campus is located in Plainsboro Township, and some playing fields lie within adjacent West Windsor Township.[73] Princeton University is often featured at or near the top of various national and global university rankings, topping the 2019 list of U.S. News & World Report.[74]

Princeton Theological Seminary, the first and oldest seminary in America of the Presbyterian Church (USA), has its main academic campus in Princeton, with residential housing located just outside of Princeton in West Windsor Township.[75]

The Institute for Advanced Study maintains extensive land holdings (the "Institute Woods") there covering .[76]

Mercer County Community College, not actually in Princeton but in nearby West Windsor, is a two-year public college serving Princeton residents and all those from Mercer County.[77]

Westminster Choir College, a school of music owned by Rider University since 1992, was established on a large campus in Princeton in 1932. Before relocating to Princeton, the school resided in Dayton, Ohio, and then briefly in Ithaca, New York.[78] In 2012, Rider proposed a parking lot expansion on the Princeton campus that required cutting old-growth trees and was strenuously opposed by neighbors.[79] [80] In 2019, Rider (which is located in Lawrence Township) attempted to sell the choir college campus in Princeton to a Chinese company, resulting in a public outcry and the prevention of that sale. In 2020, Rider moved all activities of Westminster Choir College from Princeton to its Lawrenceville campus; the Princeton campus is now largely unused while legal wrangling continues about the future of the campus and its academic programs.[81] As of 2023, Princeton is paying Rider $1,000 per month to lease overflow parking at the Choir College; the town then sells the parking rights for $30 per month to businesses, residents and non-residents. The Choir College parking is a few blocks' walk from downtown.[82] [83]

Primary and secondary schools

Public schools

The Princeton Public Schools serve students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade.[84] Students from Cranbury Township attend the district's high school as part of a sending/receiving relationship.[85] As of the 2020–21 school year, the district, comprised of six schools, had an enrollment of 3,740 students and 341.0 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 11.0:1.[86] Schools in the district (with 2020–21 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics[87]) are Community Park School[88] with 332 students in grades K-5, Johnson Park School[89] with 329 students in grades PreK-5, Littlebrook School[90] with 342 students in grades K-5, Riverside School[91] with 289 students in grades PreK-5, Princeton Middle School [92] with 803 students in grades 6-8 and Princeton High School[93] with 1,555 students in grades 9-12.[94] [95] [96] [97] [98]

New Jersey Monthly magazine ranked Princeton High School as the 20th best high school in New Jersey in its 2018 rankings of the "Top Public High Schools" in New Jersey.[99] The school was also ranked as the 10th best school in New Jersey by U.S. News & World Report. [100] Niche ranked Princeton High School as the 47th best public high school in America in its "2021 Best Public High Schools in America" rankings.[101]

In the early 1990s, redistricting occurred between the Community Park and Johnson Park School districts, as the population within both districts had increased due to residential development. Concerns were also raised about the largely white, wealthy student population attending Johnson Park (JP) and the more racially and economically diverse population at Community Park (CP). As a result of the redistricting, portions of the affluent Western Section neighborhood were redistricted to CP, and portions of the racially and economically diverse John Witherspoon neighborhood were redistricted to JP.

The Princeton Charter School (grades K–8) operates under a charter granted by the commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Education. The school is a public school that operates independently of the Princeton Regional Schools, and is funded on a per student basis by locally raised tax revenues.[102]

Eighth grade students from all of Mercer County are eligible to apply to attend the high school programs offered by the Mercer County Technical Schools, a county-wide vocational school district that offers full-time career and technical education at its Health Sciences Academy, STEM Academy and Academy of Culinary Arts, with no tuition charged to students for attendance.[103] [104]

Private schools

Private schools located in Princeton include The Lewis School of Princeton, Princeton Day School, Princeton Friends School, Hun School of Princeton, and Princeton International School of Mathematics and Science (PRISMS).

St. Paul's Catholic School (pre-school to 8th grade) founded in 1878, is the oldest and only coeducational Catholic school, joining Princeton Academy of the Sacred Heart (K–8, all male) and Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart (coed for Pre-K, and all-female K–12), which operate under the supervision of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton.[105]

Schools that are outside of Princeton but have Princeton addresses include the Wilberforce School, Chapin School in Lawrence Township, Princeton Junior School in Lawrence Township, the French-American School of Princeton, the Laurel School of Princeton, the Waldorf School of Princeton, YingHua International School, Princeton Latin Academy in Hopewell, Princeton Montessori School in Montgomery Township, Eden Institute in West Windsor Township, and the now-defunct American Boychoir School in Plainsboro Township.

Public libraries

The Princeton Public Library's current facility on Witherspoon Street was opened in April 2004 as part of the ongoing downtown redevelopment project and replaced a building dating from 1966. The library itself was founded in 1909.[106]

Miscellaneous education

The Princeton Community Japanese Language School teaches weekend Japanese classes for Japanese citizen children abroad to the standard of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), and it also has classes for people with Japanese as a second language. The main office of the school is in Princeton although the office used on Sundays is in Memorial Hall at Rider University in Lawrence Township in Mercer County.[107] Courses are taught at Memorial Hall at Rider University.[108]

The Princeton Learning Cooperative provides support for student-directed learning as "a hybrid of homeschooling and school" for teens.[109] [110]

Infrastructure

Transportation

Roads and highways

, the borough had a total of of roadways, of which were maintained by the municipality, by Mercer County, and by the New Jersey Department of Transportation.[111]

Several major roads pass through Princeton.[112] U.S. Route 206[113] and Route 27[114] pass through, along with County Routes 583,[115] 526/571 (commonly known as Washington Road)[116] and 533.[117]

Other major roads that are accessible outside the municipality include U.S. Route 1 (in Lawrence Township, West Windsor and South Brunswick), Interstate 287 (in Franklin Township), Interstate 295 (in Lawrence Township), and the New Jersey Turnpike/Interstate 95 (in South Brunswick). The closest Turnpike exits are Interchange 8A in Monroe Township, Interchange 8 in East Windsor, and Interchange 7A in Robbinsville Township.

A number of proposed highways around Princeton have been canceled. The Somerset Freeway (I-95) was to pass just outside the municipality before ending in Hopewell (to the south) and Franklin (to the north). This project was canceled in 1980. Route 92 was supposed to remedy the lack of limited-access highways to the greater Princeton area. The road would have started at Route 1 near Ridge Road in South Brunswick and ended at Exit 8A of the Turnpike. However, that project was cancelled in 2006.

