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Princeton, New Jersey

 
Princeton, New Jersey

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Princeton, New Jersey



 
 
Princeton, New Jersey is located in Mercer County
Mercer County, New Jersey

Mercer County is a county located in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Its county seat is Trenton, New Jersey. It is officially part of the New York Metropolitan Area, but due to it being close to New York City and Philadelphia, Mercer County is also its own Metropolitan Statistical Area, which is named the Trenton-Ewing MSA....
, New Jersey
New Jersey

New Jersey is a state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States. It is bordered on the north by New York, on the east by the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean, on the southwest by Delaware, and on the west by Pennsylvania....
, United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
. Princeton University
Princeton University

Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
 has been sited in the town since 1756. Although Princeton is a "college town
College town

A college town or university town is a community which is dominated by its university population. The university may be large, or there may be several smaller institutions such as liberal arts colleges clustered, or the residential population may be small, but college towns in all cases are so dubbed because the presence of the educati...
", there are other important institutions in the area, including the Institute for Advanced Study
Institute for Advanced Study

The Institute for Advanced Study, located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States, is a center for theoretical research. The Institute is perhaps best known as the academic home of Albert Einstein, John von Neumann, and Kurt G?del, after their immigration to the United States....
, Educational Testing Service
Educational Testing Service

Educational Testing Service is the world's largest private educational testing and measurement organization, operating on an annual budget of approximately $1.1 billion on a proforma basis in 2007....
 (ETS), Opinion Research Corporation
Opinion Research Corporation

Opinion Research Corporation , based in Princeton, New Jersey, is a demographic, health, and market research company. It was founded in 1938 by Claude Robinson and George Gallup, although Gallup quickly left the firm in 1939....
, Siemens Corporate Research, Sarnoff Corporation
Sarnoff Corporation

Sarnoff Corporation, with headquarters in West Windsor, New Jersey, is the former RCA Laboratories. It is now a wholly owned subsidiary of SRI International....
, FMC Corporation, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton Theological Seminary
Princeton Theological Seminary

Princeton Theological Seminary is a theological seminary of the Presbyterian Church located in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey in the United States....
, Westminster Choir College
Westminster Choir College

Westminster Choir College is a residential college of music located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.Westminster Choir College educates men and women at the undergraduate and graduate levels for musical careers in music education, voice performance, piano performance, organ performance, pedagogy, music theory and composition, conduct...
, Church and Dwight
Church and Dwight

Church & Dwight Co., Inc. is a major United States manufacturer of household products that is based in Princeton, New Jersey. While it manufactures many items, it is by far best known for its Arm & Hammer line which includes baking soda and many other items made with it....
, Berlitz International, and Dow Jones & Company.

The town is roughly equidistant between New York and Philadelphia.






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Encyclopedia


Nassaustreetinprinceton
Princeton, New Jersey is located in Mercer County
Mercer County, New Jersey

Mercer County is a county located in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Its county seat is Trenton, New Jersey. It is officially part of the New York Metropolitan Area, but due to it being close to New York City and Philadelphia, Mercer County is also its own Metropolitan Statistical Area, which is named the Trenton-Ewing MSA....
, New Jersey
New Jersey

New Jersey is a state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States. It is bordered on the north by New York, on the east by the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean, on the southwest by Delaware, and on the west by Pennsylvania....
, United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
. Princeton University
Princeton University

Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
 has been sited in the town since 1756. Although Princeton is a "college town
College town

A college town or university town is a community which is dominated by its university population. The university may be large, or there may be several smaller institutions such as liberal arts colleges clustered, or the residential population may be small, but college towns in all cases are so dubbed because the presence of the educati...
", there are other important institutions in the area, including the Institute for Advanced Study
Institute for Advanced Study

The Institute for Advanced Study, located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States, is a center for theoretical research. The Institute is perhaps best known as the academic home of Albert Einstein, John von Neumann, and Kurt G?del, after their immigration to the United States....
, Educational Testing Service
Educational Testing Service

Educational Testing Service is the world's largest private educational testing and measurement organization, operating on an annual budget of approximately $1.1 billion on a proforma basis in 2007....
 (ETS), Opinion Research Corporation
Opinion Research Corporation

Opinion Research Corporation , based in Princeton, New Jersey, is a demographic, health, and market research company. It was founded in 1938 by Claude Robinson and George Gallup, although Gallup quickly left the firm in 1939....
, Siemens Corporate Research, Sarnoff Corporation
Sarnoff Corporation

Sarnoff Corporation, with headquarters in West Windsor, New Jersey, is the former RCA Laboratories. It is now a wholly owned subsidiary of SRI International....
, FMC Corporation, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton Theological Seminary
Princeton Theological Seminary

Princeton Theological Seminary is a theological seminary of the Presbyterian Church located in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey in the United States....
, Westminster Choir College
Westminster Choir College

Westminster Choir College is a residential college of music located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.Westminster Choir College educates men and women at the undergraduate and graduate levels for musical careers in music education, voice performance, piano performance, organ performance, pedagogy, music theory and composition, conduct...
, Church and Dwight
Church and Dwight

Church & Dwight Co., Inc. is a major United States manufacturer of household products that is based in Princeton, New Jersey. While it manufactures many items, it is by far best known for its Arm & Hammer line which includes baking soda and many other items made with it....
, Berlitz International, and Dow Jones & Company.

The town is roughly equidistant between New York and Philadelphia. Princeton has been home to New York commuters (via Princeton Junction) since the end of World War II. The town is close to many major highways that can take residents to both cities. While the Amtrak ridetime is similar to each city, the more usual commuter train ride to New York via the New Jersey Transit
New Jersey Transit

The New Jersey Transit Corporation is a statewide public transportation system serving the U.S. state of New Jersey, United States, and Orange County, New York and Rockland County, New York counties in New York....
 Northeast Corridor Line
Northeast Corridor Line

The Northeast Corridor Line is a commuter rail operation run by New Jersey Transit along Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. It is the successor to commuter services provided by the Pennsylvania Railroad along the section between Trenton, New Jersey and Pennsylvania Station ....
, is generally much shorter than the equivalent train ride to Philadelphia, which involves a transfer to SEPTA trains in Trenton
Trenton, New Jersey

Trenton is the Capital of the U.S. state of New Jersey and the county seat of Mercer County, New Jersey. As of 2007, the United States Census Bureau estimated that the City of Trenton had a population of 82,804....
. Princeton receives TV and radio from both cities.

