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词条 List of National Historic Landmarks in New Jersey
释义

  1. Current NHLs in New Jersey

  2. Historic areas in the United States National Park System

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

{{see also|List of U.S. National Historic Landmarks by state}}

This is a List of National Historic Landmarks in New Jersey and other landmarks of equivalent landmark status in the state. The United States National Historic Landmark (NHL) program is operated under the auspices of the National Park Service, and recognizes structures, districts, objects, and similar resources according to a list of criteria of national significance.[1] There are 58 NHLs in New Jersey.[2]

Current NHLs in New Jersey

{{GeoGroup}}

There are NHLs in seventeen of the twenty-one counties in the state. Mercer County has fourteen NHLs, in and around Princeton, New Jersey.

{{NRHP header|NHL}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=1
|article=Abbott Farm Historic District
|name=Abbott Farm Historic District
|image=HamiltonTwpNJ RoeblingParkView.jpg
|date=1976-12-08
|address=Hamilton Township, Bordentown Township, and Bordentown
|lat=40.186
|lon=-74.727
|county=Mercer and Burlington
|description= Largest known Indian Woodland village archaeological site inhabited from 500 BC to 500 AD; Encompasses John A. Roebling Park, Hamilton-Trenton-Bordentown Marsh, and other nearby properties.
|refnum=76001158
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=2
|article=All Saint's Memorial Church (Navesink, New Jersey)
|name=All Saints' Memorial Church
|image=All-saints-church.JPG
|date=1987-12-23
|address=Navesink
|lat=40.39837
|lon=-74.02082
|county=Monmouth
|description= A stone Gothic church designed by Richard Upjohn
|refnum=74001179
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=3
|article=Atlantic City Convention Hall
|name=Atlantic City Convention Hall
|image=Atlantic City Convention Hall, On Boardwalk, West of Mississippi Avenue, Atlantic City (Atlantic County, New Jesey).jpg
|alt=1992 HABS photo
|date=1987-02-27
|address=Atlantic City
|lat=39.354982
|lon=-74.43866
|county=Atlantic
|description= The famous convention hall on Boardwalk used for everything from the Miss America pageant to WrestleMania
|refnum=87000814
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=4
|article=John Ballantine House
|name=John Ballantine House
|image=John-ballantine-house.jpg
|date=1985-02-04
|address=Newark
|lat=40.743166
|lon=-74.171314
|county=Essex
|description= Home of John Ballantine, of the Ballantine brewing family. Now part of the Newark Museum
|refnum=73001093
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=5
|article=Baltusrol Golf Club
|name=Baltusrol Golf Club
|image=Baltusrol Golf Club during PGA Championship.jpg
|date=2014-8-25
|address=Springfield
|lat=40.705
|lon=-74.328056
|county=Union
|description=The courses designed 1918–26 brought architect A. W. Tillinghast into prominence within American golfing.
|refnum=05000374
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=6
|article=Pietro and Maria Botto House
|name=Pietro and Maria Botto House
|image=Pietro-betto-house.jpg
|date=1982-12-17
|address=Haledon
|lat=40.934875
|lon=-74.188281
|county=Passaic
|description= Rallying point of the Paterson Silk Strike of 1913, now home to the American Labor Museum
|refnum=74001188
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=7
|article=Boxwood Hall
|name=Boxwood Hall
|image=Boxwood-hall.jpg
|date=1972-11-28
|address=Elizabeth
|lat=40.663608
|lon=-74.210283
|county=Union
|description= Home of Elias Boudinot, president of the Continental Congress, site of George Washington's luncheon before his inauguration, home of Jonathan Dayton, signer of the Declaration of Independence
|refnum=70000397
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=8
|article=Burlington County Prison
|name=Burlington County Prison
|image=Burlington County Prison, 128 High Street, Mount Holly (Burlington County, New Jersey).jpg
|alt=1937 HABS photo
|date=1986-06-24
|address=Mt Holly
|lat=39.996594
|lon=-74.789262
|county=Burlington
|description= Oldest operating United States prison when it closed in 1965
|refnum=86003558
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=9
|article=Camp Evans
|name=Camp Evans
|image=Camp Evans Historic District (21).JPG
|date=2012-10-16
|address=Wall Township
|lat=40.185
|lon=-74.05777
|county=Monmouth
|description= A former military base.
|refnum=02000274
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=10
|article=Cape May Historic District
|name=Cape May Historic District
|image=Cooks Villa 2 CMHD.JPG
|date=1976-05-11
|address=Cape May
|lat=38.936814
|lon=-74.911094
|county=Cape May
|description= The country's oldest seaside resort at the southernmost point in New Jersey
|refnum=70000383
|commonscat=Cape May Historic District
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=11
|article=Clark Thread Company Historic District
|name=Clark Thread Company Historic District
|image=Clark-thread-co.jpg
