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Former
Lumber Yard Site in Camden, New Jersey Now An Historic Place
by
Paul W. Schopp
The
remaining buildings and yard of the former Volney G. Bennett Lumber
Company in Camden, New Jersey became a State and National Historic
Place in 1993. Attaining approval for the State Register of Historic
Places on June 28th and the National Register on August 5th, this former
urban lumber yard stands alone as the only yard to be singularly
recognized as an historic site.

1876 - 1924
Until 1912 we delivered by horse and wagon. When a customer, a local
truck manufacturer, was unable to pay his bill we took a truck in
exchange for our lumber.
The
Bennett firm can trace its roots to the year 1876, but the part that
Camden, New Jersey played in regional lumber history extends even
further back. The rafting of felled timber, from northeast Pennsylvania
and adjoining New York, down the Delaware River began in 1764 and
quickly proved to be the best method to move these logs to Philadelphia
for processing. Soon the bustling port area of Philadelphia became
clogged with rafts that proved a hazard to shipping. The local timber
merchants cast a wistful eye at the mud flats and shallow shore line of
New Jersey and began storing the large timber rafts on the eastern shore
of the Delaware. Log pens were constructed by driving pilings into the
riverbed. This prevented the timber from being carried off by the
changing tides.
In
a normal progression, saw mills began to appear on the Jersey shore of
the river to process the stored timber. The first recorded mill built
was by William Carmen in 1822 and was steam operated. Three lumber
merchants were already conducting business in Camden when Carmen
constructed his mill. Shingle manufacturing was another industry in this
fledgling South Jersey town. Two shingle producers generated enough
waste by-products that their refuse pile became known as Shingle-Shaving
Hill and was a favorite of local children for winter sledding.
Initially, the vast amount of sawdust produced by the numerous Camden
saw mills created logistical problems. But uses were quickly found: much
of the sawdust was dumped to fill lowlands, in some places as much as
forty feet deep, while a substantial amount served as fuel in the mills
and other businesses.
By
the 1840's, the lumbering industry accounted for a substantial amount of
the expanding City’s waterfront from Cooper’s Point to Market
Street, either for raft storage or with sawmills. Lumberyards also
consumed a significant amount of land in the downtown area as the timber
industry created homes, jobs and fortunes. The development of Camden
neighborhoods indicated the local need for lumber, but lumber demand by
wholesale dealers, housing and industrial use was even stronger across
the river in Philadelphia. Camden sawmills produced almost every wooden
housing component: joists, beams, floorboards, laths, doors, windows,
sash, moldings, decorative work and roofing singles.
Lumber
processing became the largest industry in Camden in the 1850's as
rafting traffic down the Delaware increased. In addition, rafts of
timber, mostly white pine from central and northern Pennsylvania began
moving down the Susquehanna River to Port Deposit, Maryland at the head
of the Chesapeake Bay. Camden lumber merchants made purchases of this
timber at either Port Deposit, Maryland or Marietta, Pennsylvania. The
rafts then were moved through the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal to the
Delaware River and towed to Camden.
In
1859, Volney G. Bennett, a 23 year old lumberman from the logging and
rafting community of Hawley, Pike County, Pennsylvania arrived in
Camden, reportedly on one of the Delaware River log rafts. His brother,
Harvey, had been living in Camden since 1850 and worked in a local
sawmill. Volney began as a laborer at the McKeen & Bingham Lumber
Company, which operated a steam sawmill and gristmill as well as a
lumber yard on Water Street above Cooper. Both McKeen and Bingham were
also from Pike County. Bennett advanced quickly at the firm and by 1865
had become a clerk. He remained at this location until 1876.
William
and Franklin Holbert, also from Pike County, influenced Volney to
relocate to their establishment in central Camden, Their Holbert
& Branning Lumber Company, established in 1872, conducted a
steam sawmill, wharf and a sales operation known as the Central
Lumberyard. The management of this company decided to concentrate
their efforts on the processing and wholesale end of the lumber
business. So after brief negotiations. Volney G. Bennett leased the Central
Lumberyard in 1876. Located at this site was Bennett’s first sales
office.
By
the end of 1876, Bennett had purchased his first piece of property for
lumberyard use, where he erected his second sales office, storage sheds
and stables. Bennett assumed the Central Lumberyard name and
continued to use it even after he moved his yard one block north of its
original location. This move allowed Holbert and Branning to expand
their drying yards. Volney Bennett still provided a local outlet for the
sawn lumber and other wood products from the adjacent sawmill.
The
Central Lumberyard had a banner year in 1887, when Volney Bennett
purchased additional lots, expanding his business to fill an entire city
block. An 1890 account of the yard described it as follows:
This
enterprise had its inception in 1876. The premises occupied are 222 by
360 feet in Dimensions, extending from Front to (south) Second Streets
and from Cherry to Spruce Streets. About one-half of the yard is covered
with shedding for the storage of finer grades. An enormous stock is
carried at all times of all kinds of Building Lumber, such as White and
Yellow Pine, Hemlock, Spruce, etc. Mr. Bennett enjoys the closest
relations with the dealers and manufacturers in the West and South and
is thus enabled to handle stuff at the lowest figures... The business
gives employment to about ten men and four teams are required for local
delivery.
The
Holbert & Branning sawmill was dismantled in 1893 and the drying
yard land sold for other uses. Rafting on the Delaware River was
discontinued in 1900 as the Upper Delaware timber regions had been clear
cut. In a prudent business move, sawmills were relocated closer to the
timber source, so that Bennett received an increasing amount of its
lumber, by ship and railroad car, already cut, dried and dressed. Most
of the sawmills disappeared from the Camden riverbank by this time, but
the population of the area continued to grow and lumber merchants
continued to prosper.
On
February 20, 1899, Volney G. Bennett and his sons Alfred and Volney
incorporated under the name of the Volney G. Bennett Lumber Company.
The senior Bennett sold the Central Lumberyard to the corporation
for $4500. From 1900 to 1906, the Volney G. Bennett Lumber Company
acquired property yet another block north of the then-current location.
The lumberyard now occupied two city blocks and had become the largest
retail lumber operation in New Jersey. The volume of business in 1904
was six times what it was five years earlier, with a net worth of
$74,854.28. At this time, each of the two city blocks stored a daily
average of 1,000,000 board feet of lumber.
In
1904, the Volney G. Bennett Lumber Company erected a two-story,
"most modern, brick, slow-burning stables for the housing of its
many teams of horses" and a modern electric derrick to assist in
handling lumber in the yard. As previously stated, in 1890 the firm used
four teams of horses for delivery; after 1904, the number increased to
twenty teams. The horses were kept on the first floor of the new stable,
while the second was used for hay and harness storage. The following
year broke all sales records for the company, with a net profit of
$20,318.64 and three more teams and wagons added to the stable.
Volney
G. Bennett retired from the business in 1905. Six years later, in 1911,
the company was one of the first lumber firms in the state to be ushered
into a new era. In lieu of a cash payment for an overdue account, Bennett
Lumber acquired an autotruck belonging to a large Philadelphia
trucking firm. The advantages over horses and wagons were quickly
realized and soon trucks virtually replaced the wagons and teams. In
1917, the company sold the new stable to the local gas company’s coke
operation for their teams and wagons. Another sale to the gas company
occurred in 1922, which released the portion of the yard below Spruce
Street. With the old yard sold and profits up, construction of a new
sales office occurred to show off Volney G. Bennett Lumber
Company’s corporate success. This new corporate image was
manifested in the 1924 construction of a modern, one-story, Mission
Revival-style ornamental concrete "cinder block" sales office,
immediately adjacent to its former 1904 brick stable.

