NJ -- Trenton -- William Trent House Museum:
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[1] TRENT_110530_01.JPG
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[2] TRENT_110530_07.JPG
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[3] TRENT_110530_14.JPG
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[4]
TRENT_110530_24.JPG
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TRENT_110530_27.JPG
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[6] TRENT_110530_35.JPG
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- TRENT_110530_24.JPG: The House Built in 1719 by William Trent
Chief Justice of New Jersey, 1723-1724
from whom Trenton derived its name
was his home until his death in 1724
Other owners or occupants of the House were
Lewis Morris
First Governor of New Jersey
as a separate Province
Resident 1742-1746
Philemon Dickerson
Governor of New Jersey 1836-1837
Owner 1835-1838
Col. John Cox
Assistant Quartermaster General
of the Continental Army
Owner 1778-1792, Resident 1778-1790
Rodman McCamley Price
Governor of New Jersey 1854-1857
Resident 1854-1859
This tablet erected by the Society of Colonial Wars
in the State of New Jersey
MCMLIV
- TRENT_110530_27.JPG: This house was built
in 1719 by
William Trent
for whom Trenton was named
Given to the city of Trenton
in 1929 by
Edward Ansley Stokes
Restored 1934-1936
by the Civic Works Administration
the Emergency Relief Administration
and the Works Progress Administration
under the supervision of
the trustees of the Free Public Library.
- Wikipedia Description: William Trent House
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The William Trent House , the oldest house in Trenton was built for William Trent. He founded the eponymous town, which became the capital of New Jersey. It has served as the residence for several Governors.
During the Summer of 1798, the federal government evacuated to Trenton to escape a yellow fever epidemic plaguing the temporary national capital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Following Congress's adjournment in July (in Philadelphia), President John Adams spent the rest of the summer and most of the fall at his home in Quincy, Massachusetts. Trent House housed federal offices until November, when the danger was deemed to have passed.
Recently, the building has been undergoing renovation including a new visitors center, funded by a grant from the New Jersey Historic Trust. It serves as a historic house museum.
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