Home of Ringoes — Hunterdon's oldest known settlement, Sons of Liberty meeting site, Red Devils HS, Sourland Mountains, 9.0:1 K-8. Median ~$685K.
Home of Ringoes — the oldest known European settlement in Hunterdon County, dating to 1720.
The township spans 28.56 square miles (28.46 land + 0.10 water = 0.36%) — 8th of 26 in Hunterdon by area, 94th of 565 statewide. Density of just 137.7 per square mile (24th of 26 county — among the lowest in the entire county) reflects East Amwell's character as one of the most genuinely rural municipalities in central New Jersey. Elevation 203 ft. The township is located in the southeastern part of Hunterdon County — touching both Somerset and Mercer counties — and sits at the heart of the Amwell Valley and Raritan Valley regions, bordered by the Sourland Mountains.
East Amwell Township has one of the deepest municipal histories in Hunterdon County. The township was originally part of the much larger Amwell Township — a 200-square-mile area created by Royal Patent of Queen Anne in 1708, the first township in what would become Hunterdon County in 1714. Old Amwell originally encompassed present-day Delaware Township, Raritan Township, Readington Township, East Amwell Township, West Amwell Township, and portions of Clinton, Lebanon, and Tewksbury townships. On April 6, 1846, the original Amwell Township was divided — and East Amwell Township and West Amwell Township were officially formed as separate municipalities. East Amwell is named after Amwell Township, which itself was named after Great and Little Amwell in Hertfordshire, England.
European settlement of the Amwell Valley began early in the 1700s, initiated primarily by pioneer agriculturists of English, Dutch, and German stock. The village of Ringoes — Hunterdon County's oldest known European settlement — was founded at the intersection of two Native American trails that became major colonial crossroads: the Trenton-Easton Turnpike and the Old York Road from Philadelphia to New York (now Route 179). The village developed around John Ringo's Tavern on the Old York Road and was the site of many meetings of the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty, which was formed in 1766 — making Ringoes a significant pre-Revolutionary War political center. Early residents included Johann Peter Rockefeller, ancestor of John D. Rockefeller, the future Standard Oil founder. John Ringo himself was rumored to have buried treasure in town. During the Revolutionary War, the Marquis de Lafayette recuperated at the Landis House (built 1750 by Henry Landis) while a patient of Dr. Gershom Craven, and Capt. John Schenck led an ambush on British dragoons near his Amwell home.
Government operates under the NJ Township form with a Township Committee body. Mayor Jenna Casper-Bloom (D) currently serves; Municipal Clerk Linda Giliberti. The Township Committee rotates the mayoral role annually among its members. The Municipal Building is located in Ringoes 08551.
Education in East Amwell operates through a township-only PreK-8 district plus regional 9-12. The East Amwell Township School District at 43 Wertsville Road in Ringoes serves PreK-8 in a single school — 374 students at an outstanding 9.0:1 student-teacher ratio, classified DFG I under Superintendent Edward Stoloski. The district participates in the Interdistrict Public School Choice Program. For grades 9-12, East Amwell students attend Hunterdon Central Regional High School (Red Devils) at 84 Route 31 in Flemington — one of the largest campus-style high schools in NJ with 2,246 students at 10.3:1 on a 72-acre campus, serving 5 municipalities (Flemington, Raritan, Readington, Delaware, and East Amwell townships) covering 152.5 sq mi and approximately 48,680 residents. 55% AP participation. US News 117th in NJ. East Amwell has one representative on Hunterdon Central's board of education.
East Amwell Township real estate trades at substantial Hunterdon rural-residential pricing reflecting the substantial historic character, the Red Devils HS district access, the Sourland Mountain bordering landscape, and the distinctive Ringoes historic identity. Median sale around $685,000. The township's anchors include the 187-acre Ringoes National Register Historic District (added December 20, 1999), the Amwell Academy (1811 Federal style), the Washington Hotel (~1838 Colonial Revival), the Henry Landis House (1750, where Lafayette recuperated), United First Presbyterian Church of Amwell (founded 1749 by German Palatine settlers as German Reform church), the Reaville Church, the Sourland Mountains corridor, Amwell Lake Wildlife Management Area, and the township's distinctive Ringoes, Larison's Corner, Weert's Corner, Reaville, and Cloverhill communities. ZIPs 08551 (Ringoes), 08559 (Stockton); Area codes 609 + 908.