1924 -1962
Our office, left, was the first "Cinder Block" office building
in the world.
The Stable, right, housed twenty teams of horses and two "Walking
Mules".
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Left: A 1926 view of
the office. |
Civic
responsibilities and other careers were pursued by Bennett and his
children. Volney G. was an officer in several Camden Building & Loan
Associations and was the first President of the Camden Board of Trade.
He also constructed many blocks of homes, both in Camden and its
suburbs. Killam Bennett was a wholesaler of Yellow Pine. In addition, he
owned a local newspaper, The Post-Telegram, published in Camden,
For several years he was the mayor of Riverton, New Jersey, where he
resided. Volney, Junior stayed with the lumber firm and had a long and
distinguished career as president of the Camden Board of Trade,
following the death of his father. He also served as mayor of
Merchantville, New Jersey, his place of residence. Alfred K., after
serving as a Company incorporator, moved to Pasadena, California and
constructed a large hotel. He was also instrumental in the founding of
the Rose Bowl Parade.
In
the 1910's the Volney G. Bennett Lumber Company corporate slogan
was simply, "Buy Bennett’s Lumber". By the 1920's, it had
become "As ‘Sterling’ is to Silver, so ‘Bennett’ is to
Lumber". By 1924, Bennett Lumber was advertising the sale of
lumber, sheet-rock and Creo-Dipt shingles. Other period advertisements
asked consumers "Are you planning to remodel your home?" and
requested potential clients to come to Volney G. Bennett Lumber
Company for suggestions. These ads indicated the company’s trade
in a variety of building materials, besides lumber, and the firm’s
appeal to the home-improvement market as early as the 1920's.
Business
for the company continued briskly, despite the vagaries of the Great
Depression. However, in 1936 the Bennett family lost control of the
corporation to Arthur Collins, who started working for the company in
1912 as a bookkeeper. During World War II, Bennett Lumber
supplied much of the lumber required for the regional war effort. After
the war ended, many of the firm’s customers continued to be local
carpenters and contractors who followed the tradition, begun in 1876, of
traveling to the city’s waterfront for their building material needs.
The housing boom in the Camden suburbs was good for the local lumber
wholesale and retail trade that now mainly sold processed lumber shipped
in from various parts of the country. In the post-war era, many of the
old Camden lumber firms along the waterfront either closed or moved to
the suburbs.

