Essex County Guide

Historic Places in Essex County, NJ

Explore Newark’s colonial roots, Montclair’s commercial architecture, West Orange’s Edison landmarks, Branch Brook Park, historic churches, cemeteries, stations, theaters, and homes across one of New Jersey’s most historically layered counties.

Map highlighting Essex County, New Jersey

County History

From Newark’s founding to Edison’s invention factory

The recorded history of Essex County begins in 1666, when Connecticut families led by Robert Treat established a settlement along the Passaic River in what is now Newark. Essex County became one of New Jersey’s original counties, and today its historic landscape includes colonial houses of worship, Victorian cemeteries, Art Deco transit landmarks, urban parks, industrial innovation sites, and early suburban commercial districts.

This guide preserves the original NJTGO historic-place directory while organizing it into easier-to-browse sections by town and area.

25 Historic listings preserved
8 Essex County areas featured
1666 Newark settlement history begins
Visitor note: Some historic places are active churches, cemeteries, park areas, private properties, or exterior-view landmarks. Please verify hours, access rules, tours, and parking before visiting.

Full Directory

Essex County Historic Places by Area

Historic Places by Area

Newark

Branch Brook Park Historic Site
Newark

Branch Brook Park Historic Site

Lake Street and Ballantine Parkway, Newark, NJ 07104

A landmark county park and historic landscape, known as the oldest park in the first county park system established in the United States and famous for its cherry blossom trees.

Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.org

First Presbyterian Church - “Old First”
Newark

First Presbyterian Church - “Old First”

820 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07104

A congregation organized in 1666. The present church was begun in 1787 after two earlier buildings.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Plane Tree
Newark

Historic Plane Tree

60 Park Place, Newark, NJ 07102

A Newark landmark tree believed to have stood on the spot before the Revolutionary War.

Photo by R.C., courtesy of HMdb.org

Mount Pleasant Cemetery
Newark

Mount Pleasant Cemetery

Broadway and Nursery Street, Newark, NJ

Newark’s oldest remaining cemetery, opened in 1844. Its 36 acres, monuments, and brownstone Gothic gateway reflect Victorian-era cemetery design.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

Penn Station Historic Site
Newark

Penn Station Historic Site

1 Raymond Plaza West, Newark, NJ 07102

Opened in 1935 and designed by McKim, Mead & White, Newark Penn Station is a major Art Deco transportation landmark.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Plume House
Newark

Plume House

University Avenue and Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102

Built about 1710 by the Plume family. It later became House of Prayer Rectory; Rev. Hannibal Goodwin invented celluloid film here in 1887.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Saint Lucy’s Church
Newark

Saint Lucy’s Church

118 7th Avenue, Newark, NJ 07104

Founded in 1891 and dedicated in 1926, St. Lucy’s is associated with Newark’s old First Ward, Italian immigrant heritage, and the National Shrine of St. Gerard Maiella.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

Sydenham House
Newark

Sydenham House

29 Old Road to Bloomfield, Newark, NJ

One of the oldest structures in Newark, built in the 18th century.

Photo courtesy of HMdb.org

Trinity Church
Newark

Trinity Church

Broad Street and Rector Street, Newark, NJ 07104

Newark’s second oldest house of worship, organized in the 1730s and chartered in 1746. The present church includes an 1810 building and became the Diocese of Newark’s cathedral in 1944.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

Montclair

40-46 Church Street
Montclair

40-46 Church Street

Montclair, NJ 07042

A 1925 Collegiate Gothic style commercial building designed by Holmes & Von Schmid, noted for its red brick exterior, arched entrances, leaded glass windows, balustrade, and octagonal turret.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

45 Church Street Plaza
Montclair

45 Church Street Plaza

Montclair, NJ 07042

A 1925 Renaissance Revival corner apartment and commercial building with buff-colored brick and terra-cotta architectural detailing.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

647 Bloomfield Avenue
Montclair

647 Bloomfield Avenue

Montclair, NJ 07042

The site where the Montclair Hook & Ladder Company was founded in 1882. The building opened in 1904 as the old Fire Department headquarters and was later enlarged to house police and town government functions.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

First Primary School
Montclair

First Primary School

22 Valley Road, Montclair, NJ 07042

Built in 1878-1879 in a vernacular / Early Classical Revival style, it is one of the oldest surviving school buildings in Montclair.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

Hampton House
Montclair

Hampton House

467 Bloomfield Avenue, Montclair, NJ 07042

A late 19th-century commercial building with an Art Moderne façade, connected to the Doremus family’s early general merchandise business and later Hampton House Furniture.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

Madison Building
Montclair

Madison Building

42 Bloomfield Avenue, Montclair, NJ 07042

A 1912 Beaux Arts Revival building by Van Vleck & Goldsmith, named for the Edward Madison Company and notable for Montclair’s first elevator.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

Station Square
Montclair

Station Square

295 Bloomfield Avenue, Montclair, NJ 07042

Also known as The Crawford Block, this 1892 commercial building blends Queen Anne and Romanesque elements and was praised by urban planner John Nolen.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

The Crane Building
Montclair

The Crane Building

460 Bloomfield Avenue, Montclair, NJ 07042

A circa-1889 Italianate commercial building once associated with I. Seymour Crane’s hardware and plumbing business.

Photo by James True, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

West Orange

Thomas Edison’s Home - Glenmont
West Orange

Thomas Edison’s Home - Glenmont

Honeysuckle Road in Llewellyn Park, West Orange, NJ 07052

Thomas Edison bought Glenmont in 1886 as a wedding gift for Mina Miller Edison. The Victorian mansion and grounds became Edison’s family home for decades.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Thomas Edison’s West Orange Laboratory
West Orange

Thomas Edison’s West Orange Laboratory

Main Street, West Orange, NJ 07052

Edison moved into this laboratory complex in 1887 and directed research teams in the “Invention Factory” for more than four decades.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

Belleville

Old Dutch Church
Belleville

Old Dutch Church

Belleville, NJ

Associated with Second River and organized in 1697; early Belleville school activity and town founders are connected with the site.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

St. Peter’s Church
Belleville

St. Peter’s Church

155 Williams Street, Belleville, NJ 07109

One of the older churches in the Diocese of Newark, with first mass noted in 1838.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

Bloomfield

Davis Homestead
Bloomfield

Davis Homestead

409 Franklin Street, Bloomfield, NJ 07003

A Revolutionary War-era homestead associated with local escape stories, care for a wounded British soldier, and a visit by Generals Washington and Knox on the way to Morristown.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

Caldwell

Old Burying Ground of First Presbyterian Church of Caldwell
Caldwell

Old Burying Ground of First Presbyterian Church of Caldwell

Bloomfield Avenue, Caldwell, NJ 07006

A burial ground established on land given in 1779 for church and cemetery use. It contains graves of early Caldwell-area families and veterans of several wars.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

Millburn

Paper Mill Playhouse
Millburn

Paper Mill Playhouse

Brookside Drive, Millburn, NJ 07041

A historic mill site where paper was manufactured by 1795. The building was remodeled in 1934 as Paper Mill Playhouse, giving the site a continuing cultural role.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Historic Places by Area

Nutley

Vreeland House
Nutley

Vreeland House

216 Chestnut Street, Nutley, NJ 07110

Constructed about 1702 and later used by the Woman’s Club. It was occupied during the Revolution by British sympathizers and later acquired by Captain Speer.

Photo by Bill Coughlin, courtesy of HMdb.org

Explore Nearby Towns

Essex County Town Pages

Use these town links to continue from historic places into local guides for dining, business, real estate, jobs, lodging, and community information.