Public transportation

Princeton is roughly equidistant from New York City and Philadelphia. Since the 19th century, it has been connected by rail to both of these cities by the Princeton Branch rail line to the nearby Princeton Junction station on Amtrak's Northeast Corridor.[118] The Princeton train station was moved from under Blair Hall to a more southerly location on University Place in 1918, and was moved further southeast in 2013.[119] Commuting to New York from Princeton became commonplace after the Second World War.[120] While the Amtrak ride time is similar to New York and to Philadelphia, the commuter-train ride to New York—via NJ Transit's Northeast Corridor Line—is generally much faster than the equivalent train ride to Philadelphia, which involves a transfer to SEPTA trains in Trenton. NJ Transit provides shuttle service between the Princeton and Princeton Junction stations; the train is locally called the "Dinky",[121] and has also been known as the "PJ&B" (for "Princeton Junction and Back").[122] Two train cars, or sometimes just one, are used.

NJ Transit provides bus service to Trenton on the 606 route and local service on route 605.[123] [124]

Coach USA Suburban Transit operates frequent daily service to midtown NYC on the 100 route, and weekday rush-hour service to downtown NYC on the 600 route.[125]

Princeton and Princeton University provide the FreeB and Tiger Transit local bus services.[126]

Air

Princeton Airport is a public airport located north of Downtown Princeton in Montgomery Township. The private Forrestal Airport was located on Princeton University property, east of the main campus, from the early 1950s through the early 1990s.

The closest commercial airport is Trenton-Mercer Airport in Ewing Township, about from the center of Princeton, which is served by Frontier Airlines nonstop to and from 17 cities. Other nearby major airports are Newark Liberty International Airport and Philadelphia International Airport, located and away, respectively.

Healthcare

Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center (commonly abbreviated as "PMC") is a regional hospital and healthcare network located in neighboring Plainsboro Township. The hospital serves the greater Princeton region in Central Jersey. It is owned by the Penn Medicine Health System and is the only hospital of such in the state of New Jersey.[127] PMC is a 355-bed[128] non-profit, tertiary, and academic medical center. It is a major university hospital of the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School of Rutgers University[129] and has a helipad to handle transport critical patients from and to other hospitals via PennStar.[130] The hospital was previously located in Princeton on Witherspoon Street until May 2012, when the new location opened off of U.S. Route 1 in Plainsboro.[131] The new hospital was designed by a joint venture between HOK and RMJM Hiller.[132] [133]

Other nearby regional hospitals and healthcare networks that are accessible to Princeton include the Hamilton Township division and the New Brunswick division of Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital (RWJUH), along with Saint Peter's University Hospital, also in New Brunswick. Princeton University's Frist Campus Center was used for the aerial views of the fictional Princeton‑Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, as seen in the television series House.[134]

Sister cities

See main article: List of twin towns and sister cities in the United States.

Notable people

See also: List of Princeton University people and List of faculty members at the Institute for Advanced Study. People who were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Princeton include:Note: this list does not include people whose only time in Princeton was as a student. Only selected faculty are shown, whose notability extends beyond their field into popular culture. See Faculty and Alumni lists above.

Princeton in popular culture

Film

Princeton was the setting of the Academy Award-winning A Beautiful Mind about the schizophrenic mathematician John Nash. It was largely filmed in central New Jersey, including some Princeton locations. However, many scenes of "Princeton" were actually filmed at Fordham University's Rose Hill campus in the Bronx.

The 1994 film I.Q., featuring Meg Ryan, Tim Robbins, and Walter Matthau as Albert Einstein, was also set in Princeton and was filmed in the area. It includes some geographic stretches, including Matthau looking through a telescope from the roof of "Princeton Hospital" to see Ryan and Robbins' characters kissing on the Princeton Battlefield.[305]

Historical films which used Princeton as a setting but were not filmed there include Wilson, a 1944 biographical film about Woodrow Wilson.

In his 1989 independent feature film Stage Fright, independent filmmaker Brad Mays shot a drama class scene in the Princeton High School auditorium, using PHS students as extras. On October 18, 2013, Mays' feature documentary I Grew Up in Princeton had its premiere showing at Princeton High School. The film, described in one Princeton newspaper as a "deeply personal 'coming-of-age story' that yields perspective on the role of perception in a town that was split racially, economically and sociologically",[306] is a portrayal of life in the venerable university town during the tumultuous period of the late sixties through the early seventies.

Scenes from the beginning of Across the Universe (2007) were filmed on the Princeton University campus.

Parts of were filmed in Princeton. Megan Fox and Shia LaBeouf were filming on Princeton University campus for two days during the summer of 2008.

Scenes from the 2008 movie The Happening were filmed in Princeton.

TV and radio

The 1938 Orson Welles radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds, is set partly in nearby Grover's Mill, and includes a fictional professor from Princeton University as a main character, but the action never moves directly into Princeton.

The 1980 television miniseries Oppenheimer is partly set in Princeton.

George Lucas's Young Indiana Jones has Princeton shown in three episodes as the hometown of Indiana Jones. Most notably in Spring Break Adventure and Winds of Change where Princeton features prominently.[307] [308]

The TV show House was set in Princeton, at the fictional Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, and establishing shots for the hospital display the Frist Campus Center of Princeton University. The actual University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro opened on May 22, 2012, exactly one day after the finale of House aired.[309]

Literature

F. Scott Fitzgerald's literary debut, This Side of Paradise, is a loosely autobiographical story of his years at Princeton University.

Princeton University's Creative Writing program includes several nationally and internationally prominent writers, making the community a hub of contemporary literature.

Many of Richard Ford's novels are set in Haddam, New Jersey, a fictionalized Princeton.[205]

Joyce Carol Oates' 2004 novel Take Me, Take Me With You (written pseudonymously as Lauren Kelly) is set in Princeton.[310]

New Jersey author Judy Blume set her novel Superfudge in Princeton.[311]

Music

All of the members of Blues Traveler, as well as Chris Barron, lead singer of the Spin Doctors, are from Princeton and were high school friends.[312]