East Amwell Township's appeal rests on a distinctive combination of strengths producing one of the most historically significant rural municipalities in central New Jersey. First is the Ringoes heritage: the village of Ringoes within East Amwell is Hunterdon County's oldest known European settlement — founded at the intersection of two Native American trails (the Trenton-Easton Turnpike and the Old York Road from Philadelphia to NY) and developed around John Ringo's Tavern, which was the meeting site for the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty in 1766. Early residents included Johann Peter Rockefeller, ancestor of John D. Rockefeller. The Marquis de Lafayette recuperated at the Henry Landis House (1750) during the Revolutionary War. Second is the 187-acre Ringoes NRHP Historic District: added to the National Register on December 20, 1999 for its significance in agriculture, architecture, education, industry, exploration, and transportation. Includes the 1811 Federal-style Amwell Academy, the ~1838 Colonial Revival Washington Hotel, the Henry Landis House, and the United First Presbyterian Church of Amwell (founded 1749 by German Palatine settlers). Third is the Hunterdon Central Red Devils HS access: East Amwell students attend the Red Devils — a comprehensive 9-12 regional high school with 2,246 students on a 72-acre campus, 55% AP, US News 117th in NJ — alongside Flemington, Raritan, Readington, and Delaware. Fourth is the outstanding 9.0:1 K-8 ratio: the East Amwell Township School District (single PreK-8 school, 374 students, 9.0:1, DFG I) maintains one of the lowest student-teacher ratios of any K-8 district in NJ and participates in the Interdistrict Public School Choice Program.
For buyers, this combination produces a market where median sale around $685K reflects substantial value for one of New Jersey's most historically significant rural townships — bordered by the Sourland Mountains, fertile Amwell Valley farmlands, the historic Old York Road corridor, and direct adjacency to both Somerset County and Mercer County.
Ringoes is the oldest known European settlement in Hunterdon County, founded at the intersection of two Native American trails — Trenton-Easton Turnpike and Old York Road. Developed around John Ringo's Tavern. Hunterdon Sons of Liberty met here in 1766. Lafayette recuperated nearby during Revolutionary War.
East Amwell is bordered by the Sourland Mountains with substantial fertile Amwell Valley farmlands attracting settlers since 1720. Southeastern Hunterdon location touches both Somerset and Mercer counties. 137.7/sq mi density — 24th of 26 in Hunterdon, among the most genuinely rural municipalities in NJ.
East Amwell Township School District (PreK-8, 1 school, 374 students, outstanding 9.0:1 ratio, DFG I, Interdistrict School Choice Program). Hunterdon Central Red Devils HS (2,246 students, 72-acre campus, 55% AP, US News 117th in NJ) — alongside Flemington, Raritan, Readington, Delaware.
East Amwell's 28.46-square-mile land footprint produces a substantial stratified inventory mix dominated by historic farmhouse and rural residential stock, plus a meaningful concentration of pre-Revolutionary and 19th-century historic residences within the 187-acre Ringoes National Register Historic District. Stock includes 18th- and 19th-century historic residences (including the Henry Landis House (1750), the Amwell Academy (1811), the Washington Hotel (~1838), and other contributing buildings in the Ringoes Historic District); restored 1800s farmhouses (Federal, Greek Revival, Italianate) throughout the Amwell Valley fertile farmland corridors; 1900s-1940s farmhouses and country residences; 1970s-1990s single-family inventory on substantial lots throughout the township's residential corridors; multi-acre estate properties and working farms throughout the township's rural footprint; and select premium Sourland Mountain-adjacent inventory. The buyer mix is dominated by primary-residence ownership from families anchored by the 9.0:1 K-8 + Hunterdon Central Red Devils pipeline, plus upper-tier purchasers seeking multi-acre estate or working-farm inventory.
Restored 1940s-1970s single-family inventory on substantial lots throughout East Amwell's residential corridors plus smaller historic residences in Ringoes and the township's smaller communities. Primary-residence buyers anchored by the 9.0:1 K-8 + Hunterdon Central Red Devils HS pipeline.
Renovated 1800s farmhouses (Federal, Greek Revival, Italianate) throughout the Amwell Valley fertile farmland corridors, plus 2000s-2020s custom-build inventory on substantial East Amwell lots. Primary-residence demand anchored by Red Devils HS and the Amwell Valley rural-lifestyle character.
