|
![]() |
Camden
Post-Telegram June 24, 1910 Engine
Company 7 |
Camden Post-Telegram - October 17, 1912 |
LAST
HONORS TO FIREMAN BUZINE Great crowds last night and today viewed the remains of Fireman Lewis Buzine who was fatally stricken with paralysis last Thursday while driving No. 3 engine. The body was exposed to view at his late home, 1606 Broadway, where services were held this afternoon. Last
night nearly one hundred members of the Eighth Ward Republican Club
were in attendance and paid their last respects. This afternoon the
services were conducted by Reverend
William Grum, pastor of the Trinity M. E. Church. Assistant
Chief George Cox was in charge of the detail of firemen, numbering
nearly fifty, every company being represented by one or more members,
which acted as an escort to the body as it passed through the streets
to New Camden Cemetery. The pallbearers were members of No. 3 Engine
Company in charge of Captain
Nicholas. The
room was filled with choice floral designs. The Eighth Ward Republican
Club sent a large star and crescent. The design from the Firemen’s
Mutual Benevolent Association was a large circle with a big
"5" in the center, being the number of the local lodge.
Members of No. 3
Engine Company of which Mr. Buzine was driver, sent a three-foot
circle of white chrysanthemums and asters designed as a clock and
bearing the inscription "The Last Alarm". The big figures
"83" designated the number of the box from which the alarm
came and in the center was the dial of a clock with the hands pointing
to 1:32, the time the company left on what proved to be Buzine’s
last run. There were also many floral tributes from the family. The funeral arrangements were in charge of George Blake. |
Camden Post-Telegram - December 11, 1914 |
|
...continued... |
|
Master Street - Mary J. Ball
Home & Day Nursery - Thomas
Nicholas |
Camden Daily Courier * July 30, 1915 |
|
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... |
|
![]() |
John
Stockton - Peter B. Carter Thomas J. Nicholas - William Patterson Charles Cook - Walter Mertz William Cason - Robert Whitley T. Grant Middleton - John H. Lennox John A.S. Hunt - George Cattell Walter W. Johnson - Walter W. Lee Clarence Baker - Walter Wolverton Albert Denise - William Barr |
Camden Daily Courier * July 30, 1915 |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Peter B. Carter | |
![]() |
![]() |
Camden Post-Telegram * July 30, 1915 |
|
![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Peter B. Carter | William Patterson |
Charles
Cook -
Walter Mertz
-
William Cason
-
Robert Whitley
-
John H.
Lennox T. Grant Middleton - John A.S. Hunt - George Cattell - Walter Wolverton Walter W. Johnson - Walter W. Lee - Clarence Baker - Albert Denise - William Barr |
Philadelphia Inquirer - July 30, 1915 |
|
![]() |
John
Stockton - Peter B. Carter
|
Click on Images for PDF File of Full Article |
Philadelphia Inquirer - October 2, 1915 |
![]() |
John
A. Stockton - Peter B. Carter -
Thomas J. Nicholas William Patterson - Walter W. Browning - George P. Cox Engine Company 3 |
Camden Post-Telegram * February 25, 1918 |
|
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
MacAndrews
& Forbes - William L. Miles -
Engine Company 3 - F. Walter Toms -
William Mills William J. Kelly - Howard Marshall - Thomas Leeson - Charles H. Mills - Thomas Nicholas Frank Chambers - William J. Rose - Daniel Smith - Robert Whitley - William Miller - Russell Benson Arthur Wingate - Roy De Haven - Jules Hubert - John T. Garrity - John A.S. Hunt - Harry Stone |
![]() |
Philadelphia
|
![]() |
|
,,,continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
,,,continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
Samuel Liker - J.C.Dunn & Co. oilcloth works - F.A. Poth & Sons brewery |
Philadelphia Inquirer - February 12,1920 |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Peter
B. Carter - Sitley
& Son - I. Asbell -
Chelton Avenue - South
6th Street |
Philadelphia Inquirer - February 12,1920 |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Peter
B. Carter - Thomas
J. Nicholas - Sitley
& Son - I. Asbell |
Camden Post-Telegram * August 2, 1920 |
![]() |
Thomas Nicholas - Peter B. Carter - Thomas Clark - Mortica Clark |
Engine
Company 6 |
Standing:
Unknown, Thomas
"Tim" Shanahan, Unknown, Unknown, Unknown |
![]() |
Philadelphia Inquirer Peter
B. Carter Click on Image for Complete Article
|
![]() |
![]() |
Camden Courier - May 22, 1925 | |
![]() |
|
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
William
Chambers - Leonard
Megee - Thomas J. Nicholas |
Camden Courier-Post - February 22, 1928 | |
$225,000 FIRE RUINS 5 UPTOWN PLANTS | |
RESIDENTS
FLEE AS FLAMES RAGE IN BIG BUILDING Factory of Evans Leather Co. Saved by Valiant Work of Firemen APPARATUS IS DISABLED; DEBRIS BURIED FIRE PLUG Metal Stamping Firm, Textile Concern Heavy Losers; Pattern Shop Saved |
|
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... | |
![]() |
