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Streets Cooper
Street |
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| Unit, 100 & 200 Blocks | 300 Block |
| 400 Block | 500 Block |
| 600, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 1100, & 1200 Blocks | |
| 1900 & 2000 Block | |
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COOPER STREET is one of the oldest streets in Camden, and is named after the Cooper family. William Cooper was one of the first settlers in this part of New Jersey. Camden was known as Cooper's Ferries for many years prior to the city being incorporated in 1828. The curb line of Cooper Street, from Front Street to the tracks of the Camden & Atlantic Railroad Company, were moved twelve feet towards the center, and the street paved with Belgian blocks in 1881. In 1927 the curb lines were moved back twelve feet from 4th Street to 9th Street. This improvement was completed in September of 1927. Cooper Street runs from the waterfront east to 9th Street, with a short block of homes and business still standing above 11th Street. Prior to the construction of Interstate Route I-676, Cooper Street ran all the way to 12th Street. Cooper Street was for many years one of the most prestigious addresses in Camden, and many homes of historic significance, due to both the residents and the architects of said homes, were and still are on Cooper Street. The "beginning of the end" for Cooper Street came in the early 1920s, when three mansions were torn down to make room for the Walt Whitman Hotel. On June 30, 1940 all the homes on the south side of the 900 block were destroyed when the R.M. Hollingshead chemical factory, which occupied most of the block, fronting on 9th and on Market Streets, exploded and burned to the ground. Little known outside of East Camden is the "other" Cooper Street, which runs between North 19th and East State Street. This short street only has one single family home and a block of 13 row homes. |
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Do you have an Cooper Street memory or picture. Let me know by e-mail so it can be included here. |
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Journalist Will Paul wrote an article around 1940 about growing up on Cooper Street in the 1880s. Be sure to read his Memories of Old Cooper Street. |
| North 5th Street & Cooper Street | |
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Northwest
Corner
429 Joseph J. Read October 31, 2005 Click on Images to Enlarge |
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Southeast
Corner
Cooper Street Centenary as seen from Northeast
Corner |
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Cooper Street
Centenary as seen from Northeast
Corner |
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500-512 Cooper Street - The Hotel Plaza |
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| The Plaza Club Hotel circa 1935 | The Hotel Plaza | ||||
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| The Hotel Plaza | The Hotel Plaza - early 1960s | ||||
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| 500 Block of Cooper Street | |
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501
&
505 Cooper Street April 17, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge |
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501 Cooper Street James
M. O'Neil |
| 505 Cooper Street Charles
Cox |
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509 Cooper Street 1927 Known as the Remington & Vosbury Building when erected, the building at 509 Cooper Street was designed by prominent local architect Joseph N. Hettel Sr. |
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505,
509
&
511 Cooper Street April 17, 2004. Click on Images to Enlarge
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511 Cooper Street April 17, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge Home Dr.
William A. Davis
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| 513 Cooper Street |
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514 City Hall in
background |
| 515 Cooper Street
Dr. Paul
Markley |
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| 516 Cooper Street |
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| 517 Cooper Street 1900s-1910s Dr. Byron
Fortiner |
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| 518 Cooper Street |
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| 519 Cooper Street |
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522 Cooper Street Dr.
G. Russell Atkinson |
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520-522 Cooper Street April 17, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge |
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520-522 & 524 Cooper Street April 17, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge |
| 521 Cooper Street Tommy
Skymer |
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| 523 Cooper Street |
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524 Cooper Street |
| 525 Cooper Street
Charles
S. Boyer |
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525 Cooper Street Madeline Palma |
| 525 Cooper Street Howard R. Yocum |
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525 Cooper Street Frank
F. Neutze Sr. |
| 526 Cooper Street |
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524 & 530 Cooper Street April 17, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge |
| 527 Cooper Street
Judge Frank T. Lloyd |
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| 528 Cooper Street |
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530
& 532 Cooper Street 1892 |
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532 Cooper Street April 17, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge |
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532 Cooper Street George
W. Jessup |
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| 534 Cooper Street |
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534
to
500 Cooper Street 500 Block in background February 7, 2004 Click on Images to Enlarge |
| 535 Cooper Street |
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538,
540, & 542 Cooper Street John Cheney House |
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538 Cooper Street Melbourne
F. Middleton Jr. |
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538 Cooper Street Pohle's Restaurant Click on Images to Enlarge |
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538 Cooper Street Pohle's Restaurant |
| 539 Cooper Street |
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540 Cooper Street Markeim-Chalmers, Inc. Camden Courier-Post |
| 540 Cooper Street William T. Cahill |
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| 541 Cooper Street |
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| 542 Cooper Street |
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| 543 Cooper Street |
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| 544 Cooper Street |
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Looking
West from North 6th Street 1892 Click on Images to Enlarge |
| 538, 540, and 542 Cooper Street The Cheney Houses, designed by architect Arthur Truscott |
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600 Block of Cooper Street Looking West from 626 Cooper Street - About 1907 |
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Left side of street: The building with the conical roof is 538 Cooper Street. The building at far left is 604 Cooper Street. Also visible is 544, 542, 540, 538, 534, and 532 Cooper. Right: The first building at far right is 605 Cooper Street |
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