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NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
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Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Lindbergh kidnapping
Book gives new angle
on famous case. PAGE 3
HEATHER FIORE/The Hopewell Sun
Third graders at Toll Gate Grammar school in Pennington help bake the schools signature sweet potato pies on Tuesday, Nov. 20, which are
donated to the Trenton Area Soup Kitchen along with a variety of other foods for Thanksgiving.
Students roll up sleeves to make dinners
By HEATHER FIORE
The Hopewell Sun
Since the beginning of Novem-
ber, all of the students at Toll
Gate Grammar School in Pen-
nington contributed in some way
to the schools annual Thanksgiv-
ing event in which the students
provide 1,000 Thanksgiving din-
ners to the Trenton Area Soup
Kitchen (TASK).
The event, which has been a
school tradition for the last 26
years, involves students in all
grades kindergarten through
fifth and teaches them how to be
thankful for what they have and
give back to the people who are
less fortunate, according to Toll
Gate Grammar parent and TASK
project volunteer Kathie Rigante.
There are many components
to making this event a success,
she said. Students, parents and
staff work very hard to make sure
we supply everything plus a little
more.
Rigante explained how every
grade was responsible for bring-
ing in a certain packaged good,
such as green beans, stuffing,
sugar, milk, Kool Aid, or yams for
the pies. The school also accepted
donated cooked or uncooked
turkeys; the ones that were
cooked were carved at the school
on Thanksgiving Eve, Nov. 21,
at the schools annual carv-a-
thon.
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By HEATHER FIORE
The Hopewell Sun
Although there are many
books written about the Lind-
bergh kidnapping and trial,
Hopewell resident and neighbor
of the Lindbergh Estate James
Davidson co-authored the newly
published book, New Jerseys
Lindbergh Kidnapping and Trial
(Images of America), which is
the first Lindbergh book of its
kind.
Davidson, who is a local histo-
rian, grew up in Flemington and
knew a variety of people associat-
ed with the Lindbergh investiga-
tion and trial. He detailed how he
once met Lindbergh at the Stacy-
Trent Hotel in Trenton at an exe-
cution party on the night Bruno
Richard Hauptmann (the perpe-
trator) was electrocuted in 1936,
which is when he really started to
get involved with the incident.
He began collecting Lindbergh
memorabilia many years ago as
well, and now has an extensive
collection of all types of Lind-
bergh items, including magazine
articles from the trial, trial pass-
es, Lindbergh jewelry and vari-
ous personalized pins and medal-
lions.
New Jerseys Lindbergh Kid-
napping and Trial, which was
released by Arcadia Publishing
on Nov. 5, is the first national pic-
torial book about the Lindbergh
kidnapping and trial that features
200 never before seen pictures, ac-
cording to Davidson.
Arcadia has done about 8,000
local history books in the same
format, but never did a national
book, he said. This was the first
time they did a national book.
Through different leads, we
ended up finding 1,000 pictures
nobody had ever seen since the
trial.
Davidson co-authored the book
with longtime friend, Lindbergh
expert and 20-year archivist Mark
Falzini, who is in charge of the
largest collection of documents
pertaining to the Lindbergh case
at the New Jersey State Police
Museum.
Davidson initially introduced
the idea to Falzini, who was al-
ready experienced with writing
the Arcadia press book, Their
Book gives new angle
to Lindbergh kidnapping
please see BOOK, page 9
4 THE HOPEWELL SUN NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012
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BRIEFS
Christmas Bazaar
planned for Dec. 1
The annual Christmas Bazaar
at St. Matthew's Church, located
on South Main St. in Pennington,
will take place on Saturday, Dec. 1
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
This years theme is An Old
Fashioned Christmas. The
bazaar will feature a wide variety
of items, including handmade
crafts and knitted items, host and
hostess gifts, gourmet and baked
items, handmade candies, an-
tiques and collectibles, mosaic
tile crafts, holiday items, teen
room, pictures with Santa, kids
shopping space (aka Secret Santa
room), wreaths and holiday
plants, lunch cafe and much,
much more.
