The Donald Grant Herring Estate, called Rothers Barrows, was designed by Wilson Eyre Jr. in 1919 for Donald Herring, a member of the Princeton 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.
It is one of the finest examples of the Arts and Crafts movement in Central New Jersey.
[2] In 2016, the estate was put up for sale, listed at $3.8 million.
This article about a property in New Jersey on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.