Donald Grant Herring Estate | |
| Location | 52, 72, 75 Arreton Road,Princeton, New Jersey |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 40°22′55.1″N74°39′54.3″W / 40.381972°N 74.665083°W /40.381972; -74.665083 |
| Built | 1919 |
| Architect | Wilson Eyre Jr. |
| Architectural style | Tudor Revival Arts and Crafts |
| NRHP reference No. | 91001927 |
| NJRHP No. | 1745[1] |
| Significant dates | |
| Added to NRHP | January 17, 1992 |
| Designated NJRHP | November 25, 1991 |
TheDonald Grant Herring Estate, calledRothers Barrows, was designed byWilson Eyre Jr. in 1919 for Donald Herring, a member of thePrinceton University faculty. The three properties at 52, 72, and 75-77 Arreton Road are the surviving remnants of the 117-acre estate, which was subdivided in 1949. The estate's significance is as the last, chronologically, of the estates that once ringed Princeton. It is one of the finest examples of theArts and Crafts movement in Central New Jersey.[2]
In 2016, the estate was put up for sale, listed at $3.8 million.[3]
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