Streets
of
Camden, NJ

Stevens Street


STEVENS STREET was named after the two Stevens brothers, Robert L. and Edwin A. Stevens, who owned a large tract of land south of the Camden & Amboy Railroad, which they laid out into building lots about 1840.

On May 4, 1875 Camden City Council, by ordinance, vacated Stevens Street east of 6th Street for a hospital which was to be called "Camden Hospital", subsequently changed to "The Cooper Hospital" in honor of its donors. In 1888 an ordinance was passed moving the easterly curb of 6th street, between Mickle and Benson Streets, thirty feet westward, making the street from curb to curb thirty feet wide, the ground so vacated to be kept forever free from buildings. 

The charter of the Camden Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary Association was granted February 5, 1885. The house at 4th and Arch Streets was fitted up for hospital use and opened on March 2, 1885. In 1887 the property at West and Stevens Streets was purchased, and the hospital moved there and continued its work until the fall of 1890, when it was voted to close the hospital. On May 15, 1891 the West Jersey Homeopathic Dispensary and Hospital association was incorporated. The house at 3 North 5th was rented and fitted up as a dispensary; and later the building at West and Stevens Street was purchased from the old Association and opened to the public on March 25, 1892. This early hospital moved to Mount Ephraim Avenue, and is known in modern times as the West Jersey Hospital. The cornerstone of the present West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital at Mount Ephraim and Atlantic Avenues was laid on June 29, 1912. 

The Camden Day Nursery Association organized on April 14, 1890. The Association opened its Nursery at 416 Stevens Street in 1894. 

In 1914 the Amoroso Bakery opened at 320 Stevens Street. It remained their until 1929, when it moved back to Philadelphia. Amoroso rolls remain a Delaware Valley delicacy to this day.

The Young Women’s Christian association (YWCA) moved into its present new building on Stevens Street above Broadway on May 17, 1924

In 1942 the Holl Block, at the northeast corner of Broadway and Stevens Street, was razed to make room for the block of stores that still serves Camden shoppers over sixty years later. In July of that year 225 Broadway, on the northwest corner of Broadway and Stevens, was also razed to make way for two new stores.

Around 1970 the 200 block of Stevens Street was condemned and razed. The Royal Court Townhomes were built as a rent to own public housing project.  Problems plagued the facility, and by the mid 1990s only six of the ninety-three units were occupied. Only after The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development stepped in and de-politicized the situation, was the Housing Authority of the City of Camden, under the leadership of Executive Director Dr. Maria Marquez, able to complete the renovations and sell the homes to individual private owners, the last unit having been sold by early 2004. 

Do you have a Stevens Street memory or picture. Let me know by e-mail so it can be included here.

 Phil Cohen


Stevens Street West of Broadway - 1909

100 block of Stevens Street
  100 Stevens Street

 

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to Enlarge



200 block of Stevens Street
  201 Stevens Street

1918-1919 Giulio Cinelli
1947 No Bar 

209 Stevens Street

1933 William McCloud

Camden Courier-Post
May 7, 1934

Broadway
Stevens Street
Silver Street
John Kaighn
Cooper Hospital

216 Stevens Street

Frank S. Fithian

1880s-1890s

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to Enlarge

219 Stevens Street

William F. Barnett

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to Enlarge

THEFT OF 3 SCREENS BRINGS 30-DAY TERM

John Rafferty, 35, of 222 Stevens Street, was sentenced Saturday by Police Judge Pancoast to 30-days in county jail on a charge of stealing three screens belonging to Giacomo Daraio, of 706 South Third Street.

Rafferty has been frequently in police court during the last year on charges of drunkenness, and, Judge Pancoast expressed surprise that he should now be accused as a thief. Leon Branch, a detective, testified that Rafferty had stolen the screens.

222 Stevens Street

1933 John Rafferty

Camden Courier-Post
June 19, 1933

  225 Stevens Street

Charles & Norman Parker
1933

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231 Stevens Street

Benjamin D. Coley

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to Enlarge

  232
Stevens Street

1922 Antonio DiTalla

  234 Stevens Street

1935-1942 Egizi's Cafe
1954-1964 High Speed Line Cafe 

1970 Razed to make room for Royal Court Townhomes 

Police Capture Clothing Thieves Robbing a Store

 Two clothing thieves, caught in the act of robbing the tailor shop of Lewis Pologruto, 237 Stevens Street, early this morning, were held in $2,000 bail for court by Recorder Stackhouse. The men are Leo Sours, 19, 35 Washington Street, and Thomas Bandock, 39, 24 Kimball Street, Philadelphia. 