Multi-acre estate properties, restored landmark 18th-century historic residences (some contributing to the 187-acre Ringoes Historic District), working farms throughout the Amwell Valley landscape, select premium Sourland Mountain-adjacent inventory, and luxury new construction in East Amwell's most premium corridors.
East Amwell's 28.46-square-mile township footprint organizes around the village of Ringoes (Hunterdon County's oldest known settlement), the 187-acre Ringoes National Register Historic District, the Sourland Mountains bordering the township's southeastern edge, the Amwell Valley fertile farmlands, and the smaller historic communities of Larison's Corner, Weert's Corner, Reaville, and Cloverhill.
Ringoes is the oldest known European settlement in Hunterdon County. The village (population 849 CDP 2020) was founded at the intersection of two Native American trails that became major colonial crossroads: the Nariticong Trail (which became the Old York Road from Philadelphia to New York, now Route 179) and the Trenton-Easton Turnpike. The village developed around John Ringo's Tavern on the Old York Road — and was named for John Ringo. (Genealogical records establish that Philip Ringo, whose uncle was named John, purchased property at the crossroads in the 1730s and received a license to keep a tavern subsequently inherited by his son John.) European settlement of the Amwell Valley began in the early 1700s, initiated primarily by pioneer agriculturists of English, Dutch, and German stock — many settled around the Ringoes crossroads at an early date.
The Ringoes Historic District encompasses 187 acres of the village's historic core and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 20, 1999 for its significance in agriculture, architecture, education, industry, exploration, and transportation. The district preserves a substantial concentration of 18th- and 19th-century buildings exemplifying small agglomerate settlements that proliferated throughout the region to serve dispersed agricultural populations. Architectural styles include vernacular rural buildings whose construction, form, detailing, and spatial organization are representative of the region's 19th-century rural vernacular character. The district encompasses the village's main commercial and residential corridor along the historic Old York Road.
John Ringo's Tavern in Ringoes was the meeting site for the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty, which was formed in 1766 — a decade before American independence. The tavern hosted many meetings — especially war-related discussions — making Ringoes one of the most significant pre-Revolutionary War political centers in central New Jersey. The Sons of Liberty were the primary colonial organization opposing British taxation and policies leading up to the Revolution. The Ringoes meetings tied East Amwell's heritage directly to the broader colonial resistance movement and ultimately to American independence.
The Henry Landis House was built in 1750 by Henry Landis. During the Revolutionary War, the Marquis de Lafayette recuperated at the Landis House while a patient of Dr. Gershom Craven — making the house one of the most significant Revolutionary War-era landmarks in central New Jersey. Lafayette was one of the most prominent French aristocrats supporting the American cause and served as a major general in the Continental Army. The Landis House remains as a contributing building in the Ringoes Historic District, anchoring East Amwell's substantial Revolutionary War heritage.
The Amwell Academy in Ringoes was built in 1811 in the Federal architectural style — a 19th-century private school typical of the many private academies providing classically-based education established throughout the region. The Academy of Science was a second 19th-century private school in Ringoes. The Washington Hotel (former) was built around 1838 in the Colonial Revival style. The United First Presbyterian Church of Amwell at Old York Road and Dutch Lane was founded as a German Reform Church in 1749 by Palatine settlers from Germany — making it one of the oldest religious congregations in Hunterdon County. The Reaville Church anchors the small Reaville community on the township's eastern edge.
East Amwell Township is bordered by the Sourland Mountains — a distinctive geographic and ecological feature shared with portions of Mercer and Somerset counties — and sits in the heart of the fertile Amwell Valley. The Amwell Valley farmlands have been attracting settlers since 1720 and remain substantially agricultural today. Amwell Lake Wildlife Management Area on Route 31 provides protected open space and wildlife habitat. The township's southeastern Hunterdon position (touching both Somerset and Mercer counties) makes East Amwell one of the most distinctive geographic crossroads municipalities in central New Jersey.