New Jersey's State capital is the city of Trenton, but the Governor's official residence has been in Princeton since 1945, when Morven
Morven (residence)

Morven, officially known as Morven Museum & Garden, is a historic house at 55 Stockton Street in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
 in the borough became the first Governor's mansion. It was later replaced by the larger Drumthwacket
Drumthwacket

Drumthwacket is the official residence of the Governor of New Jersey and was built in 1835 by then-future Governor Charles S. Olden. It is located at 344 Stockton Road in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
, a larger colonial mansion located in the township. Morven became a museum property of the New Jersey Historical Society
New Jersey Historical Society

The New Jersey Historical Society is a historical society and museum located in Newark, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. It was founded in 1845 at Trenton, New Jersey by intellectual and business leaders of New Jersey, most prominently Joseph C....
.

Princeton was named #15 of the top 100 towns in the United States to Live and Work In by Money
Money (magazine)

Money is a Time Inc. personal finance magazine. Its first issue was published in October 1972. Its articles cover the gamut of personal finance topics ranging from investing, saving, retirement and taxes to family finance issues like paying for college, credit, career and home improvement....
 Magazine in 2005.

Although residents of Princeton (Princetonians) traditionally have a strong community-wide identity, legally there is not one municipality, but two: a township
Township (New Jersey)

A township, in the context of New Jersey local government, refers to one of five types and one of eleven forms of municipal government. It is a political entity as any typical town, city or municipality, collecting property taxes and providing services such as maintaining roads, garbage collection, water, sewer, schools, police and f...
 and a borough
Borough (New Jersey)

A Borough in the context of New Jersey local government refers to one of five types and one of eleven forms of municipal government....
. The central borough is 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 Regional Schools
Princeton Regional Schools

Princeton Regional Schools is a comprehensive community public school district that serves students in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey and Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
, and some other public services are conducted together. There have been three referenda
Referendum

A referendum , ballot question, or plebiscite is a direct vote in which an entire Constituency is asked to either accept or reject a particular proposal....
 proposing to reunite the two Princetons, but they have all been narrowly defeated. The Borough contains Nassau Street, the main commercial street, most of the University campus, and incorporated most of the urban area until the postwar suburbanization. Borough and Township now have roughly equal populations, together approaching 30,000.

United States Postal Zip Codes for Princeton include 08542 (largely the Borough), 08544 (the University), and 08540. The latter covers areas outside Princeton proper, including portions of Lawrence
Lawrence Township, Mercer County, New Jersey

Lawrence Township is a Township in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township population was 29,159....
, Hopewell
Hopewell Township, New Jersey

Hopewell Township is the name of some places in the U.S. state of New Jersey:*Hopewell Township, Cumberland County, New Jersey*Hopewell Township, Mercer County, New Jersey...
, and West Windsor
West Windsor Township, New Jersey

West Windsor Township is a Township in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, in the United States. As of the United States Census, 2000, the township population was 21,907....
 Townships in Mercer County, Montgomery
Montgomery Township, New Jersey

Montgomery Township is a Township in Somerset County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township population was 17,481....
 and Franklin
Franklin Township, New Jersey

Franklin Township is the name of some places in the U.S. state of New Jersey:*Franklin Township, Gloucester County, New Jersey*Franklin Township, Hunterdon County, New Jersey...
 Townships in Somerset County
Somerset County, New Jersey

Somerset County is a county located in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of 2000, the population was 297,490. It is part of the New York Metropolitan Area....
, and Plainsboro
Plainsboro Township, New Jersey

Plainsboro Township is a Township in Middlesex County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township population was 20,215....
 and South Brunswick
South Brunswick Township, New Jersey

South Brunswick Township is a Township in Middlesex County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township population was 37,734....
 Townships in Middlesex County
Middlesex County, New Jersey

Middlesex County is a county located in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of the United States 2000 Census, the population was 750,162. It is part of the New York Metropolitan Area and its county seat is New Brunswick, New Jersey....
. The resulting ambiguity is exploited by local real estate agents who will often advertise a property in these neighboring communities as having a "prestigious Princeton address". Further adding to confusion is the spread of "Princeton" as part of business, church and residential development even further beyond the boundaries of the Township and Borough. Princeton lies at latitude 40°21' North, longitude 74°40' West.

Education


Colleges and universities

Princeton University
Princeton University

Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
, located in both the borough and the township and in West Windsor Township
West Windsor Township, New Jersey

West Windsor Township is a Township in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, in the United States. As of the United States Census, 2000, the township population was 21,907....
, serves as a prominent feature of Princeton.

Westminster Choir College
Westminster Choir College

Westminster Choir College is a residential college of music located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.Westminster Choir College educates men and women at the undergraduate and graduate levels for musical careers in music education, voice performance, piano performance, organ performance, pedagogy, music theory and composition, conduct...
, part of Rider University
Rider University

Rider University is a private, coeducational, nonsectarian university located chiefly in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
, is located in the Borough.

Princeton Theological Seminary
Princeton Theological Seminary

Princeton Theological Seminary is a theological seminary of the Presbyterian Church located in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey in the United States....
's academic campus is located in the Borough, and a residential campus is located just outside the Township in West Windsor Township.

The Institute for Advanced Study
Institute for Advanced Study

The Institute for Advanced Study, located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States, is a center for theoretical research. The Institute is perhaps best known as the academic home of Albert Einstein, John von Neumann, and Kurt G?del, after their immigration to the United States....
 is in the Township and maintains extensive land holdings (the "Institute Woods") in the Township.

Mercer County Community College
Mercer County Community College

Mercer County Community College is an school accreditation, co-educational, two-year, public school, community college located in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey....
 in West Windsor is the nearest public college to serve Princeton residents.

