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Palmer Square

Palmer Square
Public Square
Palmer Square in Princeton.jpg
Features: Palmer Square Post Office, Nassau Inn
Construction: 1936-1939
Opening date: 1939
Amenities: shopping, dining, hotel, post office
Area: 1/2 acre (main green), 10 acres (entire complex)
Manager: Palmer Square Management LLC
Location: Princeton, New Jersey
Palmer Square is located in Mercer County, New Jersey
Palmer Square
Palmer Square
Coordinates: 40°21′00.4″N 74°39′41.5″W / 40.350111°N 74.661528°W / 40.350111; -74.661528Coordinates: 40°21′00.4″N 74°39′41.5″W / 40.350111°N 74.661528°W / 40.350111; -74.661528
Palmer Square Post Office
Post Office (Princeton, New Jersey).jpg
Location 20 Palmer Square E, Princeton, NJ
Built 1937 (1937)
Part of Princeton Historic District (#75001143)
Designated CP 27 June 1975

Palmer Square is a public square and planned development in the heart of Princeton, New Jersey across from Nassau Street and Princeton University that today forms a collection of shops, restaurants, offices and residential spaces.

Originally built in 1936-1939 by Edgar Palmer, heir to the New Jersey Zinc fortune, the Square was created by architect Thomas Stapleton in the Colonial Revival style as the town's complement to Princeton University, which sits directly across Nassau Street from the Square.

In order to build the original Square, Baker Street was removed in 1929 and its houses, the center of the original African-American neighborhood of Princeton, were moved to Birch Avenue. Construction of the Square was delayed until 1936 by the depression, and plans to extend the Square past Hulfish Street were put on hold after the initial phase of construction was completed, and were not realized until the 1980s, along with an expansion of the Nassau Inn.

The Nassau Inn, which was formerly located directly on Nassau Street, was the centerpiece of the development. A small park sits in front of the Inn, which includes the Borough's Christmas tree. Between the park and Nassau Street, a smaller square holds a bronze statue of a tiger.

Thomas Stapleton assembled a variety of styles including a bit of old Newport, Philadelphia, Annapolis and Williamstown. The plan of the Square however is a mini-version Rockefeller Center. The early plans for Rockefeller Center contemplated an Opera House at the end while Palmer had the Playhouse Movie Theater.


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