Angelo Caputo, a private watchman, saw the men loading clothing in a small motor truck and notified Miller and Johnson, special officers, and Policeman Fred Wagner. The officers closed in on the robbers and discovered them in the store pacing a large bundle of clothing. Six suits were already in the vehicle. 

The police later learned the truck had been stolen from the garage of Antonio DiTalla, 232 Stevens Street.

237
Stevens Street

Camden Daily Courier
January 20, 1922

Lewis Pologrutto
tailor

 

 

237
Stevens Street

Camden Courier-Post
March 21, 1932

Emil Tisani  - Luigi Celani
South 2nd Street
Royden Street

 

  241 Stevens Street

1940-1956 William Lorusso
Lorusso's Cafe
1959 Stevens Bar
1964-1966 Golden Goose Bar

1970 Razed to make room for Royal Court Townhomes


300 block of Stevens Street
  300 Stevens Street

1918-1919 Frank Moles Saloon

  302-304 Stevens Street

1940-1947 Miraglia's Cafe
1956 R&M Cafe

302-304 Stevens Street

1959-1970 Lev's Bar
Clarence Levister & Herman McCargo

303 Stevens Street

October 1, 2005

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to Enlarge

 

305 Stevens Street

Private First Class
Bartholomew P. Tirro

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to Enlarge

  314 Stevens Street

Albert A. Mungioli

315 Stevens Street

Steward's Mate First Class
Ralph F. Adams

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to Enlarge

320 Stevens Street

Amoroso's Bakery
1914-1929

  320 Stevens Street

Pompeano's Pastry Shop

1947

CABARET SINGER IS HELD ON BAD CHECK CHARGE

Charged with obtaining money under false pretense 
and forging a friend's signature on two checks a year 
ago, a Camden cabaret singer is in the county jail in 
default of $300 bail. 

Inez Wiley, 25, of 321 Stevens Street, was arrested 
by Herbert Kayser and Walter Schock of Haddon 
Heights police on complaint of Mrs. Ora Curry, 837 
Jackson Street, a former domestic in the household 
ot Mrs. Willat Lippincott, Station Avenue, Haddon 
Heights. 

Mrs. Curry testified before Police Recorder Joseph 
A. Patton, that while working for Mrs. Lippincott she 
became ill and was compelled to remain at her home 
for a number of weeks. During that time, she said, 
her friend, Inze Wiley, visited Mrs. Lippincott and 
without Mrs. Curry's knowledge, requested financial 
slstance. On two occasions Mrs. Lippincott gave the woman checks to the order of Mrs. Curry to the amount of four and five dollars respectively.

These checks had been cashed by the woman and 
endorsed with Mrs. Curry's forged signature, 
according to Mrs. Curry. Meeting Mrs. Lippincott 
after many months she learned the truth and caused 
the Wiley woman's arrest. 

321 Stevens Street

Pompeano's Pastry Shop

1933 

  322 Stevens Street

George Whitman's First House

1871- September 1873

George Whitman, Walt’s younger brother, worked full-time in Camden, which enabled him to marry and take a house at 322 Stevens Street in 1871. He brought his mother and his brother Edward to live with them in August of 1872 and soon began construction of a three-story house on a corner lot at 431 Stevens Street. Before he could finish it, his mother became ill and died in May 1873. Still partially paralyzed by a stroke he had suffered four months earlier in Washington, Walt Whitman hastened to Camden to see his mother, arriving on 20 May, three days before her death. He intended to stay only until his strength returned, but his convalescence was very slow. In September he moved with George’s family into the new house at 431 Stevens, and in 1874 he was dismissed from his clerkship in Washington, leaving him a permanent resident of Camden.

322 Stevens Street

October 1, 2005

I'm not sure if this is the home George Whitman, Walt’s younger brother, lived in in 1871. I believe this building was erected later, and that George Whitman's 322 Stevens was most likely a frame, similar to the one his brother Walt lived in around the corner, at 328 Mickle Street. The building was condemned in July of 2005.

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  327 Stevens Street

1880 Rev. Jacob B. Graw & Family
Joseph R. Graw

  327 Stevens Street

Camden Day Nursery

1920s-2005

  328 Stevens Street

Frank Mucci

1920s-1947

  329 Stevens Street

Robert Outwater
Richard H. Outwater

1880s-1910s

  330 Stevens Street

Dr. A.E. Street

1870s-1880s

336 Stevens Street

October 1, 2005

336 Stevens is adjacent to 301 South 4th Street,
which is the corner building

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Intersection of South 4th and Stevens Streets
Southwest Corner

October 1, 2005

301 South 4th Street is the corner building

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Southeast Corner

October 1, 2005

402 Stevens Street is the corner building

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400 block of Stevens Street
  401 Stevens Street

Fountain of Life Pentecostal
Church

2004

402 Stevens Street

October 1, 2005

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In 1947 this building was known as the Todd Apartments.

