Mill Hill, Trenton, New Jersey
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Mill Hill is a neighborhood in New Jersey's capital city of Trenton, New Jersey.
The name Mill Hill refers to central New Jersey's first industrial site, a mill, erected in 1679, as the southeast corner of the present Broad Street crossing of the Assunpink Creek.[1] Mill Hill and its wooden mill were among the holdings of the first settler in the vicinity of Trenton, Mahlon Stacy, who arrived in North America in 1678. The mill was unfortunately destroyed in a later flood.
Mill Hill became famous in the late 1700s for being the site of the Second Battle of Trenton, a battle many historians consider the turning point in the American Revolutionary War. The battle took place on January 2, 1777 in what is now Mill Hill Park.[2] Every year, this battle is re-enacted during Patriots Week in Trenton.[3] Mill Hill remained relatively undeveloped during the first decades of the nineteenth century. During this time it was not yet part of the City of Trenton. In 1840, the entire area was incorporated as South Trenton and then into the City of Trenton in 1851. The name Mill Hill was applied to the area at least as early as 1821.
Mill Hill grew rapidly during the 1800s as Trenton grew into an industrial center of some note. The Roebling steel works made the wire cables used to construct most of the major bridges built in the United States, including the Golden Gate Bridge and George Washington Bridge. Trenton was also the principal center of the pottery and ceramic industry in the United States.
The population of Mill Hill swelled rapidly, enhanced by immigration. By 1920, 52% of the city's population were foreign-born.
During the Great Depression, Trenton started to decline. By 1953 Roebling Steel was one of Trenton's last great manufacturers to be sold to another company and then closed.
Since the early 1980s, Mill Hill has been undergoing a resurgence and is now a thriving and diverse neighborhood. This was enabled by a redevelopment plan based around the idea of converting Mill Hill into a latter-day "Georgetown". Instead of replacing the historical fabric of the area, the buildings were to be preserved and renovated. The wonderful red brick row-houses - constructed in the late 1800s - have been restored to their former magnificence, in many cases being converted back to single-family homes (many had been converted to multi-family rental properties during less prosperous times). In a symbolic act that ended up carrying significant weight for the neighborhood, the then Mayor of Trenton, Arthurr J. Holland, moved his family to 138 Mercer Street in 1964. "Mayor Arthur Holland and his young wife were idealistic newlyweds with a baby daughter in 1964 when they decided to restore a house in Trenton's crumbling, if historic, Mill Hill neighborhood."[4] The restoration of the area has proceeded in waves ever since.
Initially focused on the 100 blocks of Mercer and Jackson Streets, a core of "urban pioneers" carefully renovated their homes. In 1967 the first Holiday House Tour took place, and this has become an annual event that continues today (now attracting over 1000 people who tour the historic homes).[5] With these changes came improving house prices, more investment and more restoration.
After the property collapse of the late 1980s, a second wave of renovation started, the beautiful architecture and well-organized, diverse community attracting new residents. For the first time commercial developers, led by Atlantis Historic Properties, took up renovating the vacant properties on the 200 blocks of Mercer, Jackson and Clay streets.[6] Atlantis was formed by the members of the Mill Hill community themselves (in the early 1990s) to preserve and restore the historic homes - starting with the properties at 261 and 263 Jackson Street. The neighborhood is now going from strength to strength.
Today, the last of properties are being finished. The renovated historic structures and historically sensitive new construction stand side by side. The neighborhood combines an exciting mix of long-time residents and new arrivals of diverse races, orientations and professions.