Early residents of Ringoes included Johann Peter Rockefeller — the ancestor of John D. Rockefeller, the future founder of Standard Oil and one of the wealthiest individuals in American history. The Rockefeller family arrival in East Amwell predates the Revolutionary War by decades. John Ringo himself was rumored locally to have buried treasure in the town. During the Revolutionary War, Capt. John Schenck led an ambush on British dragoons near his Amwell home. Later in the 19th century, Dr. Cornelius Larison conducted his "Fonic Speling Wurks in Orthoepy" publishing house at Larison's Corner (1876-1909) — one of East Amwell's distinctive historic eccentricities.
"East Amwell Township is home to Ringoes — Hunterdon County's oldest known European settlement, founded at the intersection of two Native American trails that became the Trenton-Easton Turnpike and the Old York Road from Philadelphia to New York. The village developed around John Ringo's Tavern, which served as the meeting site for the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty (formed in 1766) — making East Amwell one of the most significant pre-Revolutionary War political centers in central New Jersey. Early residents included Johann Peter Rockefeller, ancestor of John D. Rockefeller. The Marquis de Lafayette recuperated at the Henry Landis House (1750) during the Revolutionary War. The 187-acre Ringoes Historic District (NRHP listed December 20, 1999) preserves the Amwell Academy (1811), the former Washington Hotel (~1838), and the United First Presbyterian Church of Amwell (founded 1749 by German Palatine settlers). The township was originally part of the 200-square-mile Old Amwell Township created by Queen Anne's royal patent in 1708 — the first township in what became Hunterdon County. East Amwell was formally incorporated April 6, 1846 when Old Amwell was divided into East and West Amwell. Bordered by the Sourland Mountains, with fertile Amwell Valley farmlands. Median sale around $685K reflects substantial value for one of New Jersey's most historically significant rural townships."
Buyers shopping East Amwell typically cross-shop against the Hunterdon Central HS sending-district cluster and the broader Old Amwell legacy cluster: Delaware Township (sister Old Amwell municipality, same Red Devils HS, Green Sergeant's Covered Bridge), Raritan Township (sister Old Amwell municipality, same Red Devils HS, largest Hunterdon by population), Readington Township (same Red Devils HS, largest Hunterdon by area), and West Amwell Township (East Amwell's twin formed simultaneously April 6, 1846 from Old Amwell).
Town | Median Sale | Population | Land Area |
|---|---|---|---|
East Amwell Township ★ | $685,000 | 3,917 | 28.46 mi² |
$695,000 | 4,560 | 36.66 mi² | |
$725,000 | 23,447 | 37.48 mi² | |
$675,000 | 16,128 | 47.56 mi² | |
$625,000 | 3,005 | 21.65 mi² |
★ Subject town. Sources: U.S. Census 2020, Hunterdon County government, NJ Department of Education, East Amwell Township government, National Register of Historic Places. East Amwell Township population 3,917 (2020), est. 3,937 (2023). Ranks 416th of 565 in NJ + 12th of 26 in Hunterdon County. Land area 28.56 sq mi (28.46 land + 0.10 water = 0.36%); 94th of 565 in NJ + 8th of 26 in Hunterdon. Density 137.7/sq mi — 24th of 26 in Hunterdon County (among the lowest in the entire county, reflecting East Amwell's substantial rural character). Elevation 203 ft. ZIPs 08551 (Ringoes), 08559 (Stockton). Area codes 609 and 908. Named after Amwell Township, which was itself named after Great and Little Amwell in Hertfordshire, England. The township was originally part of the much larger 200-square-mile Old Amwell Township, created by Royal Patent of Queen Anne in 1708 — the first township in what would become Hunterdon County (in 1714). Old Amwell originally encompassed present-day Delaware Township, Raritan Township, Readington Township, East Amwell Township, West Amwell Township, and portions of Clinton, Lebanon, and Tewksbury townships. On April 6, 1846, the original Amwell Township was divided — and East Amwell Township and West Amwell Township were officially formed. East Amwell is located in the southeastern part of Hunterdon County, touching both Somerset County and Mercer County. The township is in the Amwell Valley and Raritan Valley regions, bordered by the Sourland Mountains. NJ Township form of government with Township Committee body. Mayor Jenna Casper-Bloom (D); Municipal Clerk Linda Giliberti. The Township Committee rotates the mayoral role annually. The