By
the mid 1950's and into the 1960's, homeowners began to repair, remodel
and up-grade their houses. Lumber companies changed their stock and
display to attract the new suburban home-improvement market. Carpenters
and contractors continued to shop at the old lumber company, just as
they had done since the founding. But the Volney G. Bennett Lumber
Company realized that survival as an inner-city yard required
changes to its physical plant and sales methods. Ironically, the first
lumberyard to enter the autotruck era, was also the last to hang onto
its old inner-city connections with the Delaware River and rail lines,
even after most supplies arrived by tractor-trailer.

1963
The Stable before it was renovated. Most of the original structure was
retained and kept as near to the original as possible.
In
April 1962, the former stable was re-acquired by Bennett Lumber.
The firm promptly remodeled the stable’s interior into a complete
sales center for lumber and home-improvement products. The new sales
center also contained a small museum commemorating the lumber trade
through the exhibition of antique tools. By 1966, Harold Roberts had
purchases all outstanding corporate stock which placed the firm back
into Bennett family ownership. Roberts, a native of Vermont, married one
of Volney G. Bennett’s great-granddaughters, Jerry Bennett, in 1946.
He began working for the company as a yardman, eventually becoming a
salesman and bookkeeper in 1950. Harold and Jerry Roberts’ sons,
Stephen and Brian, both joined the firm in the 1970's and now represent
the fifth generation of the Bennett family operating the company. The
firm updated the stable and 1924 office exterior features and joined the
two structures to form a unified commercial storefront. All of this
remodeling was accomplished in a Colonial Revival styling.
Despite
Bennett Lumber’s last attempts to change its inner-city image
to meet the new home-improvement market, the declining image of the City
of Camden was too much to overcome. By the mid-1970's, the City and the
Camden Housing Authority declared the waterfront district and
neighboring area "blighted". The Housing Authority acquired
the Volney G. Bennett Lumber Company Camden property in 1979 as
part of a redevelopment plan for the improvement of the municipal port.
To commemorate the historical significance of the Volney G. Bennett
Lumber Company and its physical heritage, Harold Roberts insisted
that the Camden Housing Authority amend its deed to memorialize this
legacy. The amendment stated that the old sales office and brick stable
would be "maintained by the Authority, its successors and
assignees, in good and occupiable condition, pursuant to the National
Historic Preservation Act of 1966". Roberts also required that a
statement be placed in the deed legally reserving space in the old
stable for the construction of a lumbering museum. This museum would
feature displays of photographs and old tools to celebrate Camden’s
role in regional lumbering. It would also illustrate the share that the Volney
G. Bennett Lumber Company and its officers played in the region’s
heritage.

Later in 1963
The "Stable" after it was renovated. We had a
"Museum" displaying old
tools used in the past. It also told the history of Bennett Lumber
Company and the Lumber Industry.
Upon
settlement with the Camden Housing Authority, the Volney G. Bennett
Lumber Company moved to Barrington, New Jersey where it continues to
operate co-extensively with the Mr. Roberts Lumber Centers. Subsequently,
the Camden property changed hands several times between
quasi-governmental agencies. In 1980, a four-alarm fire swept through
the yard, destroying all but one of the lumber sheds, the sales office
and the stable. In 1991, the property was sold again and the former
stable and office was converted into a restaurant, which continues to
serve fine food today.
The
lumberyard, sales office, stable and associated yard building of the Volney
G. Bennett Lumber Company, like other contemporary lumberyards, have
all been changed over time of reflect changes in technology, lumber
supply, sales markets, fires, real estate demands and corporate image.
However, they still exhibit the essential characteristics of the
commercial late-19th and early-20th century lumberyard trade. They are
significant because they embody the history of the origins, development
and eventual demise of Camden’s lumber milling and lumberyard retail
industries of that period in which Camden served as the regional center.
The
stable is the last industrial stable left in the City of Camden. Once a
ubiquitous structure in a city whose identity cannot be separated from
its industrial history, the Volney G. Bennett Lumber Company stable
serves as the last link to a long-forgotten past in a now-troubled
northeastern city. Mr. Harold Roberts and family are grateful that both
the State and Federal Government recognized the significance of this
site. With the assistance of others in the timber and lumber industry,
Harold Roberts is confident that a lumber museum will yet be located
within the walls of the old stable building on South Second Street in
Camden.

1963 - 1980
We were forced to move due to redevelopment but the "Deed"
called for the
property (the entire city block) be placed in the State and Federal
Registry of Historic Sites. "AND IT WAS".

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