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Trenton City Hall is located in Trenton, Mercer County, New Jersey, United States. The white marble building was built in 1907 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 30, 1978.
In November 2019, Gusciora shared that the City of Trenton's Department of Health had won a $95,000 grant "Strengthening Local Public Health Capacity Grant Operations" from the New Jersey Department of Health. The funds are being utilized to supplement Gusciora's efforts to reduce the number of residents affected by vaccine-preventable illnesses.
The Trenton Police Department was founded in 1792, when the city was incorporated. It works in conjunction with the Mercer County Sheriff's Office. [225] In 2005, there were 31 homicides in Trenton, which at that time was the largest number in a single year in the city's history. [226]
Until 1800, Philadelphia served as the capital city of the United States and the seat of its federal government. [2] In 1799, an outbreak of yellow fever spread rapidly through Philadelphia, the fourth such outbreak of the decade. [3] Incorporated in 1792, the city of Trenton, New Jersey, had developed into a thriving trade town by 1799. [4]
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It designed by Trenton architectural firm Clarke Caton Hintz to invoke a 19th Century civic building. The four-story 158,000-square-foot building contains 14 courtroom and houses the Civil, Special Civil, Equity and Family courts. [13] [14]
Trenton (Cumberland, Virginia), a historic plantation home located near Cumberland, Virginia USS Trenton , the name of four United States Navy ships Battle of Trenton , American Revolutionary War battle in New Jersey, December 26, 1776
The Trentonian was known as a feisty, gritty tabloid from its start in 1945 when 40 members of the International Typographical Union broke away from the Trenton Times to start their paper. [4] [5] When The Washington Post Company bought the Times in 1975, Katharine Graham vowed to make Trenton a one-paper town. She reportedly would later admit ...