Municipal Building is in Ringoes 08551. Schools: East Amwell Township School District at 43 Wertsville Road in Ringoes (comprehensive PreK-8, single school, 374 students 2022-23, outstanding 9.0:1 student-teacher ratio, DFG I, Superintendent Edward Stoloski, Business Administrator Heidi Gara, participates in the Interdistrict Public School Choice Program). Hunterdon Central Regional High School (Red Devils, 84 Route 31 Flemington, grades 9-12, 2,246 students 2024-25, 10.3:1 ratio, DFG I, 72-acre campus, serves 5 municipalities: Flemington Borough + Raritan Township + Readington Township + Delaware Township + East Amwell Township, 55% AP participation rate, US News 117th of 411 high schools in NJ, Superintendent Jessica Cangelosi-Hade, Interdistrict Public School Choice Program). East Amwell has one representative on Hunterdon Central's board of education. Major anchors: Ringoes (Hunterdon County's oldest known European settlement, CDP population 849 in 2020, developed around John Ringo's Tavern at the intersection of two Native American trails that became the Trenton-Easton Turnpike and the Old York Road from Philadelphia to New York); 187-acre Ringoes Historic District (added to NRHP December 20, 1999 for significance in agriculture, architecture, education, industry, exploration, and transportation, includes 13+ contributing buildings); Amwell Academy (built 1811, Federal style, 19th-century private school); Academy of Science (second 19th-century private school in Ringoes); former Washington Hotel (built ~1838, Colonial Revival style); Henry Landis House (built 1750 by Henry Landis, where Marquis de Lafayette recuperated during the Revolutionary War while a patient of Dr. Gershom Craven); United First Presbyterian Church of Amwell at Old York Road and Dutch Lane (founded as a German Reform Church in 1749 by Palatine settlers from Germany); Reaville Church; Sourland Mountains corridor; Amwell Lake Wildlife Management Area on Route 31; Larison's Corner (with Larison's Corner Cemetery on Old York Road, site of Dr. Cornelius Larison's "Fonic Speling Wurks in Orthoepy" publishing house 1876-1909). Other named communities: Weert's Corner, part of Reaville, Cloverhill (named for Peter C. Clover, formerly Koughstown). Notable historical residents: Johann Peter Rockefeller (ancestor of John D. Rockefeller); the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty (formed 1766) met at John Ringo's Tavern. Pricing varies by section and product type — upper-tier multi-acre estate properties and luxury new construction routinely reach $1.25M-$2.5M+. Comparison populations: Delaware Township 4,560 (2020), Raritan Township 23,447 (2020), Readington Township 16,128 (2020), West Amwell Township 3,005 (2020). Verify property-specific pricing with The Prodigy Team before contract.
Queen Anne's 1708 Royal Patent + 1846 Old Amwell Division. East Amwell Township was originally part of the much larger 200-square-mile Old Amwell Township, created by Royal Patent of Queen Anne in 1708 — the first township in what would become Hunterdon County in 1714. Old Amwell originally encompassed present-day Delaware, Raritan, Readington, East Amwell, West Amwell, and portions of Clinton, Lebanon, and Tewksbury townships. On April 6, 1846 — after 138 years — the original Amwell Township was divided, and East Amwell Township and West Amwell Township were officially formed. Named after Great and Little Amwell in Hertfordshire, England.
Ringoes: Hunterdon County's Oldest Known Settlement + Sons of Liberty. The village of Ringoes within East Amwell is Hunterdon County's oldest known European settlement — founded at the intersection of two Native American trails (the Nariticong Trail/Old York Road and the Trenton-Easton Turnpike). The village developed around John Ringo's Tavern, which became the meeting site for the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty (formed 1766) — a decade before American independence. Early residents included Johann Peter Rockefeller (ancestor of John D. Rockefeller). During the Revolutionary War, the Marquis de Lafayette recuperated at the Henry Landis House (1750) while a patient of Dr. Gershom Craven, and Capt. John Schenck led an ambush on British dragoons near his Amwell home. The 187-acre Ringoes Historic District (NRHP listed December 20, 1999) preserves the Amwell Academy (1811 Federal), the former Washington Hotel (~1838 Colonial Revival), the Henry Landis House, and the United First Presbyterian Church of Amwell (founded 1749 by German Palatine settlers).