Celebrate at Little Red
Library on Dec. 2
On Dec. 2, enjoy a Sunday stroll
through Historic Hopewell and
stop by the borough's Little Red
Library at 13 E. Broad St. from 1
to 3 p.m.
Visit with staff and volunteers,
have a snack, and see what's new.
Hurricane Sandy helped some
area residents find our door in
their search for electricity and In-
ternet. Many commented on the
warmth and sense of community
they found. Stop by and help us
celebrate a full and busy year at
the library.
Ewart hosts painting
exhibit in December
Local artist Susan Ewart will
be hosting an exhibit of her re-
cent paintings at the Hopewell
Branch of the Mercer County Li-
brary from Dec. 1 to Dec. 29 dur-
ing library hours.
The show is entitled Country
Scenes, which includes watercol-
ors and oils of local scenes, flo-
rals, and animals.
Ewart will be at the library on
Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon
during the show for a meet and
greet opportunity.
NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 5
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Dr. Vaidya will be at our Monroe and Pennington offices.
Please Call Today to Make Your Appointment
with Dr. Henning or Dr. Vaidya.
5 Centre Drive
Suite 1A
Monroe Twp.
609-655-4544
Pennington Point West
2 Tree Farm Road
Ste. A-110, Pennington
609-737-4491
Its holiday gadget season, with
companies from Apple to Ama-
zon, and Microsoft to Samsung
working hard to court us with
very different perspectives on
portable electronic gadgets and
to sign up our credit card num-
bers so that new purchases are
just an easy click away.
On Wednesday, Dec. 5 at 7 p.m.
at the Hopewell Train Station,
Hopewell Borough resident
Doug Dixon is back with his an-
nual round-up of the latest crop
of tempting portable gadgets to
make sense of the broad (and
sometimes confusing) array
of options, and to explore the
expanding possibilities for
our mobile and connected
lifestyle.
Well discuss and demonstrate
portable handheld devices, in-
cluding smartphones and tablets,
as well as dedicated devices like e-
readers.
Well look at portable acces-
sories to share and enjoy your de-
vices on the go, including video
and audio, storage and power.
But, the big focus this year is on
the Cloud the possibilities of
storing all your information and
media in the cloud.
The idea is to make your
life easier so you won't have to
plug into a computer in order to
copy files to your device, or man-
age your stuff across multiple de-
vices.
But, well also discuss the
trade-offs of the cloud approach,
and the big differences between
the available services.
Dixon is an independent tech-
nology consultant, author, and
speaker specializing in digital
media and portable devices.
Previously a product manager
and software developer at Intel
and Sarnoff in Princeton, he
nowconsults in commercial and
military technology analysis and
communications and provides ex-
pert witness services.
Dixon is the author of four
books on digital media, has pub-
lished hundreds of feature arti-
cles, and has presented over 100
seminars and talks on digital
media over the past decade. He
makes his articles and
technical references freely avail-
able on his Manifest Technology
website and blog at Manifest-
Tech.com.
Learn about holiday gadgets on Dec. 5
6 THE HOPEWELL SUN NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,
Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08560, 08525 and
08534 ZIP codes. If you are not on the mail-
ing list, six-month subscriptions are avail-
able for $39.99. PDFs of the publication are
online, free of charge. For information,
please call 609-751-0245.
To submit a news release, please email
news@hopewellsun.com. For advertising
information, call 609-751-0245 or email
advertising@hopewellsun.com. The Sun
welcomes suggestions and comments from
readers including any information about
errors that may call for a correction to be
printed.
SPEAK UP
The Sun welcomes letters from readers. Brief
and to the point is best, so we look for letters
that are 300 words or fewer. Include your
name, address and phone number. We do not
print anonymous letters. Send letters to
news@hopewellsun.com, via fax at 609-751-
0245, or via the mail. Of course, you can drop
them off at our office, too. The Hopewell Sun
reserves the right to reprint your letter in any
medium including electronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
NEWS
MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow
PRODUCTION EDITOR Kristen Dowd
HOPEWELL EDITOR Heather Fiore
OPERATIONS
DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Tim Ronaldson
ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens
VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.
