The 1719 William Trent House Museum is owned and maintained by the City of Trenton and managed and operated by the Trent House Association. The House is a designated National Historic Landmark and is listed in both the State and National Registers of Historic Places.
The Association Since the opening of the 1719 William Trent House Museum in 1936, volunteer groups supported the Museum's mission. Incorporated in 1957 and designated as a 501(c)(3) non-profit in 1975, the Trent House Association serves as the Museum's perpetual caretaker. The Association conducts programs, events, interpretive aids and exhibits as well as supporting ongoing research on the history of the Trent House and its residents and is committed to enhancing public knowledge and understanding of that history with our findings.
The videos contained on this page are testaments to this historical quest.
If our colonist forefathers had honored the 1778 treaty giving the Lenni-Lenape statehood and representatives in Congress, America would be a better place today.
I live in the area and the Trent House is a remarkable historical treasure. It isn't that well known as far as I know. It is amazing as it is the real McCoy not a reconstruction. The area contains quite a lot of very interesting history.
I believe I have seen someone do this plaiting on RU-vid. Try making a long slit in the oval dough, then pulling one end through the slit while "rolling" the dough which should give you a "ruffled" ring which you can shape into a circle, oval or even a square. Great video as always.
I absolutely loved Wienstien’s on Hermitage Ave in West Trenton! Many students who attended Jr.#3 middle school (located at West State & Parkside) patronized Wienstien’s before and after their walks to school 🏫😇 Although I attended & was bussed to my parochial schools I still shopped there frequently
When built Washington's grist mill, designed by Oliver Evans, was the most modern and efficient mill in the world; the world, not just the United States. Oliver Evans' complete integration of the milling process was a great leap forward in the dawn of the Industrial Revolution.