Windsor, New Jersey

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Windsor is an unincorporated area located within Robbinsville Township (known as Washington Township until 2007) in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States. The area is served as United States Postal Service ZIP Code 08561. There are approximately 50 homes in the area, and as of the United States Census, 2000, the population for ZIP Code Tabulation Area 08561 was 314.[1] While most of the locals have heard of neighboring West Windsor and East Windsor, few have heard of "just Windsor," which contributed to the naming of Windsor's community association website www.justwindsor.org.

Sign posted at the corner of Main St & Church St in Windsor
Sign posted at the corner of Main St & Church St in Windsor

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[edit] History

Founded in 1818, it was named Centerville because it was the geographical center of the state. Until then, adjacent heavily wooded lands were called Magrilla. In 1814, after the completion of the Bordentown and South Amboy stagecoach turnpike, William McKnight, director of the turnpike company, built a tavern at the intersection of the turnpike and present-day Windsor-Perrineville Road. A major thruway between New York and Philadelphia, the turnpike replaced Old York Road, which started out as a Native-American path prior to European settlement. In late 1831, the Camden and Amboy Railroad was constructed through Centerville. The village became a stopover for rail travelers, and a thriving center for the bountiful farms and mills which serviced the growing population. It quickly became the largest village between Yardville (Sand Town) and Hightstown, and was renamed "Windsor" in 1846 to avoid any confusion with a Centerville post office in Hunterdon County.[2]

[edit] Notables residents

Notable current and former residents of Windsor include:

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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