Points of interest

Churches

Educational institutions

Museums

Historic sites

Parks

Restaurants

Local media

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.state.nj.us/dca/home/2023mayors.pdf 2023 New Jersey Mayors Directory
  2. https://www.princetonnj.gov/167/Administration Administration
  3. https://www.princetonnj.gov/190/Clerk Clerk
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  13. Sullivan, Ronald. "Princeton Adopts Plan for Big Tract", The New York Times, November 4, 1973. Accessed February 18, 2024. "The Princeton development would lie midway between New York City and Philadelphia on approximately 900 acres the university owns and 700 acres to be acquired by the school or developed jointly with its present owners."
  14. Janson, Donald. "A Tour of Princeton Landmarks", The New York Times, April 30, 1989. Accessed June 25, 2020. "In 1945 the Stockton family sold Morven to Gov. Walter E. Edge. Six years later, while still in office, the Governor donated the mansion to the state with the requirement that it be used as the gubernatorial mansion or a state museum. From 1953 to 1982 Morven was home to the families of four Governors: Robert B. Meyner, Richard J. Hughes, William T. Cahill and Brendan T. Byrne. The National Park Service designated the house a National Historic Landmark in 1972.... After the Byrne family moved out, work began to transform Morven into a state museum. Drumthwacket became the official address of New Jersey governors."
  15. https://www.princetonnj.gov/678/Historic-Princeton Historic Princeton
  16. Book: Schenck, William Edward . An historical account of the First Presbyterian Church of Princeton, N.J. : being a sermon preached on Thanksgiving Day, December 12, 1850 . 1850 . Printed by John T. Robinson, Princeton, N.J. .
  17. https://www.princetonnj.gov/resources/historic-princeton A Brief History of Princeton
  18. Book: Hageman, John Frelinghuysen . History of Princeton and its institutions, etc. Vol. I . 1879 . J.B. Lippincott & co., Philadelphia .
  19. Book: Hageman, John Frelinghuysen . History of Princeton and its institutions, etc. Vol. II . 1879 . J.B. Lippincott & co., Philadelphia .
  20. https://archive.org/details/historyofburling02wood History of Burlington and Mercer counties. New Jersey with Biographical Sketches of their Pioneers and Prominent Men
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  22. Hutchinson, Viola L. The Origin of New Jersey Place Names, New Jersey Public Library Commission, May 1945. Accessed September 21, 2015.
  23. http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_DP/DPDP1/1600000US3460900 DP-1 - Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 from the 2010 Demographic Profile Data for Princeton Borough, New Jersey
  24. http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_DP/DPDP1/0600000US3402160915 DP-1 - Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 from the 2010 Demographic Profile Data for Princeton Township, New Jersey
  25. https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/story/new-life-historic-bainbridge-house "New Life for Historic Bainbridge House"
  26. Snyder, John P. The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606-1968, Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey; 1969. See p. 23 and 164, which cites the Acts of the NJ Legislature 1843, p. 67; 1853, p. 361, for the changes of those years. Accessed May 30, 2024.
  27. https://planetprinceton.com/?s=princeton+ridge Recent references to "Princeton Ridge"
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  33. https://www.state.nj.us/transportation/gis/maps/polnoroads.pdf New Jersey Municipal Boundaries
  34. https://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/InteractiveMap.aspx USDA Interactive Plant Hardiness Map
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  36. http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_DP/DPDP1/0600000US3402160915 DP-1 - Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 for Princeton township, Mercer County, New Jersey
  37. http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_DP/DPDP1/0600000US3402160900 DP-1 - Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 for Princeton borough, Mercer County, New Jersey
  38. https://njdatabook.rutgers.edu/sites/njdatabook.rutgers.edu/files/documents/inventory_of_municipal_forms_of_government_in_new_jersey.pdf Inventory of Municipal Forms of Government in New Jersey
  39. Cerra, Michael F. "Forms of Government: Everything You've Always Wanted to Know, But Were Afraid to Ask", New Jersey State League of Municipalities. Accessed November 30, 2014.
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  41. http://www.princetonnj.gov/govbody.html Governing Body
  42. https://www.princetonnj.gov/939/Mayor-Mark-Freda Mayor Mark Freda
  43. https://www.princetonnj.gov/872/Mayor-Council Council
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  45. https://www.mercercounty.org/home/showpublisheddocument/22827/637794896457670000 Mercer County Elected Officials
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  50. Marcus, Samantha. "These are the towns with the highest property taxes in each of N.J.'s 21 counties", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, April 22, 2019. Accessed November 5, 2019. "The average property tax bill in New Jersey was $8,767 last year. But there can be big swings from town to town and county to county.... The average property tax bill in Princeton was $19,388 in 2018, the highest in Mercer County."
  51. https://www.nytimes.com/1953/11/04/archives/bingo-for-charity-is-voted-in-jersey-margin-exceeds-21-newark.html "Bingo For Charity Is Voted In Jersey; Margin Exceeds 2-1 -- Newark Approves Shift to a Mayor and Nine Councilmen"
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  53. Fisher, Marc. "Princetons: No again on merger", The Philadelphia Inquirer, November 8, 1979. Accessed March 8, 2023, via Newspapers.com. "The fourth attempt in 30 years to consolidate Princeton Borough and Princeton Township failed Tuesday, this time by 33 votes. A proposal to merge was overwhelmingly approved in the township and defeated by 33 votes in the borough."
  54. "Recount Upholds Consolidation's Defeat By 33 Votes as First Reported on Nov. 6", Town Topics, November 21, 1979, p. 3.
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  104. https://www.mcts.edu/high-school-programs/ High School Programs
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  107. "Home" (Archive). Princeton Community Japanese Language School. Accessed May 9, 2014. "PCJLS Office 14 Moore Street, Princeton, NJ 08542" and "Sunday Office Rider University, Memorial Hall, Rm301"
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  135. Curran, Philip Sean. "Princeton: Delegation from sister city Colmar greeted at reception", centraljersey.com, June 12, 2015. Accessed November 21, 2016. "A 24-member delegation from Princeton's sister city Colmar and surrounding area in Alsace, France, stopped in Princeton Thursday during a trip in America.... Prior to consolidation, Colmar was the sister city of the then-Princeton Borough, a relationship started 28 years ago by then-Mayor Barbara Boggs Sigmund.... Today, Princeton has two sister cities. The other, Pettoranello, in Italy, had been the sister city of the former township."