Primary and secondary schools


Public schools
The six public schools of the Princeton Regional Schools
Princeton Regional Schools

Princeton Regional Schools is a comprehensive community public school district that serves students in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey and Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
 district serve both the borough and the township: four elementary schools (, , and ), John Witherspoon Middle School
John Witherspoon Middle school

John Witherspoon Middle School is a middle school in Princeton, New Jersey. It is located across from Princeton High School . There are currently just under 700 students with a staff of approximately 70....
, and Princeton High School
Princeton High School (New Jersey)

Princeton High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. PHS is a part of the Princeton Regional Schools district, which serves all public school students in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey and Princeton Township, New Jersey....
. 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 and the more racially and economically diverse population at Community Park. As a result of the redistricting, the wealthy Hodge Road/Library Place neighborhood was redistricted to CP, and portions of the racially diverse John Witherspoon Neighborhood were set to be bused to JP. The high school is located in the borough; the other schools are in the township. The high school also serves students from Cranbury Township
Cranbury Township, New Jersey

Cranbury Township is a Township in Middlesex County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. It is in the New York metropolitan area. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township population was 3,227....
 as part of a sending/receiving relationship
Sending/receiving relationship

A sending/receiving relationship is one in which a public school district sends some or all of its students to attend the schools of another district....
.

The Princeton Charter School
Princeton Charter School

Princeton Charter School is a charter school in Princeton Township, New Jersey, in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, serving students in kindergarten through eighth grade....
 (grades K-8) is located in the township. The school operates under a charter
Charter

A charter is the grant of authority or rights, stating that the granter formally recognizes the prerogative of the recipient to exercise the rights specified....
 granted by the Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Education
New Jersey Department of Education

The New Jersey Department of Education administers state and federal aid programs affecting more than 1.4 million public and non-public elementary and secondary school children in the state of New Jersey....
. 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.

Private schools
Several private schools are located in the Township: American Boychoir School
American Boychoir School

The American Boychoir School is a music boarding school located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey. It is one of two boychoir boarding schools in the United States....
, Hun School of Princeton
Hun School of Princeton

The Hun School of Princeton is a private, coeducational, Secondary education in the United States boarding school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, in the United States....
, Princeton Academy of the Sacred Heart, Princeton Day School
Princeton Day School

Princeton Day School is a private coeducational day school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey. The Princeton Day School currently enrolls 904 students in grades junior kindergarten - 12....
, Princeton Friends School
Princeton Friends School

Princeton Friends School is a private Religious Society of Friends and day Kindergarten-8th grade school in Princeton Township, New Jersey, Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
, and Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart
Stuart Country Day School

Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart is an independent all-girls Catholic school country day school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey....
.

St Paul School and The Lewis School and Diagnostic Clinic are located in the Borough.

Schools that are outside the Township and Borough but have Princeton mailing addresses include Chapin School
Chapin School (New Jersey)

The Chapin School is a private coeducational day school located in Lawrence Township, Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States, serving students in prekindergarten through eighth grade situated on a campus, two miles outside of Princeton, New Jersey....
 and Princeton Junior School in Lawrence Township
Lawrence Township, New Jersey

Lawrence Township is the name of some places in the U.S. state of New Jersey:*Lawrence Township, Cumberland County, New Jersey*Lawrence Township, Mercer County, New Jersey...
, the Waldorf School of Princeton and Princeton Montessori School in Montgomery Township
Montgomery Township, New Jersey

Montgomery Township is a Township in Somerset County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the township population was 17,481....
, and Eden Institute in West Windsor Township
West Windsor Township, New Jersey

West Windsor Township is a Township in Mercer County, New Jersey, New Jersey, in the United States. As of the United States Census, 2000, the township population was 21,907....
.

Public libraries

The Princeton Public Library
Princeton Public Library

The Princeton Public Library, a joint library chartered to serve Borough of Princeton, New Jersey and Princeton Township, New Jersey, NJ first opened to the public in 1909....
, located in the borough, serves the borough and the township. The facility was opened in April 2004 as part of the on-going downtown redevelopment project taking shape and replaced a building dating from 1966. The library itself was founded in 1909.

Noteworthy Princetonians


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.

  • Samuel Davies Alexander, (1819–1894), born in Princeton, noted Presbyterian clergyman and author
  • Svetlana Alliluyeva
    Svetlana Alliluyeva

    Svetlana Iosifovna Alliluyeva is the youngest child and only daughter of Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin. A writer and naturalized United States citizen, Alliluyeva caused an international furor by defecting to the United States in 1967....
    , daughter of Joseph Stalin
    Joseph Stalin

    Joseph Stalin was the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1922 until his death in 1953....
    , defected to United States and lived in Princeton.
  • John Altman (1952-), mystery writer.
  • Trey Anastasio
    Trey Anastasio

    Trey Anastasio is an United States guitarist, composer, and vocalist most noted for his work with the rock band Phish. He is credited by name as composer of 152 Phish original songs, 140 of them as a solo credit, in addition to 41 credits attributed to the band as a whole....
     (1964-), of the band Phish
    Phish

    eruses4|the band|deceptive internet practices|Phishing}}Phish is an United States band noted for their musical improvisation, extended jam sessions, exploration of music between genres, and their "fiercely loyal fans." Formed at the University of Vermont in 1983, the band's four members performed together for over 20 years until their hia...
    . Anastasio lived in Princeton with his family and attended Princeton Day School
    Princeton Day School

    Princeton Day School is a private coeducational day school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey. The Princeton Day School currently enrolls 904 students in grades junior kindergarten - 12....
    , before attending the Taft School in Watertown, Connecticut
    Watertown, Connecticut

    Watertown is a New England town in Litchfield County, Connecticut, Connecticut, United States. The population was 21,661 at the 2000 United States Census....
    , and later the University of Vermont
    University of Vermont

    The University of Vermont and State Agricultural College, more commonly known as The University of Vermont, is a national public research university and the state of Vermont's land-grant university....
    .
  • Milton Babbitt
    Milton Babbitt

    Milton Byron Babbitt is an American composer. He is particularly noted for his pioneering Serialism, and electronic music....
    , composer and Princeton University professor.
  • Chris Barron, lead singer of the Spin Doctors
    Spin Doctors

    Spin Doctors are an American jam band/alternative rock group formed in New York City, best known for their 1993 hits, "Two Princes" and "Little Miss Can't Be Wrong", which charted at #7 & #17 respectively on the American pop chart....
    , grew up in Princeton, attended Princeton High School.
  • Molly Bang
    Molly Bang

    Molly Bang is an United States illustrator, born in Princeton, New Jersey. She lives in California, after having lived for some time in Massachusetts....
    , children's book illustrator, born in Princeton.
  • Saul Bellow
    Saul Bellow

