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TFPL · Corporate body · 1900 -

The Trenton Free Public Library is the oldest library in New Jersey, founded in 1750 as the Trenton Library Company by Dr. Thomas Cadwalader. Originally a subscription library, it became incorporated as a free public library as it is known today in 1900 with Ferdinand W. Roebling serving as its first Board President.

Dr. Thomas Cadwalader, the first chief Burgess (Mayor), gave 500 pounds (roughly $94,000 today) for the establishment of the Trenton Library Company. His friend Benjamin Franklin is said to have purchased the library’s first 50 books from his London suppliers. The books were probably housed in rented rooms which were opened at certain hours once or twice a week, or at the homes of its subscribers. The earliest known possible location of the library was at the house of William Yard in March 1759. Stacy Potts, later another mayor of Trenton, was listed as the librarian in 1765.

Wherever it was located at the time, it was entirely destroyed by British troops in December 1776 during their occupation of the city. It is believed to have been located on Upper King Street – now Warren Street – at the tavern of Rensselaer Williams. To date, four of these original books (from the 65-book set "An Universal History from the Earliest Account of Time") survive and are located in the Trentoniana Department, a special collection of the library established in 1906.

The Trenton Library Company continued to be active into the 1830’s before entering into a period of decline. On May 20, 1855, after more than a century of service, the Trenton Library Company transferred its books to the Trenton Library Association, which had been organized in 1852. First opened in the corner store of Temperance Hall (later Goldberg’s), the Library Association moved the next year to the second story of Charles Scott’s building on Greene Street (now Broad Street), just below State Street. On December 26, 1854 a fire was set in the clothing store on the first floor during a burglary, which resulted in a considerable loss for the Library Association. It was dissolved in the 1860’s and its collection transferred to the care of the Trenton chapter of the Young Men’s Christian Association which had a public reading room. In 1871 the rooms were located at 20-22 East State Street over Titus and Scudder’s dry goods store. In 1879 the YMCA library collection was transferred to the Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).

Four years later, the WCTU created the Union Library Company. Still based on the subscription model, the Union Library Company charged rates that were affordable for many of Trenton's working class families. By 1885, the library had raised enough money to build a brownstone to hold the collection on East State Street, adjacent to the old post office. The library was on the first floor.

Facing financial issues at the turn of the 20th century, the Union Library Company faced imminent closure. Mayor (later U.S. Senator) Frank O. Briggs placed on the April 10, 1900, ballot the issue of the creation of a public, free, tax-supported but autonomous library for all citizens of Trenton. The referendum passed 4,482 to 1,052 votes, and the Free Public Library of the City of Trenton was born. A board of trustees was incorporated on May 15, and elected the steel industry baron Ferdinand W. Roebling as first president during its organization on May 18. John A. Campbell (treasurer), John J. Cleary (secretary), William M. Lanning, and Joseph L. Naar rounded out the rest of the board, with Mayor Briggs and school superintendent Leslie C. Pierson serving ex-officio. Using an appropriation from the city budget, the board purchased the Union Library Company’s collection, leased its building, and hired Alice M. Rice as librarian, Louise K. Hope as assistant librarian, and Sarah C. Nelson as cataloguer. A permanent chief librarian, Adam J. Strohm from Chicago, was hired on September 1, 1901.

The board appropriated $20,000 for the purchase of a lot on Academy Street, which since 1782 had been the site of the private Trenton Academy. Subsequent appropriations of $80,000 for the building of a permanent library and $15,000 for furnishing and equipping it were made. The architect was Spencer Roberts of Philadelphia (who would also design the new City Hall in 1907). The new library building was dedicated June 9, 1902, and was opened to the public for the distribution of books on the 11th. By the end of its first year, the library had 9,477 library card holders and a collection of 25,562 books. Very soon it was evident that the new library building was too small.

Contrary to popular belief, the new library was not a Carnegie Library. Between 1883 and 1929, businessman Andrew Carnegie donated funds to construct over 2,500 libraries, but certain cities like Trenton and Newark felt that accepting this money would show that they were unable to provide for themselves. John Cotton Dana frequently encouraged against library officials asking Carnegie for money. Trenton city officials agreed with Dana, but would later ask Carnegie for funds to construct an addition to the library (Carnegie refused that request).

In 1913, John Lambert Cadwalader, great-grandson of Dr. Thomas Cadwalader, offered to build a considerable addition to the library and to make certain altera­tions to the original building. Interestingly, the architect chosen was Edward L. Tilton of New York, well known for designing Carnegie libraries. The completed improvements cost about $45,000, and the addition was formally dedi­cated on April 6, 1915. The next addition to the library would not occur until 1976 when Trenton architects Horowitz & Wirth were tasked with building the large Centennial Wing on the land adjacent to the original building, where the Joseph Wood School once stood. The Wood School had served as the library’s children’s department, and before that was the site of the city’s common jail and workhouse, built in 1808.

Over the following decades, with second director Howard L. Hughes (1886 - 1966) in charge, the Trenton Free Public Library expanded into additional branches. The first branch was established in 1910 on Hamilton Avenue and named after Mayor Frank O. Briggs; it moved to 1115 Greenwood Avenue in 1972.