|date=1978-06-02
|address=East Newark
|lat=40.75189
|lon=-74.162001
|county=Hudson
|description= A large cotton thread mill complex which helped lead to textile industrialization.
|refnum=78001764
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=12
|article=Grover Cleveland Home
|name=Grover Cleveland Home
|image=Westland-mansion-princeton.JPG
|date=1965-06-23
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.351286
|lon=-74.6677
|county=Mercer
|description= Home of Grover Cleveland after he left the White House
|refnum=66000463
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=13
|article=Craftsman Farms
|name=Craftsman Farms
|image=Craftsman Farms.jpg
|date=1990-12-14
|address=Parsippany-Troy Hills
|lat=40.857399
|lon=-74.480127
|county=Morris
|description= A farm and school for the Arts and Crafts movement, founded by Gustav Stickley
|refnum=85003730
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=14
|article=Albert Einstein House
|name=Albert Einstein House
|image=Albert-einstein-house.JPG
|date=1976-01-07
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.344434
|lon=-74.667034
|county=Mercer
|description= The home of Albert Einstein after his flight from Germany until his death.
|refnum=76002297
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=15
|article=Fort Hancock and the Sandy Hook Proving Ground Historic District
|name=Fort Hancock and the Sandy Hook Proving Ground Historic District
|image=Ft Hancock.JPG
|date=1982-12-17
|address=Sandy Hook
|lat=40.463889
|lon=-74.002778
|county=Monmouth
|description= This coastal artillery base played an important part in the defense of New York Harbor
|refnum=80002505
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=16
|article=T. Thomas Fortune House
|name=T. Thomas Fortune House
|image=T. Thomas Fortune House, 94 West Bergen Place, Red Bank (Monmouth County, New Jersey).jpg
|alt=T. Thomas Fortune House
|date=1976-12-08
|address=Red Bank
|lat=40.341478
|lon=-74.073831
|county=Monmouth
|description= Home of Timothy Thomas Fortune, a slave who became a leading Afro-American journalist and civil rights advocate
|refnum=76001171
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=17
|article=Georgian Court University
|name=Georgian Court
|image=Georgian Court, Lakewood, NJ - Mansion, north view.jpg
|date=1985-02-04
|address=Lakewood
|lat=40.098889
|lon=-74.228889
|county=Ocean
|description= The former winter estate of millionaire George Jay Gould, now a university. It has a real tennis court, one of only forty five in the world
|refnum=78001788
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=18
|article=Grace Church, Newark
|name=Grace Church
|image=Grace Church Newark in Fall.jpg
|date=1987-12-23
|address=Newark
|lat=40.730722
|lon=-74.1745
|county=Essex
|description= Historic Episcopal Church. Grace Church's organist Samuel A. Ward composed the tune for "America the Beautiful." Designed by Richard Upjohn, this Gothic church was a major influence to other American Gothic revival architects.
|refnum=72000776
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=19
|article=Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company Warehouse
|name=Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company Warehouse
|image=Great-a-p-warehouse-jersey-city.jpg
|date=1978-06-02
|address=Jersey City
|lat=40.721055
|lon=-74.04002
|county=Hudson
|description= Part of A&P's distribution network, this 9 story concrete building is now an artist live/work space.
|refnum=78001766
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=20
|article=Great Falls of the Passaic
|name=Great Falls of the Passaic/Society for Establishing Useful Manufacturers H.D.
|image=Great Falls of the Passaic River.jpg
|alt=The Great Falls of the Passaic River
|date=1976-05-11
|address=Paterson
|lat=40.916189
|lon=-74.181597
|county=Passaic
|description= A powerful and dramatic waterfall which also was heavy used during the Industrial Revolution
|refnum=70000391, 86001507
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=21
|article=Hadrosaurus Foulkii Leidy Site
|name=Hadrosaurus Foulkii Leidy Site
|image=NHL Marl Pit 2.JPG
|date=1994-10-12
|address=Haddonfield
|lat=39.910318
|lon=-75.027354
|county=Camden
|description= Where the first relatively complete set of dinosaur bones in the world were discovered in 1858 by William Parker Foulke, a member of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, and subsequently removed, preserved, and named (Hadrosaurus foulkii) by Joseph Leidy, also of the Academy..
|refnum=94001648
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=22
|article=Hangar No. 1, Lakehurst Naval Air Station
|name=Hangar No. 1, Lakehurst Naval Air Station
|image=Hindenburg Disaster Marker.jpg
|date=1968-05-23
|address=Lakehurst
|lat=40.029011
|lon=-74.316609
|county=Ocean
|description= Site of the Hindenburg disaster on May 6, 1937
|refnum=68000031
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=23
|article=Joseph Henry House
|name=Joseph Henry House
|image=Joseph Henry House-072.jpg
