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WILLIAM
E. ALBERT was born in New Jersey around 1870. He was the son of Ernest
and Hannah Albert. Ernest Albert had emigrated to America from Wurttemburg
in what is now Germany. He arrived in Philadelphia in 1860, married
there, and came to Camden around 1865. When the Census was taken
in 1870, Ernest Albert was keeping a hotel, a term then also to refer to
a bar or saloon, at 619 North Front Street in North
Camden. By 1880 the family
also included older siblings Charles, Pauline, and Yetta, and younger
siblings Harry, Louis, and Louis. Ernest Albert was still in business
according to the 1888-1889 Camden
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City
Directory, oldest son
Charles Albert by then working as a bartender. William E. Albert appears in the
City Directory for that year, living on North Front
Street, and working for William McDonnell, who was operating a butcher shop
at 628 North Front Street.
Ernst
Albert passed away shortly afterwards, as the 1890-1891 City Directory
shows that Hannah Albert was then a widow. The Albert family was then
living at 328 State Street. William E. Albert is also named in this
directory, his occupation listed as butcher. The Albert's saloon was
acquired by John F. Hoelzle, who operated it under the name Mechanic's
Hotel.
William
McDonnell resided in the Pavonia section of Stockton Township, what is
commonly known today as Cramer Hill. William E. Albert soon followed his
employer, and eventually bought a home at 2923 Westfield Avenue in what
is known today as East Camden.
By
1910 William E. Albert had been appointed as a Captain on the Camden
Police department. Legend has it that Albert, who had not served on
Stockton Township's police force, was appointed to the captaincy when
the township merged with Camden in 1899, because he owned a horse and
had a thorough knowledge of the streets in the new Eleventh and Twelfth
wards. He had married his wife Louise around 1903, and a daughter, also
named Louise, was born on March 24, 1904. When the next Census was
taken, in January of 1920, the Albert family had purchased a home around
the corner, at 2947 Cramer
Street, the corner of North 30th and Cramer
Street. William E. Albert was still working as captain on
Camden's police department at that time.
William
Albert left the police department during the 1920s. Still living on
Cramer Street, he worked as a night watchman at a clubhouse according to
the 1930 census. During World War II he served as an air raid warden,
and was still living at 2947 Cramer
Street as late as 1946. His
daughter, Louise Albert, remained in residence at 2947 Cramer
Street into the
late 1980s, passing away on June 8, 1989.
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