    Saul Bellow , was an acclaimed Canada-United States writer born in Canada of Russian-Jewish origin. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1976 and the National Medal of Arts in 1988....
    , writer and Princeton University professor.
  • Paul Benacerraf
    Paul Benacerraf

    Paul Benacerraf is a philosophy of mathematics who has been teaching at Princeton University since he joined the faculty in 1960. He was appointed Stuart Professor of Philosophy in 1974, and recently retired as the James S....
    , philosopher and Princeton University professor.
  • Ben Bernanke
    Ben Bernanke

    Ben Shalom Bernanke is the Chairman of the Federal Reserve of the United States Federal Reserve. Bernanke succeeded Alan Greenspan on February 1, 2006....
    , Chairman of the Board of Governors of the United States Federal Reserve, Princeton University professor.
  • Michael Bradley
    Michael Bradley (soccer)

    Michael Bradley is an American association football player who currently plays as a midfielder for Borussia Monchengladbach of the Germany Fu?ball-Bundesliga....
    , soccer player, born in Princeton.
  • George Harold Brown (1908-1987), Research Engineer at RCA, lived in Princeton.
  • Aaron Burr
    Aaron Burr

    Aaron Burr, Jr. was an United States politician, American Revolutionary War hero, and adventurer. He served as the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States , under Thomas Jefferson....
     (1756-1836), Third Vice President of the United States
    Vice President of the United States

    The Vice President of the United States is the holder of a public office in the United States of America created by the Constitution of the United States....
     (under Thomas Jefferson
    Thomas Jefferson

    Thomas Jefferson was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States , the principal author of the United States Declaration of Independence , and one of the most influential Founding Fathers of the United States for his promotion of the ideals of republicanism in the United States....
    ); killed Alexander Hamilton
    Alexander Hamilton

    Alexander Hamilton was the first Secretary of the Treasury, a Founding Fathers of the United States, economist, and political philosopher. He led calls for the Philadelphia Convention, was one of America's first Constitutional lawyers, and cowrote the Federalist Papers, a primary source for Constitutional interpretation....
     in duel, grew up in Princeton and buried there.
  • Aaron Burr, Sr.
    Aaron Burr, Sr.

    The Reverend Aaron Burr was a notable divine and educator in colonial America. He was a founder of the College of New Jersey and the father of the third United States Vice President Aaron Burr ....
     (1715-1757), co-founder of Princeton University
    Princeton University

    Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
     and its second president.
  • Sim Cain
    Sim Cain

    Drummer Sim Cain was born in London, England but grew up in the United States from the age of three in Princeton, New Jersey.He is probably best known as a member of the Rollins Band from 1987 to 2000 and he was previously a member of Gone....
     (1963-), drummer for Rollins Band
    Rollins Band

    Rollins Band was an American rock group led by singer and songwriter Henry Rollins.They are best-known for the songs "Low Self Opinion" and "Liar ", which both earned heavy airplay on MTV in the early 1990s....
    , grew up in Princeton.
  • Frances Folsom Cleveland
    Frances Folsom Cleveland

    Frances Clara Folsom Cleveland Preston , wife of the President of the United States, Grover Cleveland, and First Lady of the United States from 1886 to 1889, and again from 1893 to 1897....
    , First Lady
    First Lady

    First Lady is a term used in the United States to describe the wife of an elected male head of state. It originated in 1849, when President of the United States Zachary Taylor called Dolley Madison "First Lady" at her state funeral while reciting a eulogy written by himself....
    , died in and buried in Princeton.
  • Grover Cleveland
    Grover Cleveland

    Stephen Grover Cleveland was both the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States. Cleveland is the only President to serve two non-consecutive terms and therefore is the only individual to be counted twice in the numbering of the presidents....
     (1837-1908), 22nd and 24th President of the United States
    President of the United States

    The President of the United States is the head of state and head of government of the United States and is the highest political official in the United States by influence and recognition....
    , retired to, died in, and buried in Princeton.
  • Ruth Cleveland
    Ruth Cleveland

    "Baby" Ruth Cleveland was the first child of United States President Grover Cleveland and the First Lady of the United States Frances Cleveland....
    , Daughter of Grover and Frances Cleveland born between Cleveland's two terms in office. Died at age 12 and buried at Princeton Cemetery
    Princeton Cemetery

    Princeton Cemetery is located in Borough of Princeton, New Jersey. It is owned by the Nassau Presbyterian Church. John F. Hageman in his 1878 history of Princeton, New Jersey refers to the cemetery as: "The Westminster Abbey of the United States." ...
    .
  • Chris Conley
    Chris Conley

    Christopher Lane Conley is an United States musician and songwriter/composer, and the lead-singer/rhythm guitarist in Saves the Day. As he is the only remaining original member as well as major artistic contributor, Saves the Day has been referred to, in recent years, as "essentially the Chris Conley show"....
    , lead singer of Saves the Day
    Saves the Day

    Saves the Day is an american band that was formed in 1997 in Princeton, New Jersey. They have released 6 studio albums, 4 EP's and a compilation album....
    , born and grew up in Princeton.
  • Mary Chapin Carpenter
    Mary Chapin Carpenter

    Mary Chapin Carpenter is an American folk and country music artist. Carpenter spent several years singing in Washington, D.C. clubs before signing in the late 1980s with Columbia Records, who marketed her as a country singer....
    , country/folk singer, born and grew up in Princeton.
  • Whitney Darrow, Jr, New Yorker
    New Yorker

    New Yorker may refer to:* A resident of New York state * A resident of New York City * The New Yorker, a magazine* New Yorker , a German clothing company...
     cartoonist, born in Princeton.
  • Freeman Dyson
    Freeman Dyson

    Freeman John Dyson Fellow of the Royal Society is a British-born American theoretical physicist and mathematician, famous for his work in quantum field theory, solid-state physics, and nuclear engineering....
    , theoretical physicist and fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study.
  • Jonathan Edwards, Congregationalist Church
    Congregational church

    Congregational churches are Protestantism Christianity churches practicing congregationalist church governance, in which each Wiktionary:congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs....
     theologian and Princeton University's third president.
  • Albert Einstein
    Albert Einstein

    Albert Einstein was a Germany-born theoretical physics. He is best known for his theory of relativity and specifically mass?energy equivalence, expressed by the equation E = mc2....
    , physicist, fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study.
  • Charles Evered
    Charles Evered

