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Sunday, February 28, 2010
1871: Horace Greeley Visits Hamilton Square
1861: CAMP OLDEN ALREADY LAID OUT
Saturday, February 27, 2010
2010: GRAND OPENING OF "HAMSTAT" TOMORROW; YOU'RE INVITED FOR A "SNEAK PEAK!"
1910: GLOBAL WARMING IN EARLY HAMILTON OR GLOBAL COOLING?
1891: RUDOLPH KUSER OBIT
1855: THE BENJAMIN LORD FARM
1903: BERNADINE AVENUE IN HOMEDELL
1911: HOW DOGTOWN GOT ITS NAME
Friday, February 26, 2010
1919; MERCER RUBBER CO.: THE SAYEN CONNECTION
1903: LIBERTY, LALOR, STANTON AND ADELINE STREETS
2010: HHS 1960 50TH REUNION
FROM DON NUGENT MARCH 2; SORRY I COULDN'T SEND THIS TO ELEANOR AS YOU REQUESTED DON, I SEEM TO HAVE LOST ELEANOR'S EMAIL ADDRESS WHEN VERIZON NUKED MY COMPLETE EMAIL CONTACT DIRECTORY. TRUSTING THAT SHE OR A CLASSMATE WILL PICK UP THIS MESSAGE:
Tom,
THIS FROM ELEANOR GUEAR:
Tom - Thanks so much for the Reunion announcement! I DID NOT know that you would include pictures! I'll keep you posted on our plans
Eleanor
Thank you, John. I will visit www.homesteadishome.org. I hope you return to www.glover320 often.
This From Pat Wilkes:
Pat wrote:
As a former Trentonian, it was fun checking out this website and blogs. It really brought back many happy memories especially now since we're preparing for our 50th Hamilton High School West reunion. My high school days were the best of my life.
(Thanks, Pat; my school years were also a very important part of my life.)
===================
This from Bob Chianese:
Tom:
I just hooked up with your blog from a member of our 50th reunion committee-we're meeting in Hamilton this June.
I used to have call WA2AXE and remember the Trenton Sunday morning gang on 75 meters: my ham mentors were Gat, Zol, and Steve QJO. I had a Cal call sign many years (WA6LCC) until I forgot to renew my license at the 10 year renewal! I'm studying for a new General but it's hard.
I'm a retired university English prof. and look forward to our HHS reunion this summer. My wife is from Trenton High, also class of 1960.
73, Bob
(Many thanks for visiting Glover320, Bob. I hope you return often)
2010 FEBRUARY 25 BEFORE THE SNOW ARRIVED
Thursday, February 25, 2010
2010: WELL DONE, MAYOR BENCIVENGO, COUNCIL, AND TOWN FATHERS!
1913: MORE ON THE ORIIGIN OF TRENTON STREET NAMES
1883: CHAMBERSBURG AS FEW TODAY WOULD RECOGNIZE IT
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
TO ACCESS THE "ARCHIVES" MORE CONVENIENTLY
(Type in a key word and click on the magnifying glass)
With the former archives listing way down at the bottom of the home page, many newcomers to this site didn't realize that there are HUNDREDS of other earlier entries on this blog, dating back to November, 2005, all available by a simple click on a given month.
THANKS FOR VISITING; I HOPE YOU RETURN OFTEN.
1938: EWING'S LANNING SCHOOL
2010: PERPETUAL HONOR AND HOMAGE
1938: PLANNING A DANCE FOR IMMACULATE CONCEPTION BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL
Ralph Lucarella has left a new comment on your post "1938: PLANNING A DANCE FOR IMMACULATE CONCEPTION B...":
Hi Tom: That is a nice photo of my friend Art Holland. We were teamates on the Southards baseball team at that time. His brother Joe, also in the photo, was a County Freeholder and of course Art became one of the better mayors for the city of Trenton. They were living on Tyler Street at that time and joined other Chambersburg people in sharing political problems of the area. Best regarda
2010: ROBINS AND FORSYTHIA: HARBINGERS OF SPRING
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
1990'S: CABLEVISON CAME, LOCAL PROGRAMMING WENT!
1911: THE SEARCH FOR ANDERSON FARM
1906: HAMILTON'S HISTORIC ANDERSON FAMILY FARM (BROMLEY)
I am researching the evolution of the neighborhoods in Hamilton Township and in that research I am coming up with very interesting material which points to the true rural character that was once the location of huge farms. Right now I am looking for a very elusive subject: The Anderson Farm, which goes back to Revolutionary War years. I have found that the Anderson Farm homestead was located in the area of today's Atlantic and Greenwood Avenueand that the Anderson Farm extended all the way to Greenwood Cemetery; mute testimony to the size of these local farms.
Name: James Anderson ge in 1860: 62
Birth Year: about 1798
Birthplace: New Jersey
Home in 1860: Hamilton, Mercer, New Jersey
Gender: Male
Post Office: Trenton
Household Members:
James Anderson 62
Thirza Anderson 55
Hezekiah A Anderson 35
Matilda Anderson 33
Adaline A Anderson 31
Mary J Anderson 29
Caroline Anderson 26
Aaron Anderson 24
Ellen A Anderson 22
Charles C Anderson 20
George A Anderson 19
Thirza Anderson 17
Louisa R Anderson 13
Phebe C Allen sister of Thirza 52
There were more Anderson's in Hamilton also: Original Farm Sold in 1874 eventually to Greenwood Cemetery Assn.
