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Belleville Public Library and Information Center
221 Washington Avenue
Belleville, NJ 07109-3189
Tel: (973) 450-3434
Fax: (973) 759-6731


Main Library Hours
Winter: Mon., Tue., Thu. 9-9
Wed., Fri., Sat. 9-5
Summer: Mon. 9-9/Tue.-Fri. 9-5

 Children's Room Hours
Winter: Mon. 9-9/Tue. 9-7
Wed.-Sat. 9-5
Summer: Mon. 9-9/Tue.-Fri. 9-5

Shafter Branch Hours
Mon.- Fri. 2-5
(30 Magnolia St. in School #4)

 

 

BELLEVILLE HISTORY: PEOPLE AND EVENTS
 
THE STAGE COACH AGE

In the early years of the nineteenth century stage coaches connected Belleville with New York. Owners of the stage lines were often proprietors of hotels and other places of lodging and refreshment. Some of these structures became well-known Belleville landmarks before their demise in the twentieth century.

John Williams and John Dow bought the stage line run by Joseph Sandford. Williams kept an inn for his coach customers at Main and John (now Belleville Avenue) Streets. Dow owned a slave named Jacob Robinson who not only drove the coach but also became a partner in the business.

The Williams-Dow-Robinson stage-coach concern eventually came into the possession of T.P. Seaman, the owner of the Mansion House at the corner of Main and Rutgers Streets. This busy place by the bridge over the Passaic was built in the mid-eighteenth century and lived in by Josiah Hornblower. The Mansion House was later the home of members of the Joralemon and Coddington families.

Seaman faced competition in the coaching business from Thomas Farrand who owned a hotel at Main and William Streets. Often called the Van Rensselaer House, it was built about 1800; William Holmes (grandfather of Mayor Hugh Holmes), who operated a snuff mill, lived there before it became a public house.

A final place of refreshment, the Belleville Hotel, stood by the intersection of Main and Mill Streets. Built by Stephen Van Cortlandt, it was torn down in the 1930s to make room for industrial expansion. By that time, stage coaches and stage stops were distant memories. But many of the families associated with these landmark buildings-Hornblower, Joralemon, Van Cortlandt, and Holmes-had streets in Belleville named for them.

Source: Belleville: 150th-Anniversary Historical Highlights 1839-1989 by Robert B. Burnett and the Belleville 150th-Anniversary Committee Belleville, New Jersey. 1991.


Last Update: July 09, 2007