  136. http://www.nj.com/entertainment/music/index.ssf/2010/06/student_orchestra_to_perform_i.html "Student orchestra to perform Italian music in Princeton"
  137. http://www.ppscf.org/about.html About Us
  138. http://www.fssgb.org/abelson.html Matthew Abelson (House Concert)
  139. http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Biographies/Adrain.html Robert Adrain
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  141. Jones, Andy. "Old Princeton for New Calvinists: The Legacy of Archibald Alexander", The Gospel Coalition, February 13, 2012. Accessed September 21, 2015. "They first met when Alexander moved to Princeton in 1812 and Hodge was a teenage student at a local academy."
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  143. Old, Hughes Oliphant. The Modern Age, 1789-1889, p. 249. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2007. . Accessed September 21, 2015. "James Waddel Alexander was born in Virginia when his father was president of Hampden-Sydney College.... When his father founded the theological seminary in Princeton, he too, moved to Princeton and in time studied at the College of New Jersey, graduating in 1820."
  144. https://www.nytimes.com/1860/01/30/news/obituary-1-no-title.html "Death Of Rev. J. Addison Alexander."
  145. Inniss, Lolita Buckner. The Princeton Fugitive Slave: The Trials of James Collins Johnson, p. 105. Fordham University Press, 2019. . Accessed September 8, 2019. "Born in 1806 in Prince Edward County, Virginia, William Cowper Alexander came to Princeton in 1812, when his father was appointed to the seminary, and graduated from Princeton in 1824."
  146. Martin, Douglas. "Lana Peters, Stalin's Daughter, Dies at 85", The New York Times, November 28, 2011. Accessed July 30, 2013. "Settling in Princeton, N.J., Ms. Alliluyeva made a public show of burning her Soviet passport, saying she would never return to the Soviet Union."
  147. https://www.amazon.com/Triumph-Over-Discrimination-Story-Farhang/dp/0970993706 Triumph Over Discrimination: The Life Story of Farhang Mehr
  148. Nagourney, Eric. "Saul Amarel, 74, an Innovator In the Artificial Intelligence Field", The New York Times, December 21, 2002. Accessed September 21, 2015. "Dr. Saul Amarel, who helped develop the field of artificial intelligence and founded the computer science department at Rutgers University, died on Wednesday in Princeton, N.J., where he lived."
  149. Morse, Steve. "Twenty years later, Phish still moves against the current; Band's creativity thrives outside pop's boundaries", The Boston Globe, November 30, 2003. Accessed July 30, 2013. "The next summer they painted houses around Princeton, N.J., (where Anastasio grew up) and made enough money to go to Europe and play street music."
  150. Rose Allen, The Silent Forgotten
  151. Staff. "William H. Angoff, 73, Expert on S.A.T., Dies", The New York Times, January 7, 1993. Accessed October 27, 2018. "William H. Angoff, whose work with the Scholastic Aptitude Test helped make it more understandable to millions of high school students and college admissions officers, died on Tuesday at his home in Princeton, N.J."
  152. http://www.middlebury.edu/newsroom/node/464874 "James Armstrong, Middlebury's 12th President, Passes Away"
  153. [Allan Kozinn|Kozinn, Allan]
  154. https://www.history.navy.mil/our-collections/photography/us-people/b/bainbridge-william.html Bainbridge, William
  155. http://www.mollybang.com/Pages/biodetail.html Biographical Notes
  156. Stafford, Tim. "The Third Coming of George Barna", Christianity Today, August 5, 2002. Accessed September 8, 2019. "Barna grew up in Princeton, New Jersey, a cradle Catholic who went to Mass daily when he started college at Washington and Lee University."
  157. Staff. "Nightlife / Band of the Week: Chris Barron", The Press of Atlantic City, March 26, 2009. Accessed August 21, 2013. "Barron, who is originally from Princeton, isn't exactly sure how the folks who organize the Cape May SS showcase found him, but he's happy they did."
  158. https://njcincinnati.org/charles-clinton-beatty-2/ The Reverend Charles Clinton Beatty DD, LLD
  159. [Eric P. Schmitt|Schmitt, Eric]
  160. [Paul Goldberger|Goldberger, Paul]
  161. Scott, Gale T. "Jerseyana; Where They Give a Dog A Heap of Socialization", The New York Times, October 27, 2002. Accessed August 22, 2013. "Parent-patrons here include Wall Street brokers, local judges, authors (most prominently, Peter Benchley, who lives in Princeton), housewives and grocery clerks, Ms. Lini said."
  162. Stratton, Jean. "Princeton personality", Town Topics, April 16, 2008. Accessed November 6, 2019. "Outgoing Princeton Borough Councilwoman Wendy Benchley, soon to focus her career on ocean conservation issues, is shown in her Princeton home.... Jaws was published in 1974, and after the movie rights were later sold, the Benchleys decided to move to Princeton."
  163. Fitzgerald, Michael. "Remembering Ed Berger", Current Research in Jazz. Accessed September 8, 2019. "The world of jazz research lost one of its stars on January 22, 2017 when Ed Berger died at home in Princeton, NJ."
  164. https://news.rutgers.edu/news-release/stanley-bergen-jr-founding-president-university-medicine-and-dentistry-new-jersey-dies-89/20190501 "Stanley Bergen Jr., Founding President of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Dies at 89 Under Bergen's direction, the university became the largest freestanding health sciences university in the country and boosted medical access throughout the state"
  165. Coughlin, Kevin. "Laurie Berkner, rock star for preschoolers, is bringing her guitar to Morristown Book Fest and MPAC", Morristown Green, October 13, 2017. Accessed September 8, 2019. "'The flip side of that is, if they do like something, you have the best audience imaginable, because there is no filter to cover up the fact that they're just totally enjoying themselves,' said Berkner, who grew up in Princeton and lives in New York with her husband and teenaged daughter."
  166. Jackson, Herb. "Report: NJ attorney Berman being considered for top federal prosecutor in Manhattan", Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, August 7, 2017. Accessed January 7, 2018. "Geoffrey Berman of Princeton was listed as a potential U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York in a package of proposed candidates for New York judicial and prosecutorial vacancies sent to the state's U.S. senators in July, Buzzfeed said, citing a source familiar with the process."
  167. Staff. A Community Of Scholars: The Institute for Advanced Study Faculty and Members 1930-1980, p. 90. Institute for Advanced Study, 1980. Accessed November 20, 2015. "Birkhoff, Garrett 40s M Born 1911 Princeton, NJ."
  168. [Joan Riddell Cook|Cook, Joan]