|date=1965-01-12
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.349369
|lon=-74.658878
|county=Mercer
|description= Home of Joseph Henry, whose scientific research on electromagnetic self-inductance led to the electrical telegraph. He was also the first Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution
|refnum=66000464
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=24
|article=Hermitage (Hohokus)
|name=Hermitage
|image=Hermitage-rear.jpg
|date=1970-05-22
|address=Ho-Ho-Kus
|lat=41.006661
|lon=-74.119444
|county=Bergen
|description= A stone house where George Washington stayed during the American Revolutionary War, it was later the site of the wedding of Aaron Burr and Theodosia Prevost. Now a museum.
|refnum=70000379
|commonscat=Hermitage (Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey)
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=25
|article=Hinchliffe Stadium
|name=Hinchliffe Stadium
|image=HinchliffeField.jpg
|date=2013-02-25
|address=Paterson
|lat=40.9183
|lon=-74.1811
|county=Passaic
|description= A 1930s-era baseball stadium used to play Negro league baseball during the Jim Crow era.
|refnum=04000223
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=26
|article=Holland Tunnel
|name=Holland Tunnel
|image=Holland Tunnel Entrance.jpg
|date=1993-11-04
|address=Jersey City and New York, NY
|lat=40.729787
|lon=-74.03826
|county=Hudson, NJ and New York, NY
|description= One of the earliest examples of a ventilated design, the Holland Tunnel crosses under the Hudson River connecting New Jersey and Manhattan
|refnum=93001619
|commonscat=Holland Tunnel
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=27
|article=Francis Hopkinson House
|name=Francis Hopkinson House
|image=Francis Hopkinson House, Bordenton (Burlington County, New Jersey).jpg
|alt=Francis Hopkinson House
|date=1971-07-17
|address=Bordentown
|lat=40.148325
|lon=-74.713889
|county=Burlington
|description= The home of Francis Hopkinson, a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence
|refnum=71000496
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=28
|article=Holmdel Horn Antenna
|name=Horn Antenna
|image=Horn Antenna-in Holmdel, New Jersey.jpeg
|date=1989-12-20
|address=Holmdel
|lat=40.390752
|lon=-74.184859
|county=Monmouth
|description= Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered the microwave background radiation that permeates the universe using this antenna. This work earned them the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics and contributed to the confirmation of the Big Bang theory.
|refnum=89002457
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=29
|article=Lawrenceville School (NHL)
|name=Lawrenceville School
|image=Memorial Hall, Lawrenceville School (Lawrenceville, NJ).JPG
|date=1986-02-24
|address=Lawrenceville
|lat=40.293889
|lon=-74.730377
|county=Mercer
|description= A boarding school typically associated with Princeton University
|refnum=86000158
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=30
|article=Liberty Hall (New Jersey)
|name=William Livingston House
|image=Liberty-hall-elizabeth.jpg
|date=1972-11-28
|address=Union
|lat=40.67849
|lon=-74.228718
|county=Union
|description= Home of William Livingston, member of the first and second Continental Congress, signer of the United States Constitution, and first elected Governor of New Jersey. Now part of the Kean University
|refnum=72000807
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=31
|article=Lucy the Elephant
|name=Lucy the Margate Elephant
|image=Lucy the Elephant.jpg
|date=1976-05-11
|address=Margate City
|lat=39.320647
|lon=-74.511903
|county=Atlantic
|description= Built in 1882, this six-story elephant-shaped architectural folly is the oldest example of zoomorphic architecture
|refnum=71000493
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=32
|article=Maybury Hill
|name=Maybury Hill
|image=Maybury-hill-princeton.JPG
|date=1971-11-11
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.367457
|lon=-74.641457
|county=Mercer
|description= Boyhood home of Joseph Hewes, a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence
|refnum=71000502
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=33
|article=Minisink Archeological Site
|name=Minisink Archeological Site
|image=Delaware River from Raymondskill mouth across US.jpg
|date=1993-04-19
|address=Delaware Water Gap NRA
|lat= 41.093454
|lon=-74.992247
|county=Sussex, NJ and Pike, PA
|description= This archeological site was one of the most important Munsee Native American communities during the initial contact with the American colonials
|refnum=93000608
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=34
|article=Monmouth Battlefield
|name=Monmouth Battlefield
|image=Craig House farmhouse, Monmouth Battlefield State Park.jpg
|date=1961-01-20
|address=Freehold Township
|lat=40.263669
|lon=-74.319817
|county=Monmouth
|description= Site of an American victory during the American Revolutionary War, the Battle of Monmouth on June 28, 1778 was also where the legend of Molly Pitcher started. Re-enactments of the battle take place annually in June.
