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Wednesday, January 02, 2019

This is my favorite view of downtown Trenton. Mostly because it has a very nice glimpse of Yard's 
where my dear wife Judy worked in the Infants' Wear section from her teen years up to our 1954 wedding. Note the clarity on this incredibly beautiful photo. Good things are happening in Trenton with many positive people working very hard to bring back what was a very friendly city. God bless them all. It seems that South Warren Street is now the area that has been the focus of a Phoenix rising from the ashes. Do you remember when South Warren Street ran straight south before the detoured it to South Broad Street? I sure do. Tilden Brakes, Penn Jersey Auto stores, etc. This is a "segmented" photo; meaning it has been enlarged and separated from the original in order to zero in on the Yard's store.

RE: "COMMENTS." Google ha managed to make the process of  making a comment difficult. Here's a suggestion: Choose "Anonymous;" then on the screen, type your comment and your name if you wish to be identified.

5 comments:

SJBill said...

Great pic, indeed! This image is from (possibly) June of '46 with Don Ameche and Myra Loy's "So Goes My Love," playing at the RKO Capitol. My Mom would have been pushing me in a baby carriage at the time.

Happy New Year, Tom!

Tom Glover said...

Hi Bill. Nice to hear from you. I inserted a caption at the bottom of the photo including the date 1946 when I posted the photo.

Tom

gadget said...

My grandmother, Margaret Hunt Durst, was a buyer at Yards until she was married. It seems like she and your wife would have been co-workers, unless they just missed each other..

David said...

I remember Yard's. "They do sell nice things at Yard's" was their motto I believe. My grandmother would take us to the higher floor restaurant that was decorated with wall sketches of Paris. I would invariably order the cheeseburger deluxe. However, I do not recall her ever buying anything in that store. Dunham's and Lit's were her favorites. Eventually, she took us to the Arnolton Room at Arnold Constable. You paid when you entered and was given a receipt and a ticket. You would present the ticket to the lady pushing the desert cart around the place every few minutes. After the high school kids acted up one day, my grandmother became frightened of Trenton and never went shopping there again.

Anonymous said...

My mother worked at Arnold Constable's during the early 1960's. At first,
she managed the fine jewelry department and then became Manager of the Sportswear Department. Mr Lacari (spelling ?) was the Store Manager. My school friend and I went into the store on Halloween night 1962 dressed as hobos. We just walked all around, but never spoke. Later, my mother told me she thought it might be me, but didn't say anything for fear it was! Cynthia Tibbetts Steinert class 1963. Now Cynthia Klein, living in Yardley, PA. Trenton was magical in its heyday!