    Charles Evered is an United States playwright, screenwriter and film director. Born in Passaic, New Jersey, Evered grew up in Rutherford, New Jersey, the fifth child of Marie nee' "Cole" and Charles Evered....
    , playwright/screenwriter and director, resident of Princeton.
  • Henry B. Eyring
    Henry B. Eyring

    Henry Bennion Eyring is an American educational administrator and religious leader who is First Counselor in the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ....
    , First Counselor in the First Presidency
    First Presidency (LDS Church)

    The First Presidency is the presiding or governing authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints . It is composed of the President of the Church and his counselors....
     of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and president of Ricks College, born in Princeton.
  • Richard Ford
    Richard Ford

    Richard Ford is a Pulitzer Prize-winning United States novelist and short story writer. His best-known works are the novel The Sportswriter and its sequels, Independence Day and The Lay of the Land, and the short story collection Rock Springs , which contains several widely anthologized stories....
    , writer, taught at Princeton University and has written several books set in a fictionalized Princeton.
  • George Gallup
    George Gallup

    George Horace Gallup was an American pioneer of survey sampling techniques and inventor of the Gallup poll, a successful statistics of survey sampling for measuring opinion polls....
    , Statistician and creator of the Gallup poll
    Gallup poll

    The Gallup Poll is the division of The Gallup Organization that regularly conducts public opinion polls in the United States and more than 140 countries around the world....
    , lived and is buried in Princeton.
  • Kurt Gödel
    Kurt Gödel

    Kurt G?del was an Austrian-United States logician, mathematician and philosopher. One of the most significant logicians of all time, G?del made an immense impact upon scientific and philosophical thinking in the 20th century, a time when many, such as Bertrand Russell, A....
    , Austrian-American logician, mathematician and philosopher, fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study.
  • Michael Graves
    Michael Graves

    Michael Graves is an American architect. Identified as one of The New York Five, Graves has become a household name with his designs for domestic products sold at Target Corporation stores in the United States....
    , architect, lives and works in Princeton.
  • Ethan Hawke
    Ethan Hawke

    Ethan Green Hawke is an American actor, writer and film director. He landed his first feature role in the movie Explorers in 1985 opposite River Phoenix....
     (attended West Windsor-Plainsboro High School, graduated from The Hun School
    Hun School of Princeton

    The Hun School of Princeton is a private, coeducational, Secondary education in the United States boarding school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, in the United States....
    .
  • Joseph Hewes
    Joseph Hewes

    Joseph Hewes , was a native of Princeton, New Jersey, where he was born in 1730. Hewes?s parents were part of the Quaker Society of Friends....
    , signer of the Declaration of Independence
    Declaration of independence

    This article is about declarations of independence in general. Specific declarations of independence are listed below in alphabetical order. For the painting of this name, see Trumbull's Declaration of Independence....
    , born in Princeton.
  • Charles Hodge
    Charles Hodge

    Charles Hodge was the principal of Princeton Theological Seminary between 1851 and 1878. He is considered to be one of the greatest exponents and defenders of historical Calvinism in United States during the 19th century....
    , theologian and Principal of Princeton Theological Seminary
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    Princeton Theological Seminary is a theological seminary of the Presbyterian Church located in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey in the United States....
    .
  • Robert Wood Johnson II
    Robert Wood Johnson II

    Robert Wood Johnson II was a United States of America businessman. He was the president of Johnson & Johnson between 1932 and 1938, and chairman of the board from 1938 until 1963....
    , Chairman of Johnson & Johnson
    Johnson & Johnson

    Johnson & Johnson is a global United States pharmaceutical, medical devices and consumer packaged goods manufacturer founded in 1886. Its common stock is a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the company is listed among the Fortune 500....
    , and his wife Basia Johnson, lived in Princeton.
  • Indiana Jones
    Indiana Jones

    Dr. Henry Walton "Indiana" Jones, Jr. is a fictional character adventurer, soldier, professor of archaeology, and the main protagonist of the Indiana Jones franchise....
    , movie and television character, born in Princeton but attended University of Chicago
    University of Chicago

    The University of Chicago is a private university located principally in the Hyde Park, Chicago neighborhood of Chicago. Although an older university by the same name existed prior to its founding, the modern University of Chicago credits its founding to the oil magnate John D....
    .
  • George F. Kennan
    George F. Kennan

    George Frost Kennan was an American advisor, diplomat, political scientist, and historian, best known as "the father of containment" and as a key figure in the emergence of the Cold War....
    , diplomat, historian, fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study.
  • Chang-Rae Lee
    Chang-Rae Lee

    Chang-Rae Lee is a first-generation Korean American novelist.Lee was born in Korea in 1965. He emigrated to the United States with his family when he was 3 years old....
    , writer, Princeton University professor.
  • John Lithgow
    John Lithgow

    John Arthur Lithgow is an American actor perhaps best-known for his starring role as Dr. Dick Solomon in the NBC sitcom 3rd Rock from the Sun....
    , actor, lived in Princeton in his late teens.
  • Henry Martin, New Yorker
    New Yorker

    New Yorker may refer to:* A resident of New York state * A resident of New York City * The New Yorker, a magazine* New Yorker , a German clothing company...
     cartoonist, lived and worked in Princeton.
  • John McPhee
    John McPhee

    John Angus McPhee is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer widely considered one of the pioneers of narrative nonfiction. Unlike Tom Wolfe and Hunter Thompson, who helped kick-start the "new journalism" which, in the 1960s, revolutionized nonfiction, McPhee produced a gentler style of literary journalism by incorporating techniques from novels a...
    , writer, lives in Princeton.
  • Lyle and Erik Menendez
    Lyle and Erik Menendez

    Joseph Lyle Menendez and brother Erik Galen Menendez were convicted in a highly publicized trial for the shotgun murders in 1989 of their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez, residents of Beverly Hills, California....
    , murderers, grew up in Princeton.
  • Toni Morrison
    Toni Morrison

    Toni Morrison , is a Nobel Prize in Literature-winning American author, editor, and professor. Her novels are known for their epic poetry themes, vivid dialogue, and richly detailed black characters; among the best known are her novels The Bluest Eye, Song of Solomon , and Beloved , which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1988...
    , writer, Princeton University professor.
  • John Forbes Nash, Jr., mathematician, subject of A Beautiful Mind
    A Beautiful Mind