|refnum=66000467
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=35
|article=Morven (Princeton, New Jersey)
|name=Morven
|image=MorvenNJ.jpg
|date=1971-07-17
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.347492
|lon=-74.666953
|county=Mercer
|description= Built in 1754 by Richard Stockton (1730-1781), a signer of the Declaration of Independence. It served as the New Jersey Governors mansion from 1945 until 1982 and is now a museum.
|refnum=71000503
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=36
|article=Nassau Hall
|name=Nassau Hall
|image=Nassau-hall-princeton.JPG
|date=1960-10-09
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.348739
|lon=-74.65935
|county=Mercer
|description= The oldest building at Princeton University and the largest in New Jersey when it was built in 1754. It served as the home of the American government from June to November 1783.
|refnum=66000465
|commonscat=Nassau Hall, Princeton University
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=37
|article=Thomas Nast Home
|name=Thomas Nast Home
|image=Thomas Nast Home.jpg
|date=1964-01-29
|address=Morristown
|lat=40.791756
|lon=-74.480428
|county=Morris
|description= One of the first editorial cartoonists, Thomas Nast, helped bring down Tammany Hall and created iconic images of Santa Claus, the Democratic Donkey, and the Republican Elephant
|refnum=66000470
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=38
|article=Navesink Light Station
|name=Navesink Light Station
|image=Navesink.jpg
|alt=USCG photo
|date=2006-02-17
|address=Highlands
|lat=40.396266
|lon=-73.985775
|county=Monmouth
|description= A twin light station that guided ships into New York Harbor and was the first use of Fresnel lenses in the United States.
|refnum=06000237, 70000389
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=39
|article=St. Mary's Episcopal Church (Burlington, New Jersey)
|name=New St. Mary's Episcopal Church
|image=BurlingtonNJ NewStMarysChurch 01.jpg
|alt=2012 photo
|date=1986-06-24
|address=Burlington
|lat=40.077078
|lon=-74.861768
|county=Burlington
|description= This Gothic Revival style church was designed by Richard Upjohn and modeled after St. John's Church in Shottesbrooke, England
|refnum=72000770
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=40
|article=Abel and Mary Nicholson House
|name=Abel and Mary Nicholson House
|image=Nicholson (Abel) House, Elsinboro (Salem County, New Jersey).jpg
|alt=1936 HABS photo
|date=2000-02-16
|address=Elsinboro Township
|lat=39.519529
|lon=-75.486348
|county=Salem
|description= A rare pristine example of a Delaware Valley patterned brick building
|refnum=96001548
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=41
|article=Old Barracks
|name=Old Barracks
|image=Old Barracks, South Willow Street, Trenton (Mercer County, New Jersey).jpg
|alt=HABS photo
|date=1972-11-28
|address=Trenton
|lat=40.219871
|lon=-74.768658
|county=Mercer
|description= Only remaining colonial barracks, Hessian troops were captured here after George Washington crossed the Delaware River in December 1776.
|refnum=71000506
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=42
|article=Old Queens
|name=Old Queens, Rutgers University
|image=Old Queens, New Brunswick, NJ - looking north, 2014.jpg
|date=1976-05-11
|address=New Brunswick
|lat=40.49875
|lon=-74.44625
|county=Middlesex
|description= Oldest building at Rutgers University and considered one of the finest examples of Federal architecture.
|refnum=76001164
|commonscat=Old Queens, Rutgers University
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=43
|article=Palisades Interstate Park
|name=Palisades Interstate Park
|image=Palisades cliff.jpg
|date=1965-01-12
|address=West bank of Hudson River
|lat=41.003091
|lon=-73.916202
|county=Bergen, NJ, Rockland, NY, and Orange, NY
|description= A joint New York and New Jersey organization, it includes 24 parks and eight historic sites, covering over 100,000 acres (405 km²) along more than 20 miles (32 km) of Hudson River shoreline. It also operates the Palisades Interstate Parkway, which travels through the park, along the Hudson River
|refnum=66000890
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=44
|article=Paulsdale
|name=Paulsdale
|image=Paulsdale.jpg
|date=1991-12-04
|address=Mt Laurel
|lat=39.956667
|lon=-74.930692
|county=Burlington
|description= Birthplace and home of Alice Paul, a leader in the Women's suffrage movement
|refnum=89000774
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=45
|article=President's House (Princeton)
|name=President's House
|image=Maclean house.jpg
|date=1971-07-17
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.349104
|lon=-74.660205
|county=Mercer
|description= John Witherspoon lived in this home for the President of the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University) between 1768 through 1779. During this time he also served as a delegate to the Continental Congress and signed the Declaration of Independence
