Marquand Park
Marquand Park | |
---|---|
Location | Lovers Lane, Princeton, NJ |
Created | 1846 |
Founder | Allan Marquand |
Designer | John Notman |
Operated by | The Marquand Foundation |
Species | Dawn redwood, Japanese Maple |
Public transit access | Princeton Branch (The Dinky) |
Website | marquandpark.org |
Marquand Park | |
U.S. Historic district Contributing property | |
40°20′29.4″N 74°40′16.1″W / 40.341500°N 74.671139°W / 40.341500; -74.671139 | |
Part of | Princeton Historic District (ID75001143[1]) |
Added to NRHP | 27 June 1975 |
Marquand Park is a 17-acre (69,000 m2) arboretum and recreational area located in Princeton, New Jersey. It contains walking paths, a baseball field, and attractions for children such as a sandbox and a play structure.
History
Marquand Park was originally the property of the Princeton University professor Judge Richard Field, who bought 30 acres (120,000 m2) of farmland in 1842 for his personal estate. Field began developing part of the estate as an arboretum, and after he died, its development continued under Susan Brown, who acquired the land in 1871, and under Princeton University Professor Allan Marquand, who acquired the property in 1885.
In 1953, 17 acres (69,000 m2) of the land were given to Princeton borough by the Marquand family, and in 1955 a non-profit foundation was created to care for the park. Under the care of the Marquand Park Foundation, over 100 new species and trees of shrubs have been donated to the park or purchased by the foundation for it.
Notable trees
Eight of the largest trees of their species recorded in New Jersey can be found in the park. Other well-known trees there include a dawn redwood, a critically endangered species which was thought to be extinct until a specimen was discovered in Japan in 1945, and a threadleaf Japanese Maple, which is well known for the corkscrew-like shape of its trunk and branches. (Photographs of the Japanese Maple can be found here.)
References
- ^ "Princeton Historic District". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- Zatz, Arline. New Jersey's Great Gardens. Woodstock, Vermont: The Countryman Press, 1999.
- Compton, Dorothy and Ramsay L. Raymond. A Guide to Marquand Park. Princeton, New Jersey: Minute Press, 1972.
- Richie, Peter. Marquand Park. Princeton, New Jersey: Minute Press, 1989.
- Princeton Township - Marquand Park
- Marquand Park in Princeton, NJ - Kids Play Parks
External links
- Official website
- v
- t
- e
- Princeton Historic District
- Stony Brook Village
- Jugtown
- King's Highway
- Kingston Mill
- Mountain Avenue
- Princeton Public Schools
- Princeton High School
- Witherspoon Street School for Colored Children (defunct)
- Princeton Charter School
- Delaware and Raritan Canal
- Herrontown Woods Arboretum
- Jasna Polana
- Lake Carnegie
- Marquand Park
- Mountain Lakes Preserve
- Princeton Battlefield
- Nassau Street
- Palmer Square
- Elements
- Hoagie Haven
- Nassau Club
- Nassau Inn
- Peacock Inn
- Princeton Record Exchange
- Triumph Brewing
- Princeton Shopping Center
- Tiger Transit
- Albert Einstein House
- Drumthwacket
- Joseph Henry House
- Donald Grant Herring Estate
- Maclean House
- Maybury Hill
- Mercer Oak
- Morven
- Nassau Hall
- Princeton Battle Monument
- Princeton Cemetery
- Princeton Railroad Station
- Prospect House
- Tusculum
- Cottage Club
- Washington Oak
- Westland Mansion
outside the municipality
- American Boychoir School (defunct)
- Chapin School
- Educational Testing Service
- Forrestal Village
- MarketFair Mall
- Princeton Airport
- Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center (formerly located on Witherspoon Street, now in neighboring Plainsboro)
- Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
- Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
- St. Joseph's Seminary (in Plainsboro; defunct)
- Sarnoff Corporation
- Terhune Orchards
- Washington Road Elm Allée
- Wilberforce School
This Mercer County, New Jersey state location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e