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The Messenger-Press themessenger-press.com

July 2026 FREE

At the crossroads of war and independence

Senior Sendoff

By R. H. Schmitt, Jr.

Part 1 of a 2 part retrospective of the Allentown area’s importance during the American Revolution. Trenton, Princeton and Mercer County have long commanded much of New Jersey’s Revolutionary War attention. But just beyond those better-known battlefields, Allen’s Town, Upper Freehold and the surrounding Monmouth County countryside formed one of the overlooked crossroads of the American War for Independence. As we quickly approach the 250th anniversary of the founding of our great republic, The Messenger-Press thought it fitting

that we steal a glimpse through the not-solong-ago colonial historical lens and take, if you’ll allow, a bayonet’s stab at exploring the important role that Allen’s Town Village — Allentown Borough, for all of you modernists — played in that struggle for independence. We must state clearly at the outset, with regard to this historical reflection — this columnist’s tribute to his beloved hometown and her residents — that we, a journeyman writer under threat of a guillotine-like deadline and you, his historically picayune readers, are as mere riders on a dark and galloping charge. See CROSSROADS, Page 6

History takes the center stage for America’s 250th By Bill Sanservino

Graduates celebrated commencement at Allentown High School on June 22. At top, valedictorian Ava Kuey (left) and salutatorian Amelia Pfeffer pose before the ceremony. Below left, Jesse Johnson shows off his Snoopy-themed graduation cap. Below right, Amariah Lopez waits for the start of commencement exercises June 22. For more photos, see page 16. (Photos by Suzette J Lucas.)

Before there was a country, there was a Deleware River crossing in the dark, a capital city waiting in fear, a battlefield outside Princeton and a network of farms, taverns, churches and meetinghouses where ordinary people were pulled into extraordinary events. Some 250 years later, those places are not just names in a history book. They are parks, libraries, museums, downtown streets, ballfields, old houses and river towns that still shape daily life in central New Jersey. America’s semiquincentennial — the

250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence — will be marked nationally this July 4. But in this region, the anniversary is especially local. Allentown Bordentown, Trenton, Princeton, and the surrounding communities were not bystanders to the Revolution. They were part of the ground on which the future of the country was marched over, fought for and, eventually, claimed. The events listed below run from July 1 through the following months, and range from fireworks, concerts and public readings of the Declaration of Independence to museum exhibitions, walking tours, See 250th, Page 9

SWALS STATUARY RISTORANTE

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