|refnum=71000504
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=46
|article=Princeton Battlefield
|name=Princeton Battlefield
|image=Princeton Battlefield State Park (Princeton, NJ).JPG
|date=1961-01-20
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.331538
|lon=-74.675564
|county=Mercer
|description= After George Washington crossed the Delaware and captured the Hessians at the Old Barracks in Trenton, his army engaged the British here, leading to the British surrender on January 3, 1777
|refnum=66000466
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=47
|article=Prospect (Princeton)
|name=Prospect
|image=Prospect-presidents-house.JPG
|date=1985-02-04
|address=Princeton
|lat=40.347097
|lon=-74.656633
|county=Mercer
|description= A fine example of John Notman's architecture. It formerly served as the official home of the President of Princeton University, and is now the faculty club. Woodrow Wilson lived from 1902 to 1910, prior to entering politics.
|refnum=85002434
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=48
|article=Radburn, New Jersey
|name=Radburn
|image=Radburn-cul-de-sac.jpg
|date=2005-04-05
|address=Fairlawn
|lat=40.94237
|lon=-74.116302
|county=Bergen
|description= An early planned community which aimed to separate traffic by transportation mode. It introduced the residential superblock.
|refnum=75001118
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=49
|article=Red Bank Battlefield
|name=Red Bank Battlefield
|image=Fort Mercer Monument.jpg
|date=1972-11-28
|address=National Park
|lat=39.871371
|lon=-75.18941
|county=Gloucester
|description= Site of the Battle of Red Bank on October 22, 1777
|refnum=72000796
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|type=NHLD
|pos=50
|article=Ringwood Manor
|name=Ringwood Manor
|image=Ringwood Manor spring 2015.jpg
|date=1966-11-13
|address=Ringwood
|lat=41.138952
|lon=-74.255294
|county=Passaic
|description= Manor of ironmaster Robert Erskine, who served George Washington here.
|refnum=66000471
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=51
|article=Sandy Hook Lighthouse
|name=Sandy Hook Light
|image=SH Light crop.jpg
|alt=Sandy Hook Lighthouse
|date=1964-01-29
|address=Sandy Hook
|lat=40.461667
|lon=-74.001944
|county=Monmouth
|description= The oldest working lighthouse in the United States
|refnum=66000468
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=52
|article=Seabright Lawn Tennis and Cricket Club
|name=Seabright Lawn Tennis and Cricket Club
|image=Seabright-tennis-club.JPG
|date=1992-10-05
|address=Rumson
|lat=40.366486
|lon=-73.983564
|county=Monmouth
|description= One of the oldest active tennis clubs in the United States
|refnum=91000883
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=53
|article=Shadow Lawn (New Jersey)
|name=Shadow Lawn
|image=Woodrow Wilson Hall, West Long Branch, NJ - south view.jpg
|alt=1991 HABA photo
|date=1985-02-04
|address=West Long Branch
|lat=40.279467
|lon=-74.005336
|county=Monmouth
|description= Palatial home built for the president of the F.W. Woolworth Company. Now Woodrow Wilson Hall, part of Monmouth University.
|refnum=78001780
|commonscat=Shadow Lawn (New Jersey)
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=54
|article=Speedwell Ironworks
|name=The Speedwell Village Factory
|image=Speedwell Ironworks factory building.jpg
|alt=The Factory House, birthplace of the electric telegraph
|date=1974-05-30
|address=Morristown
|lat=40.797219
|lon=-74.48083
|county=Morris
|description= Birthplace of the electric telegraph.
|refnum=74001186
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=55
|article=Elizabeth Cady Stanton House (Tenafly, New Jersey)
|name=Elizabeth Cady Stanton House
|image=Elizabeth Cady Stanton House 2012-07-31 jeh.jpg
|date=1975-05-15
|address=Tenafly
|lat=40.925803
|lon=-73.954556
|county=Bergen
|description= Home of Elizabeth Cady Stanton from 1868 to 1887.
|refnum=75001122
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=56
|article=William Trent House
|name=William Trent House
|image=Trent House, 15 Market Street, Trenton.jpg
|alt=1996 HABS photo
|date=1970-04-15
|address=Trenton
|lat=40.212692
|lon=-74.766031
|county=Mercer
|description= Home of William Trent, founder of Trenton, New Jersey, and also home to several Governors of New Jersey
|refnum=70000388
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=57
|article=Washington's Crossing
|name=Washington's Crossing
|image=Washington Crossing State Park, NJ view of Delaware River.jpg
|date=1961-01-20
|address=Titusville, NJ and Yardley, PA
|lat=40.331111
|lon=-74.938333
|county=Mercer, NJ and Bucks, PA
|description= New Jersey location of Washington's crossing of the Delaware River leading up to the Battle of Trenton
|refnum=66000650
}}{{NRHP row|NHL
|pos=58
|article=Walt Whitman House
|name=Walt Whitman House
|image=WhitmanHouse-CamdenNJ1.jpg
|date=1962-12-29
|address=Camden
|lat=39.9425
|lon=-75.123889
|county=Camden
|description= The final residence of poet Walt Whitman
|refnum=66000461
}}
|}

