About This Place
The site of the Elizabethtown Academy, a colonial-era school located near Broad Street, marks the location of one of the educational institutions that served the town's leading families before and during the Revolution. The academy educated several individuals who went on to play roles in the patriot cause.
Revolutionary Significance
Elizabethtown was a center of education in colonial New Jersey. The academy, along with private tutors employed by wealthy families, provided classical education to the sons of the local gentry. Several students of Elizabethtown's educational institutions went on to attend the College of New Jersey (Princeton) or King's College (Columbia). The town's role as New Jersey's colonial capital attracted families who valued education, and the concentration of lawyers, ministers, and merchants created a literate community that was well-connected to the intellectual currents of the pre-Revolutionary period.
The original academy building no longer stands, but the site is part of the historic fabric of downtown Elizabeth and serves as a reminder of the educational infrastructure that produced the town's Revolutionary leadership.
Location
Broad Street area, Elizabeth, NJ 07201
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Events at This Location
1664
1765
Elias Boudinot
1774
Abraham Clark
1775
James Caldwell, William Livingston
1776
James Caldwell, Hannah Caldwell
1776
William Livingston, Cornelius Hetfield Jr.
1777
Elias Boudinot
1777
Cornelius Hetfield Jr.
1779
Shepard Kollock, James Caldwell, Hannah Caldwell
1780
William Livingston
1780
James Caldwell, Hannah Caldwell
1780
Hannah Caldwell, James Caldwell, Shepard Kollock
1780
Hannah Caldwell, James Caldwell
1780
James Caldwell, Hannah Caldwell
1781
James Caldwell, Hannah Caldwell
1789
Elias Boudinot, William Livingston