VICE CHAIRMAN Alan Bauer
I
ts no secret New Jersey leaders
want sports betting legalized in the
state. In fact, plans are that it will
start on Jan. 9 depending on the sta-
tus of a lawsuit brought by Major
League Baseball, the National Football
League, the National Basketball Asso-
ciation, the National Hockey League
(like that really matters right now) and
the NCAA.
The leagues and associations some-
how are able to say with a straight face
that legalized sports betting in the
state would hurt the integrity of their
games. These are the same leagues, of
course, that have no problem playing
games in other countries where bet-
ting is legal. Some of you might re-
member the Rams and Patriots game
last month in England, for example.
The facts are well known:
* A 20-year-old federal law limits
sports betting legal to Nevada,
Delaware, Oregon and Montana.
* Hundreds of billions of dollars are
being bet on sports illegally these days.
* The leagues and associations arent
exactly hurting for money.
* New Jerseys casino and horse rac-
ing industries are struggling. They
were struggling before Hurricane
Sandy. After the Hurricane? Well, has
anyone representing the leagues and
associations seen the photos coming
from Atlantic City?
* Legalized sports betting would be a
boon to the casinos and tracks. It
would mean monster weekends in AC
when major sporting events are taking
place. Some of the money now being
spent with offshore gambling outfits or
through illegal means right here in the
states would flow, legally, into the
states economy.
Frankly, the sports leagues and asso-
ciations should be embarrassed. Their
preference to keep sports betting dol-
lars flowing to illegal enterprises than
local economies is shameful. They
should do the right thing and welcome
sports betting to New Jersey next
month.
in our opinion
Betting deadline looms
Sports leagues should welcome New Jersey to betting ranks on Jan. 9
Let the betting begin
New Jersey plans to allow sports bet-
ting Jan. 9. Sports leagues oppose the
move. Their opposition, especially in
the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, is
simply shameful.
Each grade was also responsible for
completing a different aspect of the proj-
ect, whether it was decorating lunch bags
or making decorations, preparing Toll
Gates signature sweet potato pies, or deliv-
ering the turkeys to TASK on Thanksgiv-
ing Day.
However, Rigante also detailed how the
event extends to various community mem-
bers, who are also involved with the prepa-
ration.
The pre-schools in town make cranber-
ry relish, and the Scouts from Pennington
Pack No. 44 decorate 600 lunch bags and
sort donated Halloween candy into individ-
ual bags that are included in the lunches
that the Timberlane Middle School stu-
dents pack, she said. It is truly a commu-
nity effort.
Toll Gates staff members also got their
hands dirty when they helped students
bake over 250 pies on Nov. 20, including Su-
perintendent of Schools Dr. Tom Smith,
current Principal Tana Smith, and former
Principal Dan Umstead.
Co-chair of the TASK event Cathy
Brown explained how she decided to get
more involved with the project because of
how impressed she was that Toll Gate suc-
cessfully conducted a service project of
this scale for over 25 years.
The problem of hunger in our world
can be staggering, almost overwhelming to
the point of paralysis; however, there is
wisdom in the saying that We should do
for one what we wish we could do for all,
she said. Here, in the Toll Gate Grammar
School community, we have a fantastic op-
portunity to be a part of something enor-
mous just by making somewhat small indi-
vidual contributions. This event provides
1,000 meals on a day that could otherwise
leave those less fortunate than us feeling
forgotten.
Brown has co-chaired the event with fel-
low parent Pam Wallace for the last two
years, and genuinely enjoys participating
and helping the students grasp the idea of
giving back.
It is a privilege to help lead the effort,
she added. For me, it's a perfect blend of
my humanitarian interests and my desire
to stay involved at my childrens school.
The TASK is an incredible organization
doing important work and we are just so
honored to be able to support them on this
important holiday in this way.
For more information about Toll Gates
TASK project, visit tollgategrammarpto.
shutterfly.com/task25.
EACH
Continued from page 1
Each grade completed different task
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Christmas Carol
Festival set for Dec. 2
St. James Church in Penning-
ton will host a Christmas Carol
Festival on Sunday, Dec. 2. The
event is open to everyone in the
community who enjoys singing
Christmas carols. Its for those
who already have their radios
tuned to the stations that play
continuous Christmas music,
those who are looking for a
chance to sing some of those
great traditional hymns for them-
selves, and everyone in between.
