First Church The Presbyterians of central
New Jersey had two places of worship in either
Lawrenceville or
Kingston. In 1756 the College of New Jersey (now
Princeton University) opened in Princeton and services were held in
Nassau Hall. A few years later funds were collected to build a church to serve the growing population of students and teachers. The newly constructed First Presbyterian Church of Princeton opened in 1766.
John Witherspoon, the President of the College, began his 25 years tenure as pastor of First Church in 1768.
Witherspoon Church and Second Church As time progressed, divisions within the church occurred and the church spun off two local Presbyterian Churches. After the building burned down in 1835 church notes indicate that African-American members were encouraged to leave the congregation leading to the founding of Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church. Later that same decade the
Second Presbyterian Church was chartered by those who sought a less formal worship style and desired different pastoral leadership. Efforts to merge the three congregations back into one were attempted at various times over the years including an effort led by
Woodrow Wilson.
Nassau Presbyterian Church In the early 1970s, First Church and St. Andrews (the new name of Second Church) were without installed pastors. The churches decided to merge but were concerned about one church absorbing the other. The decision was made to create a new church out of the two (the Witherspoon Church was invited to the merger but declined) and Nassau Presbyterian Church was chartered in 1973. The initial congregation had 2,335 members with 1,759 and 576 coming from First and St. Andrew's, respectively. The former building of St. Andrews was sold in 1978 to a new church plant of the
Assemblies of God, the
Nassau Christian Center. The church is part of the national
Presbyterian Church USA. ==Notable ministers and members==