Cadwalader Heights, Trenton, New Jersey

Coordinates: 40°14′07″N 74°47′09″W / 40.23528°N 74.78583°W / 40.23528; -74.78583
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Cadwalader Heights
Homes along Belmont Circle in Cadwalader Heights
Homes along Belmont Circle in Cadwalader Heights
Cadwalader Heights is located in Mercer County, New Jersey
Cadwalader Heights
Cadwalader Heights
Location of Cadwalader Heights in Mercer County Inset: Location of county within the state of New Jersey
Cadwalader Heights is located in New Jersey
Cadwalader Heights
Cadwalader Heights
Cadwalader Heights (New Jersey)
Cadwalader Heights is located in the United States
Cadwalader Heights
Cadwalader Heights
Cadwalader Heights (the United States)
Coordinates: 40°14′07″N 74°47′09″W / 40.23528°N 74.78583°W / 40.23528; -74.78583
Country United States
State New Jersey
CountyMercer
CityTrenton

Cadwalader Heights is a neighborhood located within the city of Trenton in Mercer County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.[1][2] The neighborhood was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and primarily consists of detached, single-family homes built from 1907 to 1930.[3] Cadwalader Heights is just southeast of Cadwalader Park.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "City Profile Report: Trenton 250: 1792-2042: A City Master Plan Document" (PDF). City of Trenton. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 21, 2015. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  2. ^ "Cadwalader Heights Neighborhood". Cadwalader Heights Community Association. Retrieved January 18, 2015.
  3. ^ "Cadwalader Heights, Trenton City, New Jersey". livingplaces.com. Retrieved January 18, 2015. Cadwalader Heights is a residential neighborhood of detached, single family homes built primarily from 1907 to 1930; median age is circa 1925. Median lot size is approximately one-fifth of an acre. Median interior living space is approximately 3,200 sq. ft. On a photo-taking walk through the neighborhood (late October 2006, accompanying slide show) we did not encounter any for sale signs. A few homes were in the midst of major renovation. The layout of the neighborhood is recorded to have been done by America's premier landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood boundary at the foot of the hill, across from Cadwalader Park, rising up from Parkside Avenue. Its bounds are roughly: on the northwest, Parkside Avenue and the northeast by Stuyvesant Avenue; southwest, Bellevue Avenue.