    A Beautiful Mind may refer to:* A Beautiful Mind , about the life of John Forbes Nash* A Beautiful Mind , the film adaptation of the same title...
    , Princeton University professor.
  • Bebe Neuwirth
    Bebe Neuwirth

    Beatrice "Bebe" Neuwirth is an American actress, singer and dancer....
    , actress, grew up in Princeton.
  • Joyce Carol Oates
    Joyce Carol Oates

    Joyce Carol Oates is an United States author. Raised in rural, working-class New York, Oates published her first book in 1963 and has since published over fifty novels, as well as many volumes of short stories, poetry, and non-fiction....
    , writer, Princeton University professor.
  • John O'Hara
    John O'Hara

    John Henry O'Hara was an United States writer born in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania. He initially made a name for himself with his short stories and later became a best-selling novelist whose works include Appointment in Samarra and BUtterfield 8....
    , writer, lived and is buried in Princeton.
  • Charles Smith Olden
    Charles Smith Olden

    Charles Smith Olden was an United States Republican Party politician, who served as the List of Governors of New Jersey Governor of New Jersey of New Jersey from 1860 to 1863 during the first part of the American Civil War....
    , governor of New Jersey during the American Civil War
    American Civil War

    The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
    , born and buried in Princeton.
  • J. Robert Oppenheimer theoretical physicist, director of the Institute for Advanced Study
  • Christopher Reeve
    Christopher Reeve

    Christopher D'Olier Reeve was an American actor, film director, film producer, and screenwriter. He established himself early as a The Juilliard School-trained stage actor before portraying Superman in four films, from 1978 to 1987....
    , actor, grew up in Princeton
  • Paul Robeson
    Paul Robeson

    Paul LeRoy Bustill Robeson was an American actor of film and stage, All-American and professional sportsperson, writer, multi-lingual orator, lawyer, and basso profondo concert singer who was also noted for his wide-ranging social justice activism....
    , singer, actor, athlete, civil rights activist, born and grew up in Princeton
  • Ralph Schoenstein
    Ralph Schoenstein

    'Ralph Schoenstein' was an United States writer and humorist. He was a frequent commentator to NPR's All Things Considered.Schoenstein grew up in Manhattan, and graduated from Columbia University....
    , writer, lived in Princeton up to his death.
  • Roger Sessions
    Roger Sessions

    Roger Huntington Sessions was an USA composer, critic and teacher of music.Born in Brooklyn, New York to a family that could trace its roots back to the American revolution, Sessions studied music at Harvard University from the age of 14....
    , composer, Princeton University professor, died in Princeton
  • Andrew Shue
    Andrew Shue

    Andrew Shue is an American actor, known for his role as Billy on the television series Melrose Place . He is currently on the Board of Directors for Do Something and is the co-founder of the social network service website CafeMom....
    , actor and professional soccer player, grew up in central New Jersey with sister, actress Elisabeth Shue
    Elisabeth Shue

    Elisabeth Judson Shue is an Academy Award-nominated United States film actor....
    , lives in Princeton.
  • Michael Showalter
    Michael Showalter

    Michael Showalter is an United States comedian, actor, writer, and Film director. He is one third of the sketch comedy trio Stella . Showalter first came to recognition as a cast member on MTV's The State which aired from 1993 to 1995....
    , comedian, actor, writer, and director, born in Princeton, attended Princeton High School.
  • Barbara Boggs Sigmund
    Barbara Boggs Sigmund

    Barbara Boggs Sigmund was a daughter of the powerful Democratic Party United States Representative Hale Boggs of Louisiana, and Lindy Boggs, who became a Congresswoman from Louisiana after her husband's untimely death in an air crash....
    , mayor of Princeton.
  • Peter Singer
    Peter Singer

    Peter Albert David Singer is an Australian Philosophy. He is the Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University, and laureate professor at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics , University of Melbourne....
    , bioethicist, Princeton University professor.
  • Betsey Stockton
    Betsey Stockton

    Betsey Stockton was an educator and missionary. She was born in slavery in the USA about the year 1798 and died October 24 1865.While a child, her owner Robert Stockton gave her to his daughter upon her marriage to Reverend Ashbel Green, president of the College of New Jersey ....
    , educator and missionary, manumitted from slavery and later retired to and died in Princeton.
  • John P. Stockton
    John P. Stockton

    John Potter Stockton was a New Jersey politician who served in the United States Senate as a Democratic Party .Born in Princeton, New Jersey, Stockton was the son of Robert F....
    , U.S. Senator from New Jersey, lived in Princeton.
  • Richard Stockton (1730-1781)
    Richard Stockton (1730-1781)

    Richard Stockton was an American lawyer, jurist, legislator, and a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence....
    , signer of the United States Declaration of Independence
    United States Declaration of Independence

    The United States Declaration of Independence is a statement adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, which announced that the Thirteen Colonies then at war with Kingdom of Great Britain were now independent states, and thus no longer a part of the British Empire....
    , lived in Princeton, buried in Princeton.
  • Richard Stockton (1764–1828), U.S. Senator from New Jersey, lived in Princeton.
  • Robert Stockton, United States Navy
    United States Navy

    The United States Navy is the navy of the United States Armed Forces. It is one of the seven uniformed services of the United States. The U.S. Navy currently has approximately 331,682 personnel on active duty as of 31 December 2008 and 124,000 in the United States Navy Reserve....
     commodore, first territorial governor of California
    California

    California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
    , lived in Princeton.
  • Jon Tenney
    Jon Tenney

    Jonathan F. W. Tenney is an United States actor....
    , actor, born and grew up in Princeton.
  • Andrew Wiles
    Andrew Wiles

    Sir Andrew John Wiles Order of the British Empire Fellow of the Royal Society is a United Kingdom mathematician and a professor at Princeton University, specialising in number theory....
    , mathematician who proved Fermat's Last Theorem
    Fermat's Last Theorem

    Fermat's Last Theorem is the name of the statement in number theory that states that:or, more precisely:In 1637 Pierre de Fermat wrote, in his copy of Claude Gaspard Bachet de M?ziriac's translation of the famous Arithmetica of Diophantus, "I have a truly marvellous proof of this proposition which this margin is too narrow to con...
    , Princeton University professor.
  • Woodrow Wilson
    Woodrow Wilson