The program, which begins at
3 p.m., will include an opportuni-
ty for all of the children who are
present to participate in a mini-
pageant (no rehearsals required).
And it will end with cookies and
cider, while the notes of Joy to
the World echo in our ears.
This is an opportunity to put
aside the hustle and bustle of our
day to day Christmas prepara-
tions, and go back over 2,000 years
ago to a little town called Bethle-
hem, Director of Music at St.
James Lauren Walters said. We
think that an hour spent in carol-
ing is just the thing to kick off a
wonderful Advent season.
For more information about
the Christmas Carol Festival,
please call the St. James Office at
(609) 737-0122 or Joann Held at
(609) 737-0867.
Addiction Hotline of New Jersey
(800) 238-2333
PSA
WEDNESDAY NOV. 28
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblings
welcome. 11 to 11:45 a.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Action
rhymes, songs and felt board
activities. Age-appropriate craft
follows story time. Parental
supervision required.
Manga Club: Ages 12 and older. 6 to
7 p.m. at Hopewell Branch of the
Mercer County Library System.
Join for discussions, snacks,
movies and other activities about
anime, manga, graphic novels
and superheroes.
Movies for Adults: Watch Moon-
rise Kingdom from 1:30 to 3:30
p.m. or from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Rated
PG-13.
THURSDAY NOV. 29
Toddler Rock with Miss Kelley:
Ages 2 to 3; adult supervision
required. 10 to 10:30 a.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Fun-filled
program with music and move-
ment.
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblings
welcome. 11 to 11:45 a.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Action
rhymes, songs and felt board
activities. Age-appropriate craft
follows story time. Parental
supervision required.
PJ Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblings
welcome. 6:30 to 7:15 p.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Action
rhymes, songs and felt board
activities. Age-appropriate craft
follows story time. Parental
supervision required.
College Planning Night: 7 to 8 p.m.
at Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Former
Princeton University admission
committee member Don Better-
ton will talk about what admis-
sion committees value most on
your child's application and Kevin
Ryan of Premier College Funding
in Pennington will present ways
to help you custom build a plan to
pay for your childs education
regardless of your income level
or assets.
FRIDAY NOV. 30
Story time: 10:30 a.m. at the Pen-
nington Library, 30 N. Main St.
Join Miss Cindy for stories, music
and crafts.
SUNDAY DEC. 2
Hopewell Presbyterian Church:
Worship service at 10:30 a.m.
Intergenerational Sunday School
from 9 to 10:15 a.m. Coffee fellow-
ship from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
80 West Broad St., Hopewell.
Hopewell United Methodist
Church: Worship service at 10
a.m. Teen/adult education from 9
to 9:45 a.m. Sunday school at 10
a.m. Youth group at 6:30 p.m. 20
Blackwell Ave., Hopewell.
St. Alphonsus Roman Catholic
Church: Mass at 7:30, 9 and 11:15
a.m. 54 East Prospect St.,
Hopewell.
Word Christian Fellowship Interna-
tional: Worship service at 10 a.m.
Sunday school at 10:30 a.m. 44
Van Dyke Road, Hopewell.
MONDAY DEC. 3
Yoga: 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Hopewell
Branch of the Mercer County
Library System. Bring yoga mat
or large towel. Registration
required; call (609) 737-2610.
Tai Chi: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Learn
this ancient art to promote good
health and relaxation. No regis-
tration required.
Story time: 10:30 a.m. at Hopewell
Public Library. For toddlers and
pre-schoolers. Stories, songs and
fingerplays. Registration is not
required.
Getting Comfortable with Comput-
ers: 1 p.m. at the Hopewell Public
Library. Get comfortable with
computers, the Internet, the
World Wide Web and the digital
world. The librarys technologist
will answer questions, provide
demonstrations and guide partic-
ipants.