Outstanding 9.0:1 K-8 + Hunterdon Central Red Devils HS. Education in East Amwell is one of the township's most distinctive characteristics. The East Amwell Township School District at 43 Wertsville Road in Ringoes operates a single PreK-8 school serving 374 students at an outstanding 9.0:1 student-teacher ratio, classified DFG I, under Superintendent Edward Stoloski. The district participates in the Interdistrict Public School Choice Program. For grades 9-12, East Amwell students attend Hunterdon Central Regional HS (Red Devils) at 84 Route 31 — one of the largest campus-style high schools in NJ on a 72-acre campus, 2,246 students at 10.3:1, 55% AP, US News 117th in NJ — alongside Flemington, Raritan, Readington, and Delaware. East Amwell has one representative on Hunterdon Central's board of education.
Mayor Casper-Bloom, Sourland Mountains, and Amwell Valley. East Amwell operates under the NJ Township form of government with a Township Committee body. Mayor Jenna Casper-Bloom (D) currently serves; Municipal Clerk Linda Giliberti. The Township Committee rotates the mayoral role annually. The township is bordered by the Sourland Mountains and sits in the heart of the fertile Amwell Valley — farmlands that have been attracting settlers since 1720. East Amwell's southeastern Hunterdon location touches both Somerset County and Mercer County, making the township one of the most distinctive geographic crossroads municipalities in central New Jersey. Other named communities include Larison's Corner, Weert's Corner, Reaville, and Cloverhill (formerly Koughstown). ZIPs 08551 (Ringoes), 08559 (Stockton); Area codes 609 and 908.
Median sale pricing in East Amwell Township runs around $685,000, with variation by section and product type. Entry-tier restored 1940s-1970s single-family inventory and smaller historic residences in Ringoes and the township's smaller communities trade $475K-$685K. Family-tier renovated 1800s farmhouses throughout the Amwell Valley fertile farmland corridors plus 2000s-2020s custom-build inventory occupy $625K-$1.1M. Upper-tier multi-acre estate properties, restored landmark 18th-century historic residences contributing to the 187-acre Ringoes Historic District, working farms throughout the Amwell Valley landscape, and select premium Sourland Mountain-adjacent inventory routinely reach $1M-$2.5M+. East Amwell's substantial pricing reflects Hunterdon's oldest known settlement heritage, the Red Devils HS district access, the outstanding 9.0:1 K-8 ratio, and the distinctive Sourland Mountains + Amwell Valley landscape.
East Amwell Township students attend the East Amwell Township School District at 43 Wertsville Road in Ringoes for PreK-8 — a single school serving 374 students at an outstanding 9.0:1 student-teacher ratio, classified DFG I, under Superintendent Edward Stoloski. The district participates in the Interdistrict Public School Choice Program. For grades 9-12, East Amwell students attend Hunterdon Central Regional High School (Red Devils) at 84 Route 31 in Flemington — one of the largest campus-style high schools in NJ on a 72-acre campus, 2,246 students at 10.3:1, 55% AP participation, US News 117th in NJ. Hunterdon Central serves 5 municipalities: East Amwell, Flemington, Raritan, Readington, and Delaware townships.
Ringoes (population 849 CDP 2020) is the oldest known European settlement in Hunterdon County. The village within East Amwell Township was founded at the intersection of two Native American trails that became the Trenton-Easton Turnpike and the Old York Road from Philadelphia to New York (now Route 179). The village developed around John Ringo's Tavern, which served as the meeting site for the Hunterdon Chapter of the Sons of Liberty (formed in 1766) — making Ringoes a significant pre-Revolutionary War political center. Early residents included Johann Peter Rockefeller (ancestor of John D. Rockefeller). The Marquis de Lafayette recuperated at the Henry Landis House (1750) during the Revolutionary War. The 187-acre Ringoes Historic District was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 20, 1999.
East Amwell Township was originally part of the much larger 200-square-mile Old Amwell Township, created by Royal Patent of Queen Anne in 1708 — the first township in what would become Hunterdon County in 1714. Old Amwell originally encompassed present-day Delaware, Raritan, Readington, East Amwell, West Amwell, and portions of Clinton, Lebanon, and Tewksbury townships. On April 6, 1846 — after 138 years of unified governance — the original Amwell Township was divided, and East Amwell Township and West Amwell Township were officially formed as separate municipalities. Named after Amwell Township, which itself was named after Great and Little Amwell in Hertfordshire, England. Mayor Jenna Casper-Bloom (D) currently serves.
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