    Thomas Woodrow Wilson was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States. A devout Presbyterianism and leading intellectual of the Progressive Era, he served as President of Princeton University of Princeton University from 1902 to 1910, and then as the Governor of New Jersey from 1911 to 1913....
    , 28th President of the United States
    President of the United States

    The President of the United States is the head of state and head of government of the United States and is the highest political official in the United States by influence and recognition....
    , 13th president of Princeton University and Governor
    Governor

    A governor is a governing official, usually the Executive of a non-sovereign level of government, ranking under the head of state. In federations, a governor may be the title of each appointed or elected politician who governs a constitutive state....
     of New Jersey
    New Jersey

    New Jersey is a state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States. It is bordered on the north by New York, on the east by the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean, on the southwest by Delaware, and on the west by Pennsylvania....
  • John Witherspoon
    John Witherspoon

    John Witherspoon was a signatory of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of New Jersey. He was both the only active clergyman and college president to sign the Declaration....
    , signer of the United States Declaration of Independence
    United States Declaration of Independence

    The United States Declaration of Independence is a statement adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, which announced that the Thirteen Colonies then at war with Kingdom of Great Britain were now independent states, and thus no longer a part of the British Empire....
    , president of Princeton University.
  • Boris Zubry
    Boris Zubry

    Boris Zubry Boris Zubry is best known for his books Chess Master, Miles of Experience, Arrogance of Truth, "Puska" and the numerous short stories published by various publications....
    , author, poet, inventor, educator, lives in Princeton.


  • All of the members of Blues Traveler
    Blues Traveler

    Blues Traveler is an American rock music band, formed in Princeton, New Jersey in 1987. The band has been influenced by a variety of genres, including blues-rock, psychedelic rock, folk rock, soul music, and Southern rock....
    , as well as Chris Barron (see above) are from Princeton and were high school friends.
  • All sitting New Jersey governors since 1945 have had their official residence in Princeton, first at Morven
    Morven (residence)

    Morven, officially known as Morven Museum & Garden, is a historic house at 55 Stockton Street in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
     and since 1982 at Drumthwacket
    Drumthwacket

    Drumthwacket is the official residence of the Governor of New Jersey and was built in 1835 by then-future Governor Charles S. Olden. It is located at 344 Stockton Road in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
    , but not all have actually lived in these houses.


Princeton in popular culture


Film

Princeton was the setting of the Academy Award
Academy Awards

The Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, are presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize excellence of professionals in the film industry, including directors, actors, and writers....
-winning A Beautiful Mind
A Beautiful Mind (film)

A Beautiful Mind is a 2001 in film United States film based on the life of John Forbes Nash, a Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel....
 about the schizophrenic mathematician John Nash. It was largely filmed in central New Jersey, including some Princeton locations.

The 1994 film I.Q.
I.Q. (film)

I.Q. is a 1994 in film romantic comedy film directed by Fred Schepisi, starring Tim Robbins, Meg Ryan, and Walter Matthau. The original music score was composed by Jerry Goldsmith....
, featuring Meg Ryan
Meg Ryan

Margaret Mary Emily Anne Hyra , professionally known as Meg Ryan, is a Golden Globe Awards American film actor whose lead roles in five 1990s Romantic comedy film - When Harry Met Sally..., Sleepless in Seattle, French Kiss , City of Angels and You've Got Mail - grossed over $870 million worldwide....
, Tim Robbins
Tim Robbins

Timothy Francis Robbins is an Academy Award winning United States actor, screenwriter, film director, film producer, Activism and musician. He is the longtime domestic partner of actress Susan Sarandon....
, and Walter Matthau
Walter Matthau

Walter John Matthau was an United States award-winning actor best known for his role as Oscar Madison in The Odd Couple and his frequent collaborations with fellow Odd Couple star Jack Lemmon....
 as Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein was a Germany-born theoretical physics. He is best known for his theory of relativity and specifically mass?energy equivalence, expressed by the equation E = mc2....
, 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
Princeton Battlefield

The Princeton Battlefield is where Colonial and British troops fought on January 3, 1777 in the Battle of Princeton during the American Revolution....
.

Historical films which used Princeton as a setting but were not filmed there include Wilson
Wilson (film)

Wilson is a 1944 biographical film in Technicolor about President Woodrow Wilson. It stars Charles Coburn, Alexander Knox, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Thomas Mitchell , Ruth Nelson , Eddie Foy Jr., Cedric Hardwicke, Matthew Moore and Vincent Price....
, a 1944 biographical film about Woodrow Wilson.

Scenes from the beginning of "Across the Universe
Across the Universe

"Across the Universe" is a song by The Beatles that first appeared on a charity release in December 1969, and later, in modified form, on their final album, Let It Be ....
" (2007) were filmed on the Princeton University campus.

Parts of Transformers 2 were filmed in Princeton.

TV and radio

The 1938 Orson Welles
Orson Welles

George Orson Welles , better known as Orson Welles, was an Academy Award-winning United States actor, director, writer and producer, who worked extensively in film, theatre, television, and radio....
 radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds
The War of the Worlds (radio)

The War of the Worlds was an episode of the American radio drama anthology series Mercury Theatre. It was performed as a Halloween episode of the series on October 30, 1938 and aired over the CBS Radio Network radio network....
, 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 TV show House
House (TV series)

House, also known as House, M.D., is an American medical drama that debuted on the Fox Broadcasting Company network on November 16, 2004....
 is located in Princeton, at the fictional Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, and establishing shots for the hospital display the Frist Campus Center
Frist Campus Center

Frist Campus Center is a focal point of social life at Princeton University. It is a combination of the former Palmer Physics Lab, and a modern addition completed in 2001....
 of Princeton University
Princeton University

Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
.

The 1980 television miniseries Oppenheimer
Oppenheimer (TV miniseries)

Oppenheimer is a television miniseries about J. Robert Oppenheimer, produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation. It began broadcast in the United Kingdom on 29 October 1980 and in the United States on 11 May 1982....
 is partly set in Princeton.

Literature

F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald

Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was an United States writer of novels and short stories, whose works are evocative of the Jazz Age, a term he coined himself....
's literary debut, This Side of Paradise
This Side of Paradise

This Side of Paradise is the debut novel of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Published in 1920 in literature, and taking its title from a line of the Rupert Brooke poem Tiare Tahiti, the book examines the lives and morality of post-World War I youth....
, 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 town a hub of contemporary literature.

