Connecticut Farms Presbyterian Church

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Connecticut Farms Presbyterian Church

Church in 2007

Basic information
Location Union, NJ
Geographic coordinates 40°41′34″N, 74°16′25″W
Religious affiliation Presbyterian
Year consecrated 1730[1]
Leadership The Rev. Howard A. Bryant, Interim Minister[2]
Website http://www.ct-farms.org


(U.S. National Register of Historic Places)
Added to NRHP: 1970
NRHP Reference#: 70000398

Connecticut Farms Presbyterian Church is located at Stuyvesant and Chestnut avenues in Union, New Jersey, United States, near US 22. It is the oldest church in the township.[1]

Since the settlement of Connecticut Farms in 1667 by emigrants from that colony, residents had to travel 4-5 miles (6-9 km) over poor roads every Sunday to nearby Elizabethtown (today Elizabeth) to attend church. In 1730 they decided it was time to build their own place of worship and joined together to build a wood frame structure in the center of town on a small rise.[1] Not long afterward, a parsonage was built nearby.

The original building lasted for half a century. In the latter years of the Revolutionary War, Loyalist troops under the command of Hessian general Wilhelm von Knyphausen burned the church along with the surrounding town and the parsonage during the Battle of Connecticut Farms, an unsuccessful British attempt to retake Morristown.

During the fighting, Hannah Caldwell, the wife of Continental Army chaplain James Caldwell, was shot dead at the parsonage.[1] His wife stayed at home with their baby and a 3 year old toddler. As the British moved into Connecticut Farms, Hannah Caldwell was shot through a window or wall as she sat with her children on a bed. It has been named after the family ever since, and today serves as a local history museum.

After the war ended, the citizens of Connecticut Farms rebuilt their town and its church in 1782. The current brick building has stood ever since, supported at some times through the sale of grass and apples from the church's orchards In 1901 the parsonage was replaced with a new manse next to the church, which was itself expanded in 1920 and 1949 with wings consistent with its existing Colonial stylings.[1]

This history earned the church a listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970. It was the first church in New Jersey to be listed.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f A little bit about CFPC's 275 year history (2005). Retrieved on 2008-03-06.
  2. ^ A message from the Reverend (2005). Retrieved on 2008-03-06.

[edit] External links