![]() Thomas Nicholas - James Tatem Manuel Kane Harry M. Leigh - David Ellis Engine Company 2 Engine Company 4 Engine Company 5 Engine Company 6 Segal Street |
Click in Images to Enlarge |
Camden Courier-Post - April 4, 1928 |
|
![]() |
|
...continued... |
|
![]() |
|
Thomas
Nicholas - John
H. Lennox - Rollo
Jones - William Harring Clarence
Madden -
George B. Wade - William W. Patterson |
![]() |
Camden
Courier-Post Thomas
Nicholas - John
H. Lennox - Rollo
Jones William Harring - Clarence
Madden - George Hunt Ladder Company 2 - Ladder Company 4 Engine
Company 1 -
Engine
Company 11
|
![]() |
Camden Courier-Post - April 18, 1930 |
3
YOUTHS HELD AS BLAZE RAZES Three boys are being held and two others are sought in the investigation of the $45.000 fire which today destroyed the warehouse of Sitley & Son, wholesale hardware, roofing material and grain dealers at Sixth and Bulson streets. The three boys were ordered held by Police Judge Pancoast after authorities expressed belief that the three alarm fire was caused either by thieves or boys smoking cigarettes on the premises. Two of the youths admitted they stole coal from the plant's siding last night, while the third confessed that he, and two other boys were in the plant last evening. He said his two companions, who are expected to be arrested this afternoon, were smoking One fireman was slightly hurt when he ran a nail into his foot, while other firefighters narrowly escaped injury when the roof of the-blazing building collapsed. A dense fog, rain, great clouds of thick smoke and intense heat' all hampered the firemen, and rendered them practically helpless for more than three hours. When the blaze was finally under control at 8:00 a.m., only the blackened and buckled walls remained standing, Practically the entire stock was lost. but through the courage of four men including two policemen: a team of terrified horses and three trucks were saved from the blazing stable. Twenty employees were temporarily deprived of work. Discovery of three rolls of wire fencing on nearby railroad tracks and the presence at two men near the premises when the blaze was discovered led Fire Chief Thomas Nicholas to believe thieves had thrown a cigarette near some flammable material. The arrested boy is John Brodzik, 1927 Fillmore Street. Two other youths, John Hadyniak, 16, of 685 Ferry Avenue, and Anthony Parraine [Piraino- PMC], 11, of 2026 South Seventh Street, arrested on a charge of stealing coal from the Sitley siding last night are also being held. They declare they were not in the plant. In addition to the smoke and heat firemen were further hampered by the fact that two railroads pass the building. Many of the hose lines had to be stretched over the tracks, so that in order to prevent passing trains, from which thousands of commuters saw the fire, from cutting the lines, holes were dug under the tracks and the lines run through the excavations. Captain David Ellis, of No. 7 fire company at Mt. Ephraim and Kaighn Avenues, ran a nail in his foot, and after being given first aid treatment at the scene was taken to the West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital. The first alarm was sounded at 4:18 a.m. from a box at Fillmore Street and Chelton Avenue. The fire was discovered by Paul N. Naurath, 1727 Master Street, an engineer at the Camden brewery, which is in the immediate vicinity of the Sitley plant. Naurath ran to a gasoline filling station at Broadway and Chelton Street from where he telephoned to fire headquarters. He later told Police Lieutenant George Frost that when he noticed the smoke and flames he saw two men running around the Sitley stable, which is attached to the main plant. However, he paid no attention to them, being intent upon turning in an alarm. While fire apparatus sped to the scene, Naurath, Frederick Baum, 431 Winslow Street; Patrolman Frank Del Rossi and Police Sergeant Edward Carroll, heard the shrill screams of horses in the stable, which had quickly become an inferno, Horses Rescued The four rushed into the stable, broke down the door, and led out the two horses, which several times attempted to run back into the flames. The men also drove three trucks out of the place before they were driven away by the dense smoke. The building occupies a plot about 300 feet square and comprises several one and two-story sections. There wax formerly a grain elevator on the site belonging to the Sitleys, but it was destroyed by fire more than a decade ago and never rebuilt. On the south side of the plant are the Atlantic City Railroad tracks, and on the east side the West Jersey and Seashore Railroad lines. Flames Spread Rapidly Believed to have started either in the stable or at the extreme northern end of the plant, the fire quickly swept through the entire building. Rolls of tarred paper and bins of grain were quickly consumed, throwing out huge clouds of smoke. Two more alarms were sounded for additional apparatus, but it was not until 7:30 a.m. that firemen could enter the building. Meanwhile, about 50 hose lines were