Many of Richard Ford
Richard Ford

Richard Ford is a Pulitzer Prize-winning United States novelist and short story writer. His best-known works are the novel The Sportswriter and its sequels, Independence Day and The Lay of the Land, and the short story collection Rock Springs , which contains several widely anthologized stories....
's novels are set in Haddam, New Jersey, a fictionalized Princeton.

Joyce Carol Oates
Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates is an United States author. Raised in rural, working-class New York, Oates published her first book in 1963 and has since published over fifty novels, as well as many volumes of short stories, poetry, and non-fiction....
 2004 novel Take Me, Take Me With You (written pseudonymously as Lauren Kelly) is set in Princeton.

Points of interest

  • American Boychoir School
    American Boychoir School

    The American Boychoir School is a music boarding school located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey. It is one of two boychoir boarding schools in the United States....
  • The D&R Canal State Park
    Delaware and Raritan Canal

    The Delaware and Raritan Canal is a canal in central New Jersey, United States, built in the 1830s that served to connect the Delaware River to the Raritan River....
  • Drumthwacket
    Drumthwacket

    Drumthwacket is the official residence of the Governor of New Jersey and was built in 1835 by then-future Governor Charles S. Olden. It is located at 344 Stockton Road in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
  • Forrestal Village
    Forrestal Village

    Forrestal Village is a 720,000 square foot, 52 acre mixed-use retail and office complex in Princeton, New Jersey along U.S. Route 1. It is just north of Princeton University's Forrestal campus, whose name it is derived from....
  • Herrontown Woods Arboretum
    Herrontown Woods Arboretum

    Herrontown Woods Arboretum is an arboretum located on Snowden Lane near the junction with Herrontown Road, in Princeton, New Jersey. It is open to the public every day at no cost....
  • Hun School of Princeton
    Hun School of Princeton

    The Hun School of Princeton is a private, coeducational, Secondary education in the United States boarding school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, in the United States....
  • Institute for Advanced Study
    Institute for Advanced Study

    The Institute for Advanced Study, located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States, is a center for theoretical research. The Institute is perhaps best known as the academic home of Albert Einstein, John von Neumann, and Kurt G?del, after their immigration to the United States....
     and Institute Woods
  • Lake Carnegie
    Lake Carnegie (New Jersey)

    Lake Carnegie is a man-made lake that is formed from a dam on the Millstone River, in the far northeastern corner of Princeton Township, New Jersey....
  • McCarter Theatre
    McCarter Theatre

    McCarter Theatre is a not-for-profit, professional company on the campus of Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey. It is one of the most active cultural centers in the nation, offering over 200 performances of theater, dance, music and special events each year....
  • Morven
  • Nassau Hall
    Nassau Hall

    Nassau Hall is the oldest building at Princeton University in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey . At the time it was built, it was the largest building in early New Jersey....
  • Palmer Square
    Palmer Square

    Palmer Square is a collection of shops, restaurants, offices and residential spaces in Princeton, New Jersey. Originally built in 1936-1939 by Edgar Palmer, heir to the New Jersey Zinc fortune, the Square was created by architect Thomas Stapleton in the Colonial Revival style as the town's complement to Princeton University, which sits acro...
  • Princeton Battlefield State Park
    Princeton Battlefield State Park

    Princeton Battlefield State Park is a state park located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey. The park preserves the site of the Battle of Princeton , which was a victory for General Washington's revolutionary forces over British forces....
  • Princeton Cemetery
    Princeton Cemetery

    Princeton Cemetery is located in Borough of Princeton, New Jersey. It is owned by the Nassau Presbyterian Church. John F. Hageman in his 1878 history of Princeton, New Jersey refers to the cemetery as: "The Westminster Abbey of the United States." ...
  • Princeton Day School
    Princeton Day School

    Princeton Day School is a private coeducational day school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey. The Princeton Day School currently enrolls 904 students in grades junior kindergarten - 12....
  • Princeton High School
    Princeton High School (New Jersey)

    Princeton High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. PHS is a part of the Princeton Regional Schools district, which serves all public school students in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey and Princeton Township, New Jersey....
  • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory is a United States Department of Energy United States Department of Energy National Labs for plasma physics and nuclear fusion science located just east of Princeton University's main campus in Princeton, New Jersey....
  • Princeton Record Exchange
    Princeton Record Exchange

    Princeton Record Exchange, located at 20 South Tulane St. in Princeton, New Jersey, is an independent music store. PREX was founded in 1980 by Barry Weisfeld....
  • Princeton Theological Seminary
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    Princeton Theological Seminary is a theological seminary of the Presbyterian Church located in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey in the United States....
  • Princeton University
    Princeton University

    Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
  • Princeton University Art Museum
    Princeton University Art Museum

    The Princeton University Art Museum is the Princeton University's gallery on art located in Princeton, New Jersey. Founded in 1882, it now houses nearly 68,000 works of art that range from antiquity to the contemporary period....
  • Stony Brook Meeting House and Cemetery
    Stony Brook Meeting House and Cemetery

    Stony Brook Meeting House and Cemetery are historic Quaker sites located at the Stony Brook Settlement at the intersection of Princeton Pike/Mercer Road and Quaker Road in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States....
  • Stuart Country Day School
    Stuart Country Day School

    Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart is an independent all-girls Catholic school country day school located in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey....
  • The Washington Oak
    Washington Oak

    The Washington Oak is a protected ancient white oak tree in Princeton Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, USA that overlooks the Princeton Battlefield State Park....
  • Westminster Choir College
    Westminster Choir College

    Westminster Choir College is a residential college of music located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.Westminster Choir College educates men and women at the undergraduate and graduate levels for musical careers in music education, voice performance, piano performance, organ performance, pedagogy, music theory and composition, conduct...


Sources

  • Clark, Ronald W. (1971) Einstein: The Life and Times. ISBN 0-380-44123-3
  • Gambee, Robert. (1987) "Princeton" ISBN 0-393-30433-7


See also

  • Town Topics


External links


  • *, National Center for Education Statistics
    National Center for Education Statistics

    The National Center for Education Statistics , as part of the United States Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences , collects, analyzes, and publishes statistics on education and public school district finance information in the United States; conducts studies on international comparisons of education statistics; and provid...