1907: JOSEPH H. WEST, TOWNSHIP AND COUNTY HISTORIAN
Monday, February 22, 2010
1940: LARRY MANGINE CHALLENGES FRED COCHRANE
Well Tom, I got to know Larry Mangine in the late 30s. We worked along with others at the 112th Field Artillery in Lawrenceville. It was called the NYA project. We worked 8 days a month for $18 and it was some help in those depression years. A group of guys from the Burg, including Larry and I, did a lot of physical work that kept us in good shape. We spoke a lot about fighting and he mentioned how his mother feared everytime he got into the ring. I think that was a big factor in his efforts to make prize fighting a carear. I will say you would not want to know a nicer man than Larry Mangine. Best regards.
1940: JAMES MOSES SCHOOL, VILLA PARK
- rayfromvillapark said...
- Tom, When we moved to Villa Park in 1945, the old Moses school sat diagonally behind our house on the other side of the alley.
The school had been abandoned and was boarded up with some debris strewn about the property. I do remember, however, that we were able to play baseball on the property.
A few years later the school was knocked down and 3 or 4 houses were built on the property.
Does anyone know when the school opened and when it closed? Also, is there any documentation when the building was torn down? I think it was the early 1950s? Rayfromvillapark
IF YOU GO TO THE "SEARCH BLOG" LINK IN THE UPPER LEFT OF THIS BLOG YOU WILL FIND THE GENESIS OF THE JAMES MOSES SCHOOL. Type in Moses School and you will find many entries, along with an 1890's architect's rendering of the school.
1992: THE HAMILTON TOWNSHIP HISTORICAL SOCIETY
- No meetings during the months of January and February.
- The December meeting is a Wassail Party Open House from 2 to 4 P.M. at the John Abbott II House. A truly festive and very enjoyable Christmas event.
- The June meeting is held on the lawn of the John Abbott II house on Kuser Road, weather permitting. If inclement weather, the meeting reverts to the Hamilton Township Public Library meeting room.
Membership in the Society is as follows:
Single: $10.00 annually
Family: $15.00 annually
Checks made payable to:
Historical Society of Hamilton Township,
P.O. Box 1776,
Hamilton, NJ 08620
1992: THE LATE BOB SIMPKINS: THE ORIGINAL HAMILTON HISTORIAN
You must carry it with you or you find it not."
Saturday, February 20, 2010
1908: KLOCKNER SCHOOL: IN THE BEGINNING
1935: LAWRENCEVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOLS CLASS OF '35
Hi Tom; I noticed the name of Walt Krichling in that group of graduates. I believe he went on to play football with the University of Penn. If I remember correctly, he was outstanding in high school and college. That was just about the time I was going to Trenton High. Best regards.
Coach Walt Krichling was on the THS faculty in the 60s, and on the football staff with Coach Pat Clemons and Coach Bob Callahan
Friday, February 19, 2010
1935: WHEN THE TRENTON FIRE DEPARTMENT WAS ALL VOLUNTEER
1935: THE TRENTON FREEWAY AS IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN
Ralph is a senior who is a local treasure with memories that he has of the era of the 30's and upward.
Ralph: Your comments add valuable first person experiences and are very much appreciated.
- Ralph Lucarella said...
Hi Tom: That's a good shot of the Post Office, where my brother and I worked until 1955 when we left to build the Hamilton Bowling Lanes. I can recall the time the freeway was built and also the canal that ran through there. They were great times for the city and the beginning of big changes in routes through out Trenton. I remember eating breakfast in the dinner across the street from the Post Office for 15 years,
Friday, February 19, 2010
1935: JACKIE HAMILTON, HHS '52 IS ONE YEAR OLD
1935: DEDICATION OF THE EWING MUNICIPAL BUILDING
1973: COLONIAL FIRE CO.: GOODBYE LIBERTY STREET, HELLO KUSER ROAD
Thursday, February 18, 2010
1935: PARKWAY SCHOOL, EWING NJ
1931: THE COLLEGE OF NEW JERSERY AKA TRENTON STATE TEACHERS' COLLEGE
Two years before I was born, that local institution of learning that my generation knew of as "State Teachers' College" was being built over in Ewing Township. My only contact with that august institution was way back in 1952 when I decided that I would like to attend the school and get a teaching degree majoring in history. Sadly. the $900 annual tuition plus text books was too much for the very limited Glover family budget and I had to find work to help the family add to the budget. To this day I regret that those moneys weren't available. As it turned out, I ended up spending over 40 years in in a dead end "mom and pop" job selling bearings and industrial machine parts which ultimately ended up in a "Chapter 11" bankruptcy as the two principals retired and turned the business over to their sons
.
NOTE: A VERSION OF THIS ARTICLE AND PHOTO WAS PUBLISHED BACK IN JULY 2007 (?). I HAVE DELETED THAT GRAPHIC, RE-FORMATTED IT, AND AM RE-POSTING IT HERE. I HAVE ALSO COPIED AND PASTED TOM REED'S ADDED INFO ON THE OLD NORMAL SCHOOL WHICH WAS A COMMENT ON THE ORIGINAL JULY POST..
Tom Reed Miami FL
mimareed@aol.com
I think I recognize two names on the list of developers:
The Hartmann residing at Landing and Center St is likely related to the Hartmann Funeral Home, which is just down the block a bit between Cass and Landing.
I'll bet the Charles Haggerty is the one that resided on Dye St., between S Clinton and Genesee. His name still associated with Haggerty Alley which was between both those streets.
When I was a little kid, I remember discussing the development of the Burg with some old timers that remembered the borough as an agrarian area a little further away from the Old Burg. The Roebling factory changed everything.