  169. Fensom, Michael J. "U.S. Soccer vs. Ecuador: Michael Bradley moves on after his father's dismissal", The Star-Ledger, October 11, 2011. Accessed August 22, 2013. "Having already positioned players to take Bradley's place, Mönchengladbach told the Princeton native he would not have a spot on the team if he returned."
  170. via Associated Press. "'Star Trek' actor Brooks charged with DUI in Conn.", The Seattle Times, February 3, 2012. Accessed August 22, 2013. "Avery Brooks is set to be arraigned in state court in Norwalk next week in connection with his arrest last weekend in Wilton, a wealthy suburb about 50 miles northeast of Manhattan.... Local police say they pulled over the 63-year-old Princeton, N.J., resident shortly after 10 p.m. Sunday after receiving a complaint about his driving."
  171. Staff. "Dr. George H. Brown; Led Research at RCA", The New York Times, December 13, 1987. Accessed August 22, 2013. "Dr. George H. Brown, former executive vice president for research and engineering at the RCA Corporation who led the company's development of color television, died Friday at the Princeton (N.J.) Medical Center after a long illness. He was 79 years old and lived in Princeton."
  172. https://gostanford.com/sports/womens-basketball/roster/cameron-brink/20068 Cameron Brink
  173. Staff. "Burr Portrait Highlight of Newark Show", The New York Times, August 11, 1974. Accessed August 7, 2018. "He spent most of his boyhood in Princeton, where his father was president of the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University."
  174. Lohr, Shelby. "Aaron Burr Sr.", Princeton University. Accessed August 7, 2018. "Aaron Burr Sr. (1716-1757), an influential scholar and religious leader of the colonial period, served as Princeton's second president from 1748 to 1757. He oversaw the college's move to its permanent campus in Princeton, and owned slaves while living in the President's House."
  175. Moylan, Kyle. "Princeton Olympian Lesley Bush Dives into History; Bush, a 1964 gold medalist in diving, was honored by Lakewood Blueclaws this week.", Princeton Patch, June 16, 2012. Accessed November 22, 2017. "As a 16-year-old girl growing up and attending Princeton High School in the winter of 1964, Lesley Bush wasn't sure how many people knew her in her own hometown."
  176. Skelly, Richard. "Kenny 'Stringbean' Sorensen drops new CD", Asbury Park Press, August 1, 2014. Accessed August 29, 2014. "Sorensen and Co. were scheduled to play a record-release party Monday, July 28, in Asbury Park, where he is accompanied Monday nights by drummer Sim Cain, a native of Princeton, bassist Dan Mulvey, raised in Old Bridge, and relative youngster Joe Murphy on guitar, who was raised in the Asbury Park area."
  177. https://house.mo.gov/billtracking/bills01/member01/bio039.htm Rep. Marsha Campbell
  178. Franklin, Paul. "After long journey, Michelle Campbell finds herself in the WNBA", The Times, June 3, 2013. Accessed November 2, 2017. "At Rutgers, even though she would be a 1,000-point scorer, Michelle Campbell never received the attention afforded to players like Cappie Pondexter and Chelsea Newton, or even younger teammates Essence Carson, Matee Ajavon and Kia Vaughn.... The Notre Dame High School graduate, who grew up in Princeton with three sisters, pursued her passion."
  179. Belcher, David. "A Storyteller Back at Her Craft", The New York Times, May 10, 2010. Accessed October 12, 2013. "Ms. Carpenter, who was born in Princeton, N.J., and graduated from Brown, became a Nashville darling in 1989 with her second album, State of the Heart (CBS/Columbia), which spawned the hits 'Never Had It So Good' and 'Quittin' Time,' which became staples of mainstream country radio and two-step dance halls."
  180. Book: American Society of Civil Engineers. Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Public domain. 1921. American Society of Civil Engineers. 820–.
  181. Web site: Bauer. Patricia. Damien Chazelle. Encyclopedia Britannica. 13 April 2018. April 13, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180413193727/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Damien-Chazelle. live.
  182. Pace, Eric. "Blair Clark, 82, CBS Executive Who Led McCarthy's '68 Race", The New York Times, June 8, 2000. Accessed September 8, 2019. "Blair Clark, an influential executive at CBS News, a former editor of the Nation and the campaign manager for Eugene J. McCarthy in his unsuccessful bid for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination, died on Tuesday in Princeton, N.J. He was 82 and lived in Princeton and the Turtle Bay section of Manhattan."
  183. [Eric Asimov|Asimov, Eric]
  184. http://www.firstladies.org/biographies/firstladies.aspx?biography=23 Frances Cleveland
  185. http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/presidents/grover_cleveland_home.html Grover Cleveland Home
  186. Staff. "Ruth Cleveland Dead.; Eldest Child of ex-President Cleveland Dies Suddenly at Princeton Home.", The New York Times, January 8, 1904. Accessed October 12, 2013.
  187. Fiorletta, Alicia. "Interview with Chris Conley from Saves The Day: Breaking Through, Moving Forward", The Aquarian Weekly, November 9, 2011. Accessed October 12, 2013. "Chris Conley, singer, guitarist and lyricist for Saves The Day, particularly remembers his upbringing in Princeton, NJ, as a time of personal growth and musical discovery."
  188. Greer, William R. "Archibald Crosley Dies At 88; Helped Develop Scientific Polling", The New York Times, May 2, 1985. Accessed May 23, 2021. "Archibald M. Crossley, one of the founders of modern public-opinion polling, died yesterday at his home in Princeton, N.J. He was 88 years old.... Mr. Crossley, who lived in Princeton from 1923 until his death, retired in 1962, but continued to research polling methods."
  189. Kerwick, Mike. "Archive: Father uses business savvy to fight his kids' rare disease", The Record, February 28, 2017. Accessed January 5, 2018. "Crowley has been up for hours. A few miles down the road, at his Princeton home, the 42-year-old CEO of Amicus Therapeutics was helping his teenage daughter.... Their survival is in many ways a tribute to their father, an Englewood native who has spent the last decade raising money to fund research for lifesaving drugs."
  190. [Mel Gussow|Gussow, Mel]
  191. http://princetoninfo.com/index.php/component/us1more/?key=03-19-2008_f_01 "On the Move"
  192. https://www.nytimes.com/1941/01/06/archives/dr-h-duffield-86-noted-clergyman-minister-of-the-old-first.html "Dr. H. Duffield, 86; Noted Clergyman; Minister of the 'Old First' Presbyterian Church Here, 1891-1918, Is Dead; Raised $300,000 Fund; He Began Meetings on Steps of Church in 1911 - Was Author of 'Wartime Prayers
  193. [Nicholas Dawidoff|Dawidoff, Nicholas]
  194. Web site: Jonathan Edwards at the College of New Jersey . exhibit . Princeton University . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121224131533/http://www.princeton.edu/~mudd/exhibits/edwards/case3.html . December 24, 2012 .
