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LAWRENCE BOULTON was born in New Jersey on July 5, 1897 to Charles G. Boulton and his wife, the former Annie Wuest. He was named after his maternal grandfather, Lawrence Wuest. His grandfather was a lithographer, and his father workled as an oil cloth printer. The 1900 Census shows the Wuests and Boultons living at 139 South 31st Street in East Camden. When the Census was taken in 1910 the family. which included older sister Laura and younger sister Annie, lived at 141 Dudley Street in East Camden, still with the grandparents, Laurence and Annie Wuest. By 1914 the Boultons had moved to their own home, at 15 North 32nd Street. Lawrence Boulton was a veteran of World War I. When he was 21 he married. His wife Charlotte bore a daughter, Doris Jane, around 1920. The 1924 City Directory shows him working as a printer and living at 15 North 32nd Street. He became a member of the Camden Fire Department in April of 1928. The 1929 City Directory lists his address as 21 Terrace Avenue. The Boultons were living at 126 Eutaw Avenue in East Camden in April of 1930. By the summer of 1933 they had moved to 1016 Monitor Road in Fairview. Fear
of enemy air raids in 1942 spawned a
number of Federal Decrees regulating public
conduct in the event of air raid warnings. One new Federal Regulation
prohibited fire apparatus from using sirens in response to alarms. Under
war-time regulations, sirens would be reserved exclusively for air raid
warnings. The use of audible warning devices by fire apparatus was restricted to bells only. The burden to both fire fighters and the public safety was formidable. On March 1, 1942, the inevitable happened. Engine Company 8 while responding to an alarm was involved in a collision with a ten ton truck at Third Street and Kaighn Avenue. Upon impact all of the firemen were thrown into the street. The truck driver declared that he failed to hear the bells of the approaching apparatus. The mishap resulted in injuries to six members and total destruction of the apparatus. Captain Alvin Thompson was listed in critical condition, while Firemen Mitchell Wojtkowiak, Philip Farrow, Leonard Oshushek, Lawrence Boulton and Edwin Robbins were admitted for lesser injuries. Battalion Chief Newton stated that he believed the accident might have been avoided if fire companies were not prohibited from using sirens. Lawrence Boulton was still with the fire department as late as 1947. By that time he had moved to 131 North 25 Street in East Camden. He was still living at that address as late as the fall of 1959. Last a resident of Camden, Lawrence Boulton passed away on October 15, 1968. He was survived by his wife, who joined him in February of 1984. Lawrence Boulton's older sister Laura was the wife of Joseph Shreeve, who served on the Camden Police Department, as did her father-in-law, Isaac Shreeve. |
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Camden Courier-Post - April 4, 1928 |
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Thomas
Nicholas - John
H. Lennox - Rollo
Jones - William Harring - Clarence
Madden |
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Camden Courier-Post - June 8, 1933 |
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Boy
Ball Star Injured,
6
Shaken Up in Crash William
M. Denof Jr., the son of a Camden
undertaker, of Fifth
and Spruce Streets, suffered a possible fractured skull and cuts, and six
other members of the Junior Moose baseball team of the Camden Minor League
were shaken in an automobile accident last night. Their
truck, driven by Silvio Di Medio, 17, of 1105, South
Fourth Street, collided at Fifth
and Berkley Streets with a car driven by Lawrence
Boulton, 35, a city
fireman, of 1016 Monitor Road. The accident occurred at 6:15 p.m. Denof
was thrown to the road. He was treated at the office of Dr. Mordecai M.
Pinsky, 944 South
Fifth Street, and taken home. Denof is second baseman on the Camden
High School team and plays shortstop for the Junior Moose. According
to Detective John Kaighn, the
accident occurred when Boulton, driving west on Berkley
Street, attempted
to make a right turn into Fifth street. Boulton was not held. Others
in the truck were Elmer Yost, pitcher, of·315 Mechanic
Street; Alfred Di Giacomo, third baseman, of Fourth
and Viola streets; Frank Pietrizyk, Jr., of 1061 Morton street; John Pirroti, of 1464 South
Fourth Street, and Forrest Collins, 355 Mechanic
Street. They required no medical treatment. The
youths were en route to a game at Westmont. |
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