So, here you stand on Seminary Place, facing a patch of New Brunswick that’s seen more plot twists than an entire season of prestige TV. Welcome to the New Brunswick Theological Seminary… oldest in North America, but don’t let that “oldest” label fool you - this place has always had a bit of a rebel streak.
Let’s wind the clock back to 1784. The British had just cleared out, the ink was barely dry on the peace treaty, and the Dutch Reformed Church was stuck with a classic colonial headache: How do you get new ministers when the only approved training is a long, choppy boat ride to the Netherlands? Solution - start teaching right here, first in New York, in the home of Professor John Henry Livingston. Livingston: Yale grad, Utrecht scholar, could handle Reformed doctrine AND New York rent, which is saying something even in the 1700s.
But New York got pricey even for seminarians, so the Synod started playing real estate musical chairs, moving the operation from the city to Flatbush, then finally giving in to New Brunswick’s charms in 1810. That would have set Livingston up for success, except… Queen’s College, now Rutgers, had its own financial soap opera, closing and reopening more than Livingston probably would’ve liked. Still, Livingston packed up, moved here, and basically invented multitasking: running both church and school, sometimes without an official salary. That, friends, is commitment.
Fast-forward a couple decades. As you look around, picture a crowd of young seminarians overflowing into local boarding houses, paying double what Princeton students did for rent, all crammed together in Old Queens with undergrads and grammar school kids. It’s no wonder that by the 1850s, the seminary’s professors figured, “Let’s just build our own campus.” Local movers and shakers donated a nice swath of land up this hill-soon dubbed “Holy Hill,” though during the Revolution it was a British artillery redoubt. So, from cannons to sermons… talk about a shift in atmosphere.
Ann Hertzog of Philadelphia ponied up thirty grand-no small feat in 1855-to help build Hertzog Hall, the first real home for the seminary. By the 1870s, the campus sprouted a gymnasium - a requirement from donor James Suydam, who wanted those future ministers to get some exercise - and the Sage Library, designed for contemplation, but conveniently stocked with more than 150,000 books and some manuscripts old enough to have survived more than one theological crisis. The library hung onto its original Romanesque character, right down to Victorian brickwork that, frankly, wouldn’t look out of place in a Dickens adaptation.
Of course, nothing ever stays the same. In the 1960s, out went older buildings like Hertzog and Suydam Halls - in came Zwemer Hall, bold, modern, and ready for a new breed of students. And by the 1980s, gone were the days of boarding here - most students are now commuters, many on their second careers, which made the seminary one of the most diverse in the business. Add to that, a major partnership with Rutgers in 2012 - the Seminary sold five acres for Rutgers’ new Honors College, then rebuilt itself as an environmentally smart, technology-heavy campus.
But what really puts a spark into this place is its sheer reach. Alumni have carried the Seminary’s spirit from India to China, Africa to Korea. They’ve launched colleges, written sermons with “viral” reach (for the 1800s; think of Thomas DeWitt Talmage’s sermons read by 25 million), served in far-off missions, and even run Rutgers itself - twice.
If you peek inside the Sage Library, you’ll see archives on the Dutch colonies, stacks of Bibles, and enough Reformed history to make a theologian’s head spin. And if you listen closely in the breeze, you might catch fragments of debate, snippets of prayer, or just - joyfully - the quiet shuffle of people still determined to learn and lead.
So, next time someone says seminaries are quiet, tell them they haven’t met New Brunswick Theological. Here, change has always been the only tradition worth keeping.
To expand your understanding of the academics, gardner a. sage library or the administration and organization, feel free to engage with me in the chat section below.



