Map of Historic Districts
of Princeton Borough
Jugtown District—Located
at the intersection of Nassau and Harrison Streets, this area was originally
settled in 1695. By the early-eighteenth century, Jugtown had become
a thriving hamlet of houses, stores, a hotel, and a pottery works, from
which the neighborhood derives its name. The district's beginnings are
visible in the modest brick dwellings of the eighteenth century, which
were joined later by elegant wood-framed Federal-style dwellings with
delicate carved wood details and fanlights. During the nineteenth century,
the neighborhood came to include houses in a wider variety of architectural
styles. Queen Anne and Colonial Revival dwellings of the late-nineteenth
and early-twentieth century completed the district.
Bank Street District—Tucked
away along narrow Bank Street is a collection of vernacular Queen Anne-style
buildings that form a cohesive and well-preserved residential district.
Constructed in the late-nineteenth century as modest residences, these
wood-framed dwellings gather close to the street and to one another.
These houses feature a variety of Victorian decoration. Wood shingles
in fanciful diamond and fish-scale patterns cover them, decorative brackets
adorn the buildings' two-story cutaway bay windows, and wood porches
with turned wood posts and spindle valances welcome visitors.
Mercer Hill District—Primarily
residential in character, this elegant district includes the Albert
Einstein house, Morven, a number of dwellings designed by Princeton's
noted architect-builder, Charles Steadman, and clusters of Victorian
houses. Landmark buildings in the district include Trinity Church and
Princeton Theological Seminary's Alexander Hall. A variety of architectural
styles is present here, with houses executed in the Greek Revival, Gothic
Revival, Italianate, Second Empire, Queen Anne, and Colonial Revival
styles.
Central Historic District—This
district encompasses the core of the central business district and several
Princeton University buildings that front onto Nassau Street. Its buildings
represent diverse periods and architectural styles from the eighteenth
through the twentieth centuries. Located amid the district's eighteenth-century
Nassau Hall, Bainbridge House, and MacLean House are the Greek Revival
Nassau Presbyterian Church, the Tudor Revival Lower Pyne, and the Collegiate
Gothic Madison and Holder Halls. The commercial buildings along Nassau
Street demonstrate an array of historical styles, including Federal,
Second Empire, Renaissance Revival, and the Colonial Revival of Palmer
Square.
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