The Shop at St. Peter’s

The Shop at St. Peter’s will be closed from 3/27 thru 4/1. It will reopen on Tuesday, 4/2.

PLEASE NOTE

We ask that you refrain from leaving donations outside the building during off hours. Too often, your donations are damaged by weather before we can get to them, and that is a great loss for everyone!

Thank you and bless you!

The Shop at St. Peter’s welcomes all!

Be sure to check out the holiday section for Fall decor and art work!

Donations are only accepted on Saturdays until 1:00 PM.

A Special Note: Please Help our Volunteers and arrive BEFORE 1:00 PM with donations. This helps us to process your support and close at an appropriate hour! Thank you!

Our Thrift Shop is the Little Engine that Could, a dynamic enterprise that provides excellent goods from gently worn clothing and footwear to everyday household items plus antique china and costume jewelry, toys and even bikes.  It’s Spotswood’s favorite place to donate, bargain hunt, browse or simply come in for conversation.

Hours of Operation:

  • Saturdays 10 AM-2 PM (Donations Accepted 10 AM-1:00 PM)

  • Tuesdays 10 AM-2 PM

  • Thursdays 10 AM-2 PM; 6 PM-8 PM

  • Call the Shop direct during hours of operation 732-251-4113

Welcome to the Shop! Thrift, and Lend a Hand to our Mission and Ministries!

¡Bienvenido a la Tienda! ¡Ahorra y echa una mano a nuestra misión y ministerios!

Bienvenue dans la boutique ! Économisez et prêtez main forte à notre mission et à nos ministères !

 

The Shop at St. Peter’s is open!

Welcome home to St. Peter’s, and welcome home to the Shop at St. Peter’s!

Bienvenido a casa St. Peter’s, y bienvenido a casa de la Tienda de St. Peter’s!

 
 

…in English, mostly

en Espagnol….principalmente

Best of all, 100% of The Shop revenues support the ministry of St. Peter’s.

Have you been noticing more and more of those bright-colored charity clothing bins showing up in and around Spotswood?  As featured recently on NPR, David Gonzalez of The New York Times investigated and found that, many of them are a scam, and that the laws make it hard to remove once they’re in place. A growing number of companies are illegally placing used-clothing bins throughout NJ. The receptacles typically have signs that indicate donated goods will go to the poor or, in some cases, to legitimate charities but State officials said the needy do not benefit from much of what is collected. Most of the proceeds often end up with for-profit entities that can be impossible to trace, or even to contact.

SPREAD THE WORD!  Our Thrift Shop supports the great work we do within our local community.  Join us. Reduce (your household clutter), Reuse (one person’s junk is another person’s treasure) and Recycle (even trash gets a second life!).