  195. Blackwell, Jon. "1933: The genius next door", The Trentonian. Accessed October 12, 2013. "From the moment Albert Einstein arrived in Princeton in 1933, a shaggy, sweater-wearing genius with a pipe in one hand and a sheaf of papers in the other, stories like the one about the girl's homework got a good laugh. And the amazing thing is, they were true."
  196. Calle, Carlos I. Einstein for Dummies, p. 331. John Wiley & Sons, 2011. . "After the war, Maja wanted to return to Europe and to her husband, but her own health prevented her from travelling, Instead, she went to live with her brother in Princeton."
  197. http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/index.php/Elmer_W._Engstrom Elmer W. Engstrom
  198. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/98068735/daniel-errico-of-short-hills/ "Town native's children's story to be released Oct. 1"
  199. Via Associated Press. "Katherine R. S. Ettl, A Sculptor, 81, Dies", The New York Times, January 12, 1993. Accessed February 23, 2020. "Mrs. Ettl lived in Princeton, N.J., from 1972 until September, when she returned to Jackson."
  200. Fowler, Linda. "Charles Evered has a Wonderful Life", Inside Jersey, September 2011. Accessed October 12, 2013. "Content when he's surrounded by history, Evered, a native Jerseyan, lives in a townhouse in Colonial-era Princeton Township with his wife, actress Wendy Rolfe Evered, and their kids, Margaret and John; they like to call it Olympic Village because of the diversity of its residents."
  201. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/church/leader/henry-b-eyring?lang=eng President Henry B. Eyring
  202. McGrath, Charles. "Robert Fagles, Translator of the Classics, Dies at 74", The New York Times, March 29, 2008. Accessed November 22, 2014. "Robert Fagles, the renowned translator of Latin and Greek whose versions of Homer and Virgil were unlikely best sellers and became fixtures on classroom reading lists, died on Wednesday at his home in Princeton, N.J., where he was an emeritus professor at Princeton University."
  203. [Adam Nagourney|Nagourney, Adam]
  204. Casson, Henry (ed.) The blue book of the state of Wisconsin, p. 693. Henry Gugler Company, 1897. Accessed October 10, 2015.
  205. McGrath, Charles. "A New Jersey State of Mind", The New York Times, October 25, 2006. Accessed August 29, 2014. "Mr. Ford, who was born and reared in Mississippi, discovered the Jersey Shore in the late 1970s, when he and his wife were living in Princeton, where he had a teaching job.... "In Independence Day, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1996, Frank sold real estate — made a bundle, in fact — in the prosperous, leafy town of Haddam, N.J., a fictional composite of Princeton, Hopewell and Pennington."
  206. https://web.archive.org/web/20161106013013/https://nmwa.org/explore/artist-profiles/colette-fu Colette Fu
  207. https://www.nytimes.com/1965/08/03/archives/dr-n-howell-furman-73-dies-chemist-worked-on-a-tom-bomb-responsible.html "Dr. N. Howell Furman, 73, Dies; Chemist Worked on Atom Bomb; Responsible for Analytical Separation of Uranium-At Princeton 41 Years"
  208. http://www.gallup.com/corporate/21364/george-gallup-19011984.aspx George Gallup, 1901–1984 Founder
  209. [Kate Zernike|Zernike, Kate]
  210. Grantham-Philips, Wyatte. "Who is Evan Gershkovich? What we know about WSJ reporter arrested by Russia for espionage", USA Today, March 30, 2023. Accessed March 31, 2023. "Where is Gershkovich from? How old is he? Gershkovich grew up in Princeton, New Jersey and attended Bowdoin College in Maine, where he played soccer."
  211. https://www.towntopics.com/nov1109/people.php "People"
  212. Gödel, Kurt; and Feferman, Solomon. Kurt Gödel: Collected Works: Volume III: Unpublished Essays and Lectures, p. 5. Oxford University Press, 1995. . Accessed November 2, 2013. "Photographs of the Godel home in Princeton at 145 Linden Lane."
  213. Book: New Jersey Trivia. 1993. Rutledge Hill Press. 1-55853-223-4. 135. registration.
  214. Bear, Rob. "Dwell Takes a Look Inside Michael Graves' Princeton Home", Curbed, April 23, 2012. Accessed November 2, 2013. "The architect and industrial designer Michael Graves was walking one Sunday with his daughter, when he spotted a 'a ruin in Princeton, N.J.,' that was, in fact, an abandoned warehouse built and once used by the Italian masons brought in to build the stone dormitories at Princeton University. Graves transformed The Warehouse, as it is now known, into a magnificent home for himself and his family."
  215. Saxon, Jamie. "Fred Greenstein, 'world-class scholar' of the American presidency, dies at 88", Princeton University, December 10, 2018. Accessed December 11, 2018. "Fred Greenstein, professor of politics, emeritus, and one of the nation's leading experts on the American presidency, died from complications from a form of Parkinson's disease at home in Princeton, New Jersey, on Dec. 3. He was 88."
  216. Ben-Itzak, Paul. "'Freeze Girl' Backed On Views", The New York Times, July 17, 1983. Accessed June 10, 2020. "'This is the first time I saw Ariela totally concentrate on one thing she cared a lot about,' said Mrs. Gross, a statistics professor at the City University of New York, during a recent interview at the Gross home in Princeton Township."
  217. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1968/08/12/76961447.pdf?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0 "Hallett Johnson, Served As Diplomat 36 Years"
  218. Sander, Logan. "Princeton People: Musician Chris Harford", Planet Princeton, June 3, 2015. Accessed December 10, 2018. "Chris Harford is a musician who was born and raised in Princeton."
  219. Dutka, Elaine. "The Acting Bug Bites Ethan Hawke", The Los Angeles Times, February 20, 1994. Accessed November 19, 2023. "Acting was a refuge for this self-described 'terrible student,' a way to get out in the world for a kid who couldn't wait for life to start. Hawke's family eventually moved to Princeton, N.J., where, as a 13-year-old, he made his stage debut in the McCarter Theater's production of St. Joan."
  220. Kanter, Sharon Clott. "Who Is Sarah Hay? Get to Know the Ballerina of Starz's New Drama Flesh & Bone", InStyle, November 7, 2015. Accessed December 12, 2015. "In real life, the 28-year-old Princeton, New Jersey native is much more grounded than her character, though she can sympathize with the craziness that actually goes on in the ballet world."
  221. https://www.thesweetestpod.com/about About the Pod
  222. Elliott, Khristine. "Historical Ties", Battle Creek Enquirer, July 4, 2003. Accessed November 2, 2013. "Joseph Hewes isn't one of the most well-known signers of the Declaration of Independence, but he's got a built-in fan base in Calhoun, Branch and Barry counties.... Born in Princeton, NJ, in 1730, he went on to graduate from Princeton College."
  223. Anderson, Robert W. "A Short Biography of Charles Hodge", WRS Journal 4/2 (August 1997) 9–13, Western Reformed Seminary. Accessed November 2, 2013. "His son and biographer, A. A. Hodge, recorded that he 'reached his home, in Princeton, about the 18th of September 1828 Where There Was Joy.' His son, then being five years of age, added that this was 'the first abiding image of his father.
