Uhl House
Historical Overview
A 2-story house stands at 4275 Quakerbridge Road. This structure - the Uhl house - is a member of West Windsor's "100 Club" and a contributing element to the historic Lawrence/West Windsor community of Port Mercer.
The house was very likely built between the mid-1830s[1] and 1850.[2],[3] It was once part of a larger property that also contained the adjacent Port Mercer inn at 4271 Quakerbridge Road.[4] Thus, its ownership was the same as the inn - for a complete history of ownership prior to 1959, read about the inn's history by clicking here. It's unknown who lived in the house at 4273 Quakerbridge Road during this time; it may have been rented to various tenants - perhaps the Stout and Fagan families[5] - or lived in by the property owner. In 1951, the larger tract was sold to Elizabeth Harlow,[6] and was eventually split it into its constituent properties of 4271, 4273, and 4275 Quakerbridge Road.[7],[8],[9] Harrison and Palmer Uhl acquired the Uhl-Keith house at 4273 Quakerbridge Road in 1959.[10] Harrison, an architect, also built the nearby house at 4277 Quakerbridge Road in the mid-century.[11] In 1962, he became a partner in a new architectural practice eventually called CUH2A. The firm was recognized for winning a design competition for the New Jersey Pavilion at the 1964 World's Fair in Queens, New York.[12] Palmer herself taught at the All Saints Nursery School in Princeton for over 10 years.[13] |
Bibliography
- "Delaware and Raritan Canal." Princeton Whig. August 29, 1834.
- Joseph Gillingham. (1840, October 2). For Sale Or Rent. Emporium and True American. Trenton, NJ.
- "West Windsor Tax Assessor Address List, 2019.” West Windsor, 2019. List of all residences in West Windsor with dates of construction, according to tax assessor. Sent to the Historical Society by Lorraine Jones and Dawn Moretti.
- Cook, Richard, Hutchinson, Robert L. “Indenture.” West Windsor, 1862. Located in the Mercer County Clerk's Office, Mercer County Deed Book 51 Page 316.
- Updike, Elmer M. Sr. “West Windsor Was Sued for Poor Roads.” Princeton Recollector 4, no. 10, September 1979. https://theprince.princeton.edu/princetonperiodicals/?a=d&d=princetonrecollector19790901.2.3&srpos=1&e=-------en-20--1-byDA-txt-txIN-%22sued+for+poor+roads%22------.
- Harlow, Elizabeth Lane, Uhl, Harrison J. Jr., Uhl, Palmer B. “Indenture.” West Windsor, 1959. Located in the Mercer County Clerk's Office, Mercer County Deed Book 1494 Page 479.
- Van Doreh, Elizabeth. “Indenture.” West Windsor, 1959. Located in the Mercer County Clerk's Office, Mercer County Deed Book 1494 Page 479.
- Powers, Cheryl Coyner, Powers, Joseph Patrick, Harlow, Elizabeth Lane. “Indenture.” West Windsor, 1977. Located in the Mercer County Clerk's Office, Mercer County Deed Book 2052 Page 448.
- Uhl, Harrison J. Jr., Uhl, Palmer B. “Indenture.” West Windsor, 1962. Located in the Mercer County Clerk's Office, Mercer County Deed Book 1635 Page 32.
- Harlow, Elizabeth Lane, Uhl, Harrison J. Jr., Uhl, Palmer B. “Indenture.” West Windsor, 1959. Located in the Mercer County Clerk's Office, Mercer County Deed Book 1494 Page 479.
- Ligeti, Paul T. I., and Uhl, Harrison. Phone call with Harrison Uhl. Personal, 2023. Note: Harrison has lived here since the mid-1900s.
- “Harrison Jerome Uhl Jr. (1929-2018).” Find a Grave. Accessed September 30, 2023. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/222657766/harrison-jerome-uhl.
- "Palmer Beverly Uhl." The Times. August 19, 2008.