stretched to the building and water continually played on the fire. Commissioner Frank B. Hanna arrived and increased the water pressure five points at the pumping stations to keep a water supply to feed the hose lines. Chief of Police Lewis H. Stehr also sped to the fire. A touch of tragedy was added when Thomas Mills, 70, of 431 Viola Street, employed by the Sitleys for 40 years as a packer, arrived. The elderly workman burst into tears when he saw the flames, and sobbed that he was now out of work and had a family to support. Finally, about 8 a. m., firemen had the blaze under control, after the roof had caved in. Only the walls stood, but several times they threatened to collapse. The owners, Frank B. Sitley, Sr., of Woodbury, and his son, Frank B. Sitley, Jr., arrived, but declined to estimate their loss. However, police and firemen fixed an approximate damage of $25,000 to the building and $20,000 to the stock. Lieutenant Frost found three rolls of wire fencing which had been taken from the building, They were lying on the Reading Railroad tracks, apparently dropped by thieves when police arrived. Young Brodzik was arrested at 8:00 p.m. yesterday by Special Officer John Stevenson, who turned him over to Patrolmen Smith and Rieh. The youth was charged with suspicion of having broken into the place, and is alleged to have first denied being in the building, but later admitted that he and two other boys crawled through a basement window. The boy declared that he neither smoked nor stole anything, but said that other boys had smoked. He refused to divulge their names. Hadyniak and Perraine were arrested last night and charged with theft of coal from the siding. Brodzik declared those two were not the boys who were with him last night, All three were arrraigned before Judge Pancoast in police court this morning and held without bail pending investigation. |
Camden Courier-Post - March 9, 1932 | |||||||
|
![]() |
Camden
Courier-Post G.H.P.
Cigar Company |
Thomas
Nicholas - John
H. Lennox - Rollo
Jones - William Harring |
Camden Courier-Post - January 25, 1928 |
Tags to Be Sold in City, Suburbs to Aid Hospital Members of the Woman’s Board to the West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital have gathered their forces and are in readiness for their annual Tag Day tomorrow. The assistance of all the city and suburban auxiliaries as well as the aid of the Camden City Firemen have been enlisted. The city and suburbs will be covered by the various groups selling the small cardboards while food and flower sales will be conducted at various points. In Camden, the City Auxiliary will conduct a food sale at 407 Broadway, and the board members under the direction of Mrs. Charles Lacy will hold another at 540 Federal street. General arrangements for Tag Day are under the direction of Mrs. William B. Scott, president of the Women’s Board. The members of the board include: Mrs. Harvey Cannon, Mrs. John Danenhower, Mrs. William Clifton, Mrs. Benjamin Wrobleski, Mrs. Ruth Blessing, Mrs. Isadore Green, Mrs. Meyers Baker. Mrs. Lee Griscom, Mrs. George Woodward, Mrs. Joseph Kobus, Mrs. James J. Scott, Mrs. Edith Kerbaugh, Mrs. A. K. Eynon, Mrs. Richard Connor, Mrs. Abe Fuhrman, Mrs. Clarence Fisher, Mrs. Kenneth Athey, Mrs. Robert Warwick and Mrs. F. T. Garrison. Assistance of the fire department of the city has been arranged through the courtesy of Chief Thomas Nicholas. Sales being conducted by the auxiliaries are under the direction of the following chairmen: Audubon, Mrs. Henry R. Tatem, Jr.; Camden, Mrs. Harry Hackman; Collingswood, Mrs. Milton M. Bitter; East Camden Juniors, Miss Martha Stone; Delair, Mrs. William Morrow; Gloucester, Miss Elizabeth Felbs; Gloucester Heights, Mrs. Mary Gormerley; Haddonfield, Mrs. William F Clement: Haddonfield Juniors, Mrs. Hartje Riddel; Council of Jewish Women, Mrs. Henry Cooperson; Pennsauken and Merchantville, Mrs. J. Perry Long; Haddon Heights, Mrs. Frank Underkuffier; Italian Branch. Mrs. F. Puleo; Polish Branch, Mrs. Edward Praiss; Stratford, Mrs. Charles Jaggard; Woodlynne, Mrs. Charles Harrison. Members of the Women’s Board of West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital are planning an outing to Washington’s Crossing on Monday, June 20. Mrs. William B. Scott, president, is chairman on arrangements for the trip which will be made by bus. The party will leave the Hotel Walt Whitman at 10 o’clock that Monday morning and luncheon will follow at The Olde Tavern Inn.. |
Camden Courier-Post * October 8, 1932 |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
...continued... |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Thomas
J. Murphy - Josiah Pedigree -
William W. Patterson - Fred Schaar -
Roy. R. Stewart David S. Rhone - John W. Golden - Arthur Colsey - Thomas P. Murphy - Thomas J. Nicholas Daniel W. Leach - Harry Hankins - James McDermott - Joseph T. Johnson - Harry Bakley - Irving Varley James M. Ellis - William Bryant - Samuel Hibbert - William C. Horner |