TUESDAY DEC. 4
Hopewell Seniors Connect: Holiday
Gadgets 2012: 10 to 11 a.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Doug
Dixon, an independent technolo-
gy consultant, author, and speak-
er specializing in digital media
and portable devices, will share
his annual round-up of the latest
crop of tempting portable gadg-
ets. Dixon will also discuss the
possibilities of storing all your
information and media in the
cloud and the trade-offs and dif-
ferences between the available
cloud services. This program is
open to all ages and no registra-
tion is necessary.
Yoga: 5 to 6 p.m. at Hopewell Branch
of the Mercer County Library Sys-
tem. Bring yoga mat or large tow-
el. Registration required; call
(609) 737-2610.
Story time: 10:30 a.m. at the Pen-
nington Library, 30 N. Main St.
Join Miss Cindy for stories, music
and crafts.
Hopewell Township Agricultural
Advisory Committee meeting:
7:30 p.m. at the Township Build-
ing first Tuesday of the month.
Public is invited. For more infor-
mation contact: Lucia Huebner at
466-0277 or lucia@doorposter.
com; or John Hart at 737-2008 or
ihart89@aol.com.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012
WANT TO BE LISTED?
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information must be received, in writing, two weeks prior to the
date of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Sun, 108 Kings Highway
East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email:
news@hopewellsun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing
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Expires 12/15/12. Expires 12/15/12. Expires 12/15/12.
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Fifteen Minutes: Biographical
Sketches of the Lindbergh Case,
in 2008.
I was down at the museum
talking with him, and having
done an Arcadia press book al-
ready, I said to him, You know
theres probably 30 books written
about Lindbergh and the kidnap-
ping, but nobody has done a picto-
rial history, Davidson said. All
books use the same reshuffled 25
pictures, so we went on a quest.
He explained how they found
the pictures in various places
throughout Central New Jersey,
including the Jersey City Library
and Hunterdon County Library
archives. However, he also de-
tailed how he retrieved photo-
graphs from friends.
Although Davidson and Falzini
managed to find more than five
times more photographs than
needed, Davidson detailed the
major challenge they encoun-
tered while compiling the book.
Unlike other Arcadia press
books, where each picture and
caption stands alone, with this
book, we ended up having to do a
whole sequential history of the
kidnapping and trial with pic-
tures to sequentially follow it, he
said. That was quite a chal-
lenge.
Despite the challenges, all of
Davidsons and Falzinis hard
work paid off, since the book sold
out on Amazon.com the first day
it was released, and is receiving
rave reviews.
Arcadia said we sold more
books the first week than their
typical local history book sells in
a year, Davidson said.
The book also received consid-
erable recognition at the authors
special presentation at Hopewell
Elementary on Nov. 9, which was
hosted by the Hopewell Historical
Society and attended by about 200
people. The authors displayed a
PowerPoint presentation about
the search for the Lindbergh baby
in the Sourland Mountain area
and the other activity in and
around Hopewell following the
1932 crime.
We showed pictures collected
of what went on from the time the
baby was kidnapped searching
around Hopewell, what occurred
in Hopewell (people called it a
Roman circus), how there were
over 900 reporters in Hopewell
and all the way up until the baby
was found 10 weeks later, David-
son said. We only could put 200
pictures in the book and collected
over 1,000, so we showed a lot of
pictures that never made it into
the book.
Davidson detailed how both his
and Falzinis varying inputs were
critical in the development of the
book, which they completed in
only five months.
It was a good combination be-
tween Mark and I because hes
been in the archives, and we
would jointly write captions and
introductions, and he would fine-
tune them historically to make
sure they were accurate, David-
son said. He was more of the in-
house person, and I was more of
the run around, look for pictures
person. It really worked well.
New Jerseys Lindbergh Kid-
napping and Trial is available on
Amazon.com for $14.92.
BOOK
Continued from page 3
Book sold out first day
10 THE HOPEWELL SUN NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012
20 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245 | sales@elauwit.com
www.elauwit.com
Hopewell
Lawrence
Montgomery
Princeton
Robbinsville
West Windsor
Special to The Sun
The Hopewell Valley
U-8 Bolts recently
beat the Millburn
Earthquakes with a
1-0 road victory.