The North Branch was opened in 1914, through the coopera­tion of the Board of Education, in a room of the Columbus School on the corner of Brunswick Avenue and Mulberry Street. It eventually moved to its own location at 1201 Princeton Avenue, and opened to the public there in June 1962.

The Skelton Branch was established in 1917 at the Franklin School building on the corner of Liberty and William Streets. In 1926, it was temporarily moved to rented quarters in the basement of St. Mary’s Greek Catholic School on the corner of Grand and Malone Streets. It moved to the corner of Malone and South Broad (#943) in 1929 into a beautiful new building with high arched windows, an elegant staircase, and locally crafted tile work surrounding the children’s room fireplace. It was the first branch to be built specifically as a library.

The East Trenton Branch, one of New Jersey’s designated Historical Places, occupied the 18th century Samuel Dickinson mansion on the corner of North Clinton and Girard Avenues. It was turned into a library in 1926, and restored by the Civil Works Administration (CWA) in 1934.

The Cadwalader Branch was opened in 1927, and relocated to the old Strand Theater on North Hermitage Avenue in 1968. Like all of the branches, Cadwalader served as a vibrant community center for its neighborhood.

As with many U.S. cities following the Second World War, Trenton experienced difficult economic times as a result of deindustrialization, white flight, segregation de facto, if not de jure. City budget cuts forced the closure of all of the branch facilities in 2010, leaving only the Main Library. Despite the setback, the Trenton Free Public Library continues to provide excellent library services to the citizens of Trenton and is continuing to improve and innovate every day.

Since its opening in 1902, the library has been collecting and preserving the city’s history. Today, the Trentoniana Department, established in 1906, has earned a reputation among researchers and genealogists as the premier collection devoted exclusively to the City of Trenton’s rich past. Among its holdings are records from the New Jersey State Normal and Model School at Trenton, as well as business records, personal papers, letters, photographs, newspapers, scrapbooks, maps, ephemera, textiles, oral histories, artwork, and more.

[historical summary abridged from "About the Library," by Laura Poll, on the Library's website]

Trenton State College
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79058776 · Corporate body · 1958 - 1996
Heussler, Robert
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n80024546 · Person · 1924-1984

President of Trenton State College from 1968 to 1970.

http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n84148640 · Person · 1837-1917

Mary Jane Sergeant was born August 24, 1837, to Gershom Craven Sergeant and Charity Ann Howell Sergeant in Raritan Township, near Flemington, Hunterdon County, New Jersey. She was in the first class of the New Jersey State Normal School, beginning October 1855, when classes were held in Trenton City Hall before the new school building opened in the next term in 1856. Her first teaching experience was in Lambertville School in 1857-1858, before graduating from the Normal School in February 1859. Afterward, she taught in Copper Hill School in Raritan Township. On March 26, 1863, she married Dr. Cornelius Wilson Larison, also an educator, as well as a physician and proponent of phonetic spelling. He founded the Seminary at Ringoes and the Academy of Science and Arts at Ringoes where Mary taught mathematics and other subjects from the 1870s to early 1900s. They had two children: Mary “Polly” L. (Blackwell), and Benjamin. Mary Jane died on April 17, 1917. Her daughter, Mary Blackwell, donated her diary to then Trenton State College during the Centennial celebrations of 1955, where it was transcribed and portions were published in The Signal newspaper.

http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n85079400 · Person · 1948-

President of The College of New Jersey from 1999 to 2018.

http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n85314683 · Corporate body · 1855-1929

Founded in 1855 as the New Jersey State Normal School, The College of New Jersey is the oldest teacher training college in the state and the ninth oldest in the nation. Originally located in downtown Trenton, the college expanded academically and physically, and later moved to suburban Ewing Township in the 1930s.

Over the years, the name of the college has changed to reflect its expanding mission.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    New New Jersey State Normal School,  1855-1908

New Jersey Normal School in Trenton, 1908-1929

New Jersey State Teachers College and State Normal School at Trenton, 1929-1937

New Jersey State Teachers College at Trenton, 1937-1958

Trenton State College, 1958-1996

The College of New Jersey, 1996-present

http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n86103686 · Person · 1810-1877

Principal of New Jersey State Normal School from 1864 to 1871.

http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n86125325 · Corporate body · 1855-present

The College of New Jersey’s academic tradition reaches back to 1855 when it was established by the state legislature as the New Jersey State Normal School. It was the first state-established teacher training school in the state and the ninth in the nation. Governor Rodman Price promoted the idea of a training institute for New Jersey’s teachers and mobilized support among influential state leaders. Located on Clinton Avenue in Trenton from 1855 until the early 1930s, the Normal School flourished in the latter 1800s, expanding both its academic offerings and physical facilities. In 1925, the first four-year baccalaureate degree program was established. This change marked the beginning of TCNJ’s transition from a normal school to a teachers’ college and was accompanied by a change in physical surroundings. In 1928, a beautiful 210-acre tract of land in Ewing Township, then known as Hillwood Lakes, was purchased as a new site for the College.