  224. https://www.newspapers.com/article/marysville-journal-tribune-herbert-huffm/135439300/ "Personal Mention"
  225. Teicholz, Tom. "Doc on PBS: The life and fictions of Harold Humes", Huffington Post, May 25, 2011. Accessed December 10, 2018. "Harold L. Humes was born in 1926 in Douglas, Arizona. His father was a chemical engineer. The family moved to Princeton New Jersey where Humes attended high school and got the nickname 'Doc', based on the crazy scientist character 'Doc Huer' in the Buck Rogers comics."
  226. Web site: Unofficial Sesame Place Podcast. Listen Notes. May 14, 2019 . en. 2020-01-17.
  227. English, Chris. "New book on Sesame Place coming out Monday", Bucks County Courier Times, July 2, 2015. Accessed January 17, 2020. "It's written by Guy Hutchinson and Chris Mercaldo, who both used to visit the park as children. Hutchinson, who grew up in Princeton, New Jersey, and now lives in East Windsor, New Jersey, has also been back several times as a parent, he said."
  228. Olivier, Bobby. "Must-hear N.J.: Princeton rockers The Karma Killers live the Warped Tour dream", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, July 16, 2015, updated January 17, 2019. Accessed December 5, 2020. "Micky James, Karma's flamboyant frontman, says he's happy to be near home, but life on the road has been surreal.... Vocals: Micky James, 22, of Princeton"
  229. Tagliabue, John. "A U.S. Angel With Millions Helps Walesa", The New York Times, June 11, 1989. Accessed August 22, 2013. "On June 1, the Solidarity leader signed a letter of intent with Czeslaw Tolwinski, the director of the big Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk, and Barbara Piasecka Johnson, a Polish-born American heiress who lives in Princeton, to create a shipbuilding company."
  230. Gardner, Joel R.; and Harrison, Andrew R. "The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: The Early Years", The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Accessed November 2, 2013. "They moved into Bellevue, an estate in Highland Park, and their son, Robert Wood Johnson III, was born in 1920. While living in Highland Park, Johnson became involved inlocal politics and served a term as mayor while he was still in his twenties. His marriage broke up in 1930, and his wife and child remained at Bellevue, while he relocated with his new wife, Margaret, to Morven, in Princeton, which later became the governor's mansion."
  231. http://www.johnkatzenbach.com/faq/ FAQs
  232. [Tim Weiner|Weiner, Tim]
  233. Staff. "Ask a Reporter: Gina Kolata", The New York Times. Accessed August 22, 2013. "Ms. Kolata is married and has two children. She lives in Princeton, N.J."
  234. via Associated Press. "N.H. students rally against South Africa", Brattleboro Reformer, October 11, 1986. Accessed November 19, 2023, via Newspapers.com. "The summer was kind of latent but everybody is back up this fall, said Barbara Krauthamer, a sophomore from Princeton, N.J., who organized the Dartmouth rally attended by about 150 people."
  235. Staff. "Paul Krugman's Solution to Getting Fiscal Stimulus? It Involves Aliens", PBS NewsHour, June 18, 2012. Accessed August 22, 2013. "The easy economics, Krugman told us at his home in Princeton, is that government should spend to goose the economy, because the private sector, for various reasons, simply won't."
  236. http://www.gocolgateraiders.com/roster.aspx?rp_id=240 Matt Lalli
  237. McGrath, Charles. "Deep In Suburbia", The New York Times, February 29, 2004. Accessed November 2, 2013. "Lee now lives, with his wife and two young daughters, in Princeton, N.J. -- just a stone's throw, not accidentally, from a golf course."
  238. Staff. "Lessons From John Lithgow's Onstage 'Education'", NPR, December 5, 2011. Accessed November 2, 2013. "You have just made a huge splash on Broadway, just won your first Tony Award, gone on to success that your father could never have dreamed, in fact you never really thought possible, a repertory actor. And at the same time you are living at his home in Princeton, and he has just been fired."
  239. Ouzounian, Richard . "Shameless lunacy; John Lithgow wild and crazy in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels Actor has loosened with time, writes Richard Ouzounian", Toronto Star, April 11, 2005. Accessed November 2, 2013. "Lithgow travelled constantly during the first 16 years of his life thanks to his father's vagabond thespian activities, finally settling down in Princeton, NJ when his dad became head of the university theatre there."
  240. Plump, Wendy. "Emily Mann's McCarter Magic", Princeton magazine. Accessed November 30, 2013. "This is the setting recently encountered at Emily Mann's Mercer Street home in Princeton: A warm kitchen on a cold winter morning; staffers from McCarter Theatre filling bowls with fruit and setting out muffins; the playwright herself over in a corner wrestling an espresso machine into submission."
  241. Leitch, Alexander. "Mann, Thomas", from A Princeton Companion, Princeton University Press (1978). Accessed November 30, 2013. "During their stay in Princeton Mr. and Mrs. Mann lived in the red brick Georgian house at the corner of Stockton Street and Library Place. Here, working three or four hours every morning, seven days a week, he completed Lotte in Weimar and started the fourth volume of the Joseph tales."
  242. Heinrich, Will. "In Jumana Manna’s Film, a Wild Plant Crosses the Political Line", The New York Times, September 29, 2022. Accessed April 19, 2024. "Wild Relatives doesn’t hit quite as hard as Foragers, perhaps because its content isn’t quite as personal for Manna, who was born in Princeton, N.J., but raised in Jerusalem."
  243. Staff. "Cartoonist Henry Martin donates art, books", News at Princeton, April 7, 2010. Accessed November 30, 2013. "The cartoonist Henry Martin, a 1948 graduate of Princeton University, has donated nearly 700 original drawings along with some of his humor books to the Princeton University Library.... Martin, a longtime Princeton resident, continues to draw a cartoon for the Office of Development each November."
  244. [Joan Riddell Cook|Cook, Joan]
  245. Hessler, Peter. "John McPhee, The Art of Nonfiction No. 3", The Paris Review, Spring 2010, No. 192. Accessed November 30, 2013. "John Angus McPhee was born in Princeton, New Jersey, in 1931, attended college in his hometown, and still lives there today."
  246. [Robert D. McFadden|McFadden, Robert D.]
  247. Helping, Steve. "30 Years After the Menendez Brothers Murders, Read People's 1990 Cover Story", People, August 20, 2019. Accessed June 12, 2022.
  248. Dougherty, Steve. "In Nashville, the Buddy System", The Wall Street Journal, February 21, 2013. Accessed November 30, 2013. "Mr. Miller, an Air Force brat who was born in Ohio and grew up in Maryland and Princeton, N.J., where he attended high school, sees no contradiction between his Yankee roots and his love for country music."
  249. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/19709051/the_times/ "E. Spencer Miller. Death Without a Bit of Warning"