Pictured above
(from middle):
Bolts player Bryce
Ansari goes in for
the steal, with
Kevin Ellis, Brandon
Rodriguez, Merrick
Liu and Gunnar
Casano running to
assist him.
NOV. 28-DEC. 4, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 11
The First Presbyterian Church
of Titusville will host A Tour of
Titusville, a series of self-guided
tours of the church and eight his-
toric homes on River Drive on
Sunday, Dec. 2, from 1 p.m. to 5
p.m., to mark the opening of the
congregations 175th Anniversary
Celebrations.
We are deeply grateful to be
celebrating 175 years of loving
God and neighbor at Titusville
Presbyterian, pastor of the
church Rev. Will Shurley said.
We could not imagine a more fit-
ting opening to our 175th year
than by partnering with our
neighbors to allow the communi-
ty the opportunity to take a peek
inside the rich, tangible history
represented by our building and
these eight homes.
Among the homes that will be
on tour are 36 River Drive, known
locally as The Delaware House,
which was built between 1820 and
1843 and served at various times
as the villages post office, general
store and a hotel; 38 River Drive,
which was built in 1840, and once
served as the home of village resi-
dent Theodore Hunt, who, during
the Great Depression, left for
South America and mysteriously
disappeared; 50 River Drive,
which was built circa 1860, and is
one of the villages few remaining
exposed-brick homes; 52 River
Drive, a carpenter Gothic house
built in 1857, which was once
home to members of influential
the Scudder, Cadwalader and
Hess families; 74 River Drive,
known locally as the Blackwell
House, the home of former State
Senator William H. Blackwell,
which was built between 1907 and
1913, and features leaded win-
dows in many rooms; 82 River
Drive, which was built between
1910 and 1920 and features a rare
concrete-shingled roof, and once
served as the home of Grace Ban-
nerman, the widow of Titusville
Presbyterians former pastor
William Bannerman; 90 River
Drive, a three-story Victorian,
built circa 1865, whose exterior
was renovated extensively in 2003
according to historical photo-
graphs; and 100 River Drive, a
colonial revival home designed by
Walter B. Crabtree and built in
1909, that features new trim, inte-
rior doors, and cabinets custom
built by the current owner from
red oak trees milled on site.
The church building itself,
which was built in 1855 as a larg-
er replacement for a building that
burned, will be open to receive
visitors when they first arrive in
Titusville. There, the church will
host historical display panels
from the Presbyterian Historical
Society in Philadelphia, which
will allow visitors to learn more
about the more than 300 years of
Presbyterian history in the Unit-
ed States. Among the display will
be stories about foreign missions,
the church and its roles during
the Civil War, music in the life of
the Christian community, and the
variety of ways in which the
church has borne public witness
to the gospel of Jesus Christ
throughout its history.
We understand that our
churchs history is simply part of
the greater Christian history of
bearing witness to Gods redemp-
tive work in the world and part of
the greater local history of our
particular community, Shurley
said. We look forward to giving
our visitors a look into both of
those histories as they come to-
gether on the occasion of our
175th anniversary.
Carolers from Princeton Theo-
logical Seminary and light re-
freshments will round out A
Tour of Titusville. More infor-
mation about the year-long 175th
Anniversary Celebrations, in-
cluding a schedule of events, con-
certs and speakers, will be avail-
able that day.
Tickets for the house tour are
$20 each and may be reserved by
calling the church office at (609)
737-1385 or visiting titusvil-
lechurch.org.
Admission to the displays at
the church is free. All tour tickets
may be picked up or purchased at
the church on Dec. 2.
Limited parking is available at
the church; more parking is avail-
able at the Titusville Academy, lo-
cated at 86 River Drive, and a
short walk from the church.
The First Presbyterian Church
of Titusville, founded in 1838 and
celebrating 175 years of loving
God and neighbor in 2013, is locat-
ed at 48 River Drive in Titusville,
six miles south of Lambertville
and one mile north of the Wash-
ington Crossing Bridge, on the
banks of the Delaware River.
Church to host Tour
of Titusville on Dec. 2
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NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2012 PAGE 14
W H A T Y O U N E E D T O K N O W
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