Historic areas in the United States National Park System

National Historic Sites, National Historic Parks, National Memorials, and certain other areas listed in the National Park system are historic landmarks of national importance that are highly protected already, often before the inauguration of the NHL program in 1960, and are often not also named NHLs per se. There are four of these in New Jersey. The National Park Service lists these three together with the NHLs in the state,[3] These are:

Landmark name
ImageDate established[4]LocationCountyDescription
NHP|1 Paterson Great Falls[5]2011|11|7}} Paterson Passaic A National Natural Landmark and site of mills and mill races originally developed by the Society of Useful Manufacture in late 1700s that are a Civil Engineering Landmark
NMON|2 Ellis Island (part of Statue of Liberty National Monument)[6]1965|5|11}} Jersey City Hudson Immigration processing depot from 1892-1954. A portion of Ellis Island is in New York.
NHS|3 Thomas Edison National Historical Park1962|9|5}} West Orange Essex Inventor Thomas Alva Edison's laboratory and residence, Glenmont
NHP|4 Morristown National Historical Park1933|3|2}} Morristown Morris American Revolutionary War sites: Jockey Hollow, Fort Nonsense, and Ford Mansion

See also

  • List of National Historic Landmarks by state
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in New Jersey

References

1. ^{{cite web | last = National Park Service | first = | authorlink = National Park Service | coauthors = | title = National Historic Landmarks Program: Questions and Answers | work = | publisher = | date = | url = http://www.nps.gov/nhl/QA.htm | doi = | accessdate = 2007-09-21 }}
2. ^{{Cite web | publisher=National Park Service | date=March 2013 | title = National Historic Landmarks Survey: List of National Historic Landmarks by State | url=http://www.cr.nps.gov/nhl/designations/Lists/LIST13.pdf | format=PDF| accessdate=2011-07-04}}.
3. ^These are listed on p.114 of "National Historic Landmarks Survey: List of National Historic Landmarks by State"
4. ^Date of listing as National Monument or similar designation, from various sources in articles indexed.
5. ^{{cite web | title = Paterson Great Falls | work = | publisher = National Park Service | date = | url = http://www.nps.gov/pagr/index.htm | accessdate = 2012-12-26}}
6. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.ellisisland.org/genealogy/ellis_island_timeline.asp|title=Ellis Island Time |publisher=Staue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation |date=2003-01-16 |accessdate=2010-08-15}}

External links

  • National Historic Landmarks Program, at National Park Service
  • National Park Service listings of National Historic Landmarks
{{NHLbyState}}{{New Jersey}}

3 : Lists of National Historic Landmarks by state|National Historic Landmarks in New Jersey|New Jersey-related lists

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