  250. McDowell, Edwin. "Jeannette M. Ginsburg, 83, Author and Editor", The New York Times, March 20, 1987. Accessed November 7, 2016. "Born in Bradley Beach, N.J., and raised in New York City, Mrs. Ginsburg graduated from Barnard College in 1924. After her marriage to Edward B. Ginsburg, an industrial engineer in the clothing industry, she lived in South Carolina, moving to Princeton in 1950."
  251. Abel, David. "Romney apologizes for use of expression; To some, 'tar baby' is racial pejorative", The Boston Globe, July 31, 2006. Accessed November 30, 2013. "In 1981, author Toni Morrison published a novel titled Tar Baby, and she has compared the expression to other racial epithets.... Reached at her home near Princeton University, where she teaches, Morrison called the expression 'antiquated' and one that's 'attractive to some people, when they begin to search for hints of racism.
  252. [Hilton Als|Als, Hilton]
  253. Pristin, Terry. "New Jersey Daily Briefing; Princeton Poet Wins Prize", The New York Times, October 2, 1997. Accessed August 22, 2013. "Mr. Muldoon, who lives in Princeton Township, has won numerous prizes for his work, including the T. S. Eliot Poetry Prize and the Irish Literature Prize."
  254. Hockley, Rujeko; Panetta, Jane. Whitney Biennial 2019, p. 86. Yale University Press, 2019. . Accessed October 29, 2019. "Jeanette Mundt - Born 1982 in Princeton, NJ; lives in Somerset, NJ"
  255. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/nash/filmmore/pt.html A Brilliant Madness Transcript
  256. http://www.towntopics.com/jul0809/book.php Town Topics (Princeton) DVD Review
  257. Scott, Debra. "Bebe Neuwirth: Close-up on Bebe Neuwirth -- Green Card is her first big movie role", Entertainment Weekly, December 21, 1990. Accessed November 30, 2013. "When director Peter Weir's film Green Card opens this week, the Princeton, N.J.-born, bicoastal actress, who is married to actor-director Paul Dorman, may get her wish again."
  258. Nutt, Amy Ellis. "Joyce Carol Oates: Princeton's 'dark lady of fiction' comes shining", The Star-Ledger, March 15, 2010. Accessed November 30, 2013. "Sitting in her bucolic backyard in Princeton, Joyce Carol Oates shimmers with a kind of delicate intensity."
  259. Staff. "John O'Hara Buried in Princeton Rites", The New York Times, April 17, 1970. Accessed November 30, 2013. "Princeton, N.J., April 16 John O'Hara, the novelist, was buried here today after a funeral service in the Princeton University Chapel. Mr. O'Hara had lived here since 1953."
  260. http://www.nga.org/cms/home/governors/past-governors-bios/page_new_jersey/col2-content/main-content-list/title_olden_charles.html New Jersey Governor Charles Smith Olden
  261. Staff. "Dayton Oliphant, Ex-Judge, 75, Dies; Headed Court of Errors and Appeals in New Jersey", The New York Times, June 27, 1963. Accessed July 2, 2016.
  262. George, Jason. "From a C Student to a Celestial Traveler", The New York Times, May 16, 2004. Accessed December 14, 2013. "'I want to share the experience with school groups, especially in the inner cities and more remote areas,' Mr. Olsen, who lives in Princeton, N.J., said recently by telephone and e-mail from Star City, Russia, where he began training last month."
  263. Staff. "J. Robert Oppenheimer, Atom Bomb Pioneer, Dies", The New York Times, February 19, 1967. Accessed June 15, 2014. "Princeton, N. J., Feb. 18 -- Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the nuclear physicist, died here tonight at the age of 62. A spokesman for the family said Dr. Oppenheimer died at 8 o'clock in his home on the grounds of the Institute for Advanced Study."
  264. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/alicia-ostriker Alicia Ostriker
  265. https://www.mycentraljersey.com/story/entertainment/2014/09/20/alicia-ostriker-speak-highland-park/15670621/ "Poet Alicia Ostriker to read in Highland Park"
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  267. Vanderbeek, Brian via McClatchy Newspapers. "Blues Traveler is the rare jam band with chart-topping hits", Chicago Tribune, November 14, 2013. Accessed June 15, 2014. "And such peace befits a band that traces its roots to the idyllic New Jersey town of Princeton. It's home to a great Ivy League university and apparently — at least in the 1970s — as a breeding ground for jam band leaders. Phish frontman Trey Anastasio attended preppy Princeton Day School just a couple years before Popper and Spin Doctors founder Chris Barron were classmates at Princeton High."
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  273. Shea, Kevin. "Bill Schluter, former state senator who ran for governor, dies at 90", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, August 6, 2018. Accessed August 7, 2018. "Born in Bronxville, New York and raised in Princeton, Schluter graduated from Princeton University in 1950, where he played varsity hockey all four years."
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  275. Johnson, Greg. "Lawrence High grad John Schneider rising in Blue Jays' system as a manager", The Trentonian, April 10, 2018. Accessed December 5, 2018. "During John Schneider's sixth season as a prospect in the Toronto Blue Jays organization, his career in professional baseball took a twist. A series of concussions and other injuries piled up, and the Princeton native steadily came to the realization that his playing days were almost over."
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  292. Mroz, Jacqueline. "Sundance Honor for Film of Early Save-the-Earth Activists", The New York Times, February 13, 2009. Accessed December 10, 2018. "When he was just 11 years old and living in Princeton, Robert Stone borrowed his parents' Super 8 camera and made his first film, about the pollution he saw around him.... After attending Princeton High School, Mr. Stone studied history in college."
  293. Cerasaro, Ashley J. "Closing the Deal; Jon Tenney, Princeton-born star of TV's The Closer, has a knack for turning small roles into big breaks.", New Jersey Monthly, November 14, 2011. Accessed August 29, 2014. "It's probably not a good idea to challenge a writer's vision when auditioning for a part on his television series, but that's exactly what Princeton native Jon Tenney did when he read for the role of Sergeant David Gabriel on TNT's hit drama The Closer."
  294. Hillier, Jordan. "Vintage Princeton: Paul Tulane", Princeton Magazine. Accessed August 29, 2014. "When Tulane retired in 1857, after operating his business for close to 40 years, he bought the Walter Lowrie House at 83 Stockton Street in Princeton, where he then lived for 20 years until his death."
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  296. Johnson, Greg. "Hopewell native Brandon Wagner hits walk-off single for Thunder", The Trentonian, July 28, 2018, updated August 25, 2021. Accessed November 10, 2021. "Wagner, who was born in Princeton and attended Immaculata High School in Somerville, said his mom, dad, sister and other relatives attended Saturday's game."
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