402,
404, 408 & 414
Stevens Street

October 1, 2005

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  411 Stevens Street

Anthony & Anna Fino
November 25, 1944

  411 Stevens Street
1947

John F. Blackson
414 Stevens Street

1900s-1910s Tenny Hutchison
1900s-1910s George Holl Hutchison

HORSE-DRAWN WAGONS like this were used in the early 1900s by Victor Talking Machine Company to haul Victrolas. The work-day ended with delivery, of mail, about three or four small pouches and possibly a canvas sack of second class mail-Victor catalogues, to the old post office, 3rd and Arch Streets. A mailing department employee accompanied the driver on the trip. The former mail clerk, George H. Hutchison (center), of 120 Glenwood Avenue, MerchantvilIe, furnished the photograph.

  416 Stevens Street

Camden Day Nursery

The Camden Day Nursery Association organized on April 14, 1890. The Association opened its Nursery at 416 Stevens Street in 1894. 

420 Stevens Street

1888-1893 James W. Hope Family
James & Susan Hope
James W. Hope Jr. 
Henry "Harry" Hope - Emma Hope
Eddie Hope - William Hope
Harriet Hope - Carrie Hope

Camden Daily Telegram
March 21, 1893

CAMDEN MAN TRIES SUICIDE IN PHILADELPHIA

Herman Blizzard of 423 Stevens street attempted to commit suicide in Philadelphia yesterday by drinking poison, according to police. Blizzard was taken to a hospital and later arrested. He will be given a hearing today. 

423 Stevens Street

1933 Herman Blizzard

Camden Courier-Post
June 16, 1933

2 JAILED FOR BEGGING MONEY FROM AUTOISTS

Charged with being drunk and disorderly, James Kelly, 34, of 324 Penn Street, and Charles Murphy, 59, of 423 Stevens Street, were each sentenced to 60 days in jail Saturday by Police Judge Garfield Pancoast.

They were arrested at Eleventh and Linden streets yesterday on complaint of motorists who said the men would wait until a red light flashed and then walk into the street and ask for money.

423 Stevens Street

1933 Charles Murphy

Camden Courier-Post
June 25, 1933

  423 Stevens Street

Chester Mignogna

August 10, 1936 
August 11, 1936

  428 Stevens Street

Mary Dischert

Mary Dischert kept a boarding house here from the 1900s through the 1920s. Her daughter Elsie married longtime Camden policeman Walter T. Welch.

429 Stevens Street

Michael Mignona

429 South 4th Street

1936 Chester Mignogna

Camden Courier-Post
August 10, 1936

Clifford Carr
George Getley

Jacob Mutzer

Michael Meloni
Dominic Vizzone

  430 Stevens Street

Dr. A.E. Street

1887

1933 Robert Powell
taxicab driver

  431 Stevens Street

George Whitman's Second House

1874-1884

Poet Walt Whitman moved here with his brother when the building was completed in September of 1874. He later purchased the home at 328 block of Mickle Street that is known around the world as The Walt Whitman House. In 1884 George Whitman moved his family to a farm twelve miles from Camden.

431 Stevens Street was lost to fire in 1994.

432-434
Stevens Street
(southeast corner
 of Stevens & West Streets)

West Jersey Homeopathic Dispensary & Hospital
1888-1914
Astor Apartments
1940s-1950s

  433 Stevens Street
  437 Stevens Street
Intersection of Stevens Street & Judson Place
  438 Stevens Street

Emmanuel United Pentecostal
Church

2004

  440 Stevens Street

1910s-1920s
Harry C. Richmond
1926
Shepherds Hall

  440 Stevens Street

Nazarene Baptist Church

1947


500-538 block of Stevens Street
514 Stevens Street

Edward Stokes King Jr.

523 Stevens Street

Trinity German
Evangelical Lutheran Church

Built in 1857, the design of this Gothic building located on Stevens Street between Broadway and 5th in Camden, is in the tradition of St James the Less, built ten years earlier across the river in Philadelphia, but the original denomination was German Lutheran. The bright stone above the entrance proclaims, in German, this to be a German church, but the rest of the inscription is unreadable.
      The building now houses the New Visions Community Services of Camden.

533 Stevens Street

Dr. Aaron Howell

Camden Courier-Post Obituary
February 22, 1927

DEMOCRATIC TRUSTEES PLAN SUMMER PROGRAM

Trustees of the Democratic Club of Camden County discussed summer plans last night at Democratic Headquarters, 538 Stevens Street.

