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HARRY
JACOBS WAGNER JR. served as a Camden Fire Fighter for many years, rising
to the rank of Acting Chief of Department in 1958.
Harry
Jacobs Wagner Jr.
was born February 1, 1900 in New Jersey to Harry J. and Sue Wagner.
Harry Jacobs Wagner worked as an ironworker, a boilermaker, and later as
an engineer. Susan Wagner had been previously married, to man named
Sharp, and had a daughter from the earlier marriage when the census was
taken in 1900. The Wagners lived in a rented home at 815 Bridge Avenue,
next door the Mathias and M. Caroline Hess. The two families would live
side by side for over 30 years. Mathias Hess and family lived at 719 Carman Street
in 1890, this worth noting as Harry
J. Wagner Jr.
would live most of his
life before 1950 on that block.
By
the time the 1906 Camden City directory was compiled, the Wagner family
had rented a house at 745 Carman Street,
while at 747 Carman lived Mr. and Mrs. Mathias Hess, and a boarder
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named
George C. Wagner, Harry Sr.'s brother (his name is sometimes given as George
K. Wagner). Both George and Harry Sr. had their occupations listed as
ironworker.
When
the 1910 census was taken, the Harry Wagner family then were renting a
home at 745 Carman Street.
Besides George and his parents, both 36 at the time, the family included
step-sister Ethel Kinsey, 17, and brothers Philip B. Wagner, 12; Harry
J. Jr., 10; Roy A. Wagner, 8 and George
C. A divorced uncle, Robert B. Tomlinson,
lived with the family. Interestingly enough, next door at 747 Carman Street,
lived Mathias and M. Caroline Hess. Robert B. Tomlinson Jr. boarded with
the Hess family, as did uncle George C. Wagner.
Harry
Wagner Sr. and his family lived at 729 Carman Street
in the 1910s through the 1930s. The 1914 City Directory shows the
Wagners at 729 Carman, while the Hess family was at 723 Carman Street.
The 1920 Census shows Harry And Susan Wagner at 729 Carman Street
with their four sons- Harry Jr., 19, Roy, 17,
George, 15, and Mathias, 9,
obviously named after Mathias Hess. The Hess family, Robert Tomlinson
Jr., and uncle George Wagner, were still at 723 Carman Street.
Mrs. Hess passed away in February of 1927. Mathias Hess would
subsequently go to live with Harry & Susan Wagner. Another
family had moved to 733 Carman Street
in the 1910s, that of Abijah and Flora Barker. Their son Albert
Barker would many years later follow Harry Wagner Jr. onto
the Camden Fire Department.
The 1924 City
Directory indicates that Harry Wagner Jr. was single, still living at
729 Carman Street, working as a clerk. He was still living at
729 Carman Street when the 1927 City Directory was compiled. No
longer working as a clerk, Harry Wagner Jr.
had joined the Camden Fire Department.
On January 1, 1928,
Harry J. Wagner and other Camden fire fighters organized the Box 315 Association.
This organization was chartered for the mutual
benefit of Camden Firemen, its principal purpose being to fund a
commemorative badge for all members of the Department retiring at twenty
or more years of service. In the event that an active member died before
achieving retirement status, a death benefit in the sum of $20.00 would
be paid to the member's estate. Its title, 315, was arbitrarily chosen
as the number of the first Box transmitted over the circuits, following
the organization's formation. A cabinet of Officers; a By-Laws
Committee; Auditing Committee; and a Board of Trustees comprised of one
representative from each fire company in the City, were designated by
election and appointment.
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This
automobile ornament remains the only artifact from the
long gone association. Box 315 was located at Ninth
Street and Ferry Avenue.
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All
active members of the Department were expected to join the organization.
An initiation fee of $1.00 and regular dues assessed at ten cents per
month, funded operations. Any member of the Department that failed to
join the organization within three months after completing his
probationary period in the Uniformed Force, was required to pay an
initiation fee of $5.00, plus the average of all dues and assessments
incurred from the time he was eligible to join. The association met on
the first Wednesday of each month.
Charter
members of the By-Laws Committee were Chester Andrus, Chairman; Harry
Wagner, Henry Zook, Harrison Pike, William Spencer and Nelson Andrews.
The association is believed to have actively functioned until sometime
during the 1940s.
The 1929 City Directory also shows
that Harry Wagner Jr. had joined the Camden Fire Department
and was living at 723 Carman Street
with his wife, Ella "Jane" Wagner. Apparently the
young couple moved into the former Hess house when Mathias Hess
went to live with Harry Jr.'s parents. The 1930 Census shows the
Harry Wagner Jr. family at 723
Carman Street
with
their two children, Harry J. Wagner III and Jane. Mr. and Mrs.
Wagner would reside at the Carman Street
address into the 1960s.
By
1947 Harry Wagner Jr. had been promoted to acting Captain.
This post was soon made permanent, and he continued to rise
through the ranks, as acting Battalion Chief, Battalion Chief,
and District Chief. Early in 1958, upon the retirement of Chief
of Department William Van Pfefferle, Harry J. Wagner Jr.
was appointed as Acting Chief of Department, pending the
confirmation of Edward McDowell by the City Commission. Chief Wagner
resumed his post as District Chief. He retired in the
1960s and moved with his wife to Cape May Courthouse NJ. During
the 1960s and 1970s one "urban renewal" project after another
tore through downtown Camden. The 700 block of Carman Street
literally disappeared, the present Police Administration Building, its
parking and impound lots occupying the land where much of Carman Street
once was.
The
1947 Camden City Directory also shows that his son Harry J.
Wagner III, was also serving as a fire fighter with the Fire Department in Camden.
Brother Roy A. Wagner was then the owner of Roy's Tavern,
at 800 Federal Street,
where brothers Phillip and George C. Wagner worked as
bartenders. Roy's Tavern
moved a few years later to
733 Federal Street,
where it remained open into the early 1970s.
Youngest brother
Mathias Wagner managed the Woolworth's store at Broadway and
Federal Street.
Harry
J. Wagner Jr. was last a resident of Cape May NJ, where he passed
away in January of 1980.
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