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Along with Innes, the men formed what was to become Christ Church on October 17, 1702. For several years, services were held in private homes until 1705, when Judge John Johnson - a friend of Innes - gave over the rights to the old Monmouth Patent courts for use of a church.
Central Presbyterian Church (Montclair, New Jersey) Christ Church (Episcopal), Shrewsbury; Christ Church (Middletown, New Jersey) Christ Church, New Brunswick, New Jersey; Christ Church, Newton; Church of Our Lady of Grace (Hoboken, New Jersey) Church of the Ascension (Atlantic City, New Jersey) Church of the Holy Communion (Norwood, New Jersey)
Old First Presbyterian Church (Newark, New Jersey) Rosedale Cemetery, Orange; Saint Stephen's Cemetery & The Chapel at Short Hills, Short Hills [4] St. Johns Catholic Cemetery, Orange; Woodland Cemetery, Newark, New Jersey; Brookdale Reformed Church, Bloomfield. Belleville Reformed Church (now under a new name), Belleville.
Harold G. Hoffman (1896–1954), 41st Governor of New Jersey, from 1935 to 1938 who also represented New Jersey's 3rd congressional district in the United States House of Representatives, from 1927 to 1931. [2]
Name Image Location Description/notes; Our Lady of Mt. Carmel: 39 E 22nd St, Bayonne: Romanesque Revival church dedicated 1899; the church and supporting buildings form the Mount Carmel Historic District St. Henry: 82 W 29th St, Bayonne Parish formed 1889; current English Gothic church built 1911-1915 St. Mary, Star of the Sea 326 Ave C, Bayonne
Interior of Christ Church, facing the altar and chancel. In a 1770 letter, the Rev'd Dr Thomas B. Chandler, rector of St John's Church in the provincial capital Elizabethtown (now Elizabeth), reported that he had visited Sussex County in the northwestern part of the province of New Jersey in November 1769 and found that there were 50 families belonging to the Church of England in the region.