The United States will be celebrating its 250th birthday on July 4.
As one of the 13th original colonies, New Jersey played an important role in the American Revolution. The state is home to many important historical sites.
Here's a list of some sites around the Garden State with historical significance:
Chestnut Neck Memorial Park — Commemorates the 1778 Battle of Chestnut Neck, where British forces attacked a privateer base.
Historic New Bridge Landing — Key crossing used repeatedly by General George Washington’s army; includes the Steuben House.
Steuben House — Headquarters of Baron von Steuben after the war; one of NJ’s most important 18th-century structures.
Bordentown Quaker Meeting House — A Revolutionary-era meeting house central to local Patriot activity.
Mount Holly Quaker Meeting House — Near the site of the Battle of Iron Works Hill in 1776.
Indian King Tavern — Where New Jersey’s Legislature met in 1777 and formally adopted the Great Seal of New Jersey.
Historic Cold Spring Village — A living-history site that preserves early American life, including Revolutionary-era structures.
Chestnut Neck Battle Site – Port Republic, NJ. Battle of Chestnut Neck in 1778, involving British attacks on American privateers.
Greenwich Tea Burning Monument — Marks the 1774 “tea burning,” one of the earliest acts of rebellion in the colonies.
First Presbyterian Church of Newark — Burial ground of several Revolutionary figures; the church was a Patriot stronghold.
Whitall House at Red Bank Battlefield — Home beside the 1777 Battle of Red Bank; a key American victory.
Jersey Journal Marker — Commemorates Revolutionary-era events in the region.
Paulus Hook - Site of the famous 1779 American raid on British forces.
Taylor's Mill Historic District Marker - English settler John Taylor established a gristmill circa 1760. The mill supplied flour to American troops during the Revolutionary War and continued to operate into the early 20th century.
Vought House - Christoffel Vought Farmstead, commonly known as the 1759 Vought House, was built in 1759. Vought was a loyalist during the American Revolution and volunteered to join the British Army.
Washington Crossing State Park — Where General George Washington crossed the Delaware River before the pivotal Battle of Trenton.
Trenton Battle Monument — Marks the 1776 American victory at Trenton.
Princeton Battlefield State Park – Site of the Battle of Princeton in 1777.
Old Barracks Museum – Closely tied to the Battle of Trenton.
Metlar–Bodine House — Historic home tied to early settlement and wartime activity.
Battle of Short Hills Historic Area – Associated with the Battle of Short Hills in 1777.
Monmouth Battlefield State Park — One of the largest battles of the war (1778).
Allen House / Blue Ball Tavern — Used by Loyalists; site of a 1779 raid.
Morristown National Historical Park — Includes Washington’s Headquarters, Jockey Hollow, Fort Nonsense and the Ford Mansion. Central to the Continental Army’s winter encampments.
Jockey Hollow — Encampment site of the Continental Army during the brutal winter of 1779–1780.
Cedar Bridge Tavern — Site of the last documented skirmish of the Revolutionary War in 1782.
Dey Mansion — Washington’s headquarters during several 1780 campaigns.
Old Salem County Courthouse — One of the oldest active courthouses; connected to wartime legal proceedings.
Hancock House State Historic Site — Site of the Hancock House Massacre in 1778.
Jacobus Vanderveer House — Headquarters of General von Steuben during winter encampments.
Wallace House — Washington’s headquarters during the Middlebrook encampment.
Van Horne House — Used by American generals during the Middlebrook encampments.
Old Newton Burial Ground — Resting place of Revolutionary-era soldiers.
Caldwell Parsonage — Home of the “Fighting Parson,” Rev. James Caldwell, a key Patriot figure.
Battle of Springfield sites — Includes the First Presbyterian Church of Springfield and the Cannonball House.
Connecticut Farms Presbyterian Church - Connected to the Battle of Connecticut Farms.
Shippen Manor — Ironworks-related site supporting the Continental Army.