Edward J. Borden, a trustee, was congratulated on his election as president of the New Jersey Real Estate Commission. Other members present were Samuel P. Orlando,  president; Victor King, Patrick H. Harding, Harry L. Maloney and Sidney Kaplan.

538 Stevens Street

Democratic Club
of
Camden County

Camden Courier-Post
June 8, 1933

 


Broadway & Stevens Street
Stevens Street

West
of Broadway
1909

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to Enlarge

Northwest Corner
of
Broadway
&
Stevens Street
July 1942

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to Enlarge

Northeast
Corner
of
Broadway
&
Stevens Street

The Holl Block
1890s-1942

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to Enlarge

Northeast
Corner
of
Broadway
&
Stevens Street

1943-2004

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to Enlarge


540-581 block of Stevens Street

The lock, key, auto jack and two one-gallon cans of anti-freeze were stolen from a garage used by George Firth, 540 Stevens Street, Firth told police. The articles were valued at $5.

540 Stevens Street

1938 George Firth

Camden Courier-Post
February 7, 1938

544 Stevens Street

1900s-1910s
Frank J. Hineline

 

565 Stevens Street

Young Women's
 Christian Association
Building

The Young Women’s Christian association (YWCA) moved into its present new building on Stevens Street above Broadway on May 17, 1924Joseph N, Hettel was the architect.

Photo Taken Spring 2003

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  573 Stevens Street

Dr. Marcus K. Mines

1920s-1936

  577 Stevens Street

Dr. Emma M. Richardson
1920s-1930s
Dr. Wendell Johnson
1947

579 Stevens Street

Arthur W. Claphan
1900s-1930s

Virginia-born in 1864, A,W. Claphan was one of Camden's most successful Black businessmen from the 1910s through the 1930s.

  581 Stevens Street

Woodrow C. Hughes
&
Family
1890-1891

581 Stevens Street

Dr. Emma M. Richardson

1900s-1920s

581 Stevens Street

Clarence Fuhrman
Fuhrman School of Music

Camden
Courier-Post
February 17, 1928

581 Stevens Street

The
Casimiera Dance Studio

Camden
Courier-Post
October 30, 1931

 

  581 Stevens Street

Dr. Franklin M. Richardson
1947


South 6th & Stevens Streets

Southwest Corner of
South 6th
&
Stevens Streets

First Methodist Episcopal Church
301 South 6th Street

Postcard based
on
1890s photograph

Razed in 2005

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Northwest Corner
of
South 6th
&
Stevens Street

227 South 6th Street

November 2004

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227 South 6th Street

November 2004

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2700 block of Stevens Street
  2779 Stevens Street

1930s-1940
George M. Townsend

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to Enlarge

2796 Stevens Street

1941
Allen Palmer

 

   

2800 block of Stevens Street
  2800 Stevens Street

 

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to Enlarge

  2818 Stevens Street

1924 William A. Lanning
1929 John C. Curley

'ERNIE' 7 YEARS OLD BUT HE HAS REAL PARTY

Ernest McLaughlin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest T. McLaughlin, 2818 Stevens street, celebrated the seventh anniversary of his birth Saturday with a party for playmates.           -

His guests were John Albrecht, Peggy Shaw, Leonard Heintze, Betty Pontz, William Reed, Catherine Baldwin, Harvey Le Fever and Samuel Noecker. 

2818
Stevens Street

1933 Ernest T. McLaughlin

Camden Courier-Post
June 4, 1933

 

  2818 Stevens Street

1947-1977 Charles P. Ott


2900 block of Stevens Street
2937 Stevens Street

Chief Arthur Colsey

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to Enlarge


3000 block of Stevens Street
3000 Block of Stevens Street
East of Dudley Street 

1960s- On the playground of Francis X. McGraw Elementary School, facing northwest. The baseball field stretched from the edge of the playground to Stevens Street, with row homes in the background.   East Camden Middle School was built over the baseball field in 1978.

Photo courtesy of Cynthia Schreiner Washington

Mrs. Ray Erb and daughters, Marjorie and Patricia Anne Erb, formerly of 3014 Stevens Street, this city, have joined Mr. Erb at Denver, Colorado. 

3014 Stevens Street

1930s Ray Erb Family

Camden Courier-Post
June 19, 1933

  3038 Stevens Street

William P. Moll Sr.
1940s-1960s

3038 Stevens Street

Clarence J. Eichel
1920s-1930s

 

3061 Stevens Street

Carmen Iannelli

  3064 Stevens Street

East Camden Middle School

Built in 1978, East Camden Middle School lies between Woodrow Wilson High School and the Francis X. McGraw Elementary School, and adjacent to Woodrow Wilson High's football field.


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