Introduction
Welcome to Camden History — your gateway to the fascinating stories of Camden, New Jersey, a city that has quietly shaped the course of America. Nestled along the Delaware River, Camden’s streets and waterfronts are alive with centuries of stories, from the Lenape people who first called this land home, to the bustling industries that earned it the nickname “The City Invincible.”
Camden has been at the crossroads of history. It played a key role in the Underground Railroad, fueled the rise of American manufacturing, and even helped give birth to the recording industry. Its neighborhoods have welcomed waves of immigrants, each leaving a mark on the city’s rich tapestry of culture, resilience, and community.
Step with us through time as we uncover Camden’s hidden gems and untold tales — from legendary figures to everyday heroes, from bustling waterfronts to quiet neighborhoods. Explore the triumphs, the struggles, and the vibrant life that has always made Camden a city worth celebrating.
Grab a virtual coffee, dive into our stories, and share your own insights. Camden’s history isn’t just in books — it’s all around you, waiting to be discovered!
Frequently Viewed
Frequently Viewed Links
Common Links
Alcohol
Bars, Bottlers, and Beverage and Distributors
Bars
14th Ward Democratic Club
Democratic club and bar at 2461 S. 7th St.
600 Cafe
Bar at 600 South 6th St., also known as Bush Cafe.
6th Street Lounge
Bar at 109 North 6th St., formerly The Tavern.
7th & Kaighn Lounge
Bar at 701 Kaighn Ave., formerly Bazemore Lounge.
939 Bar
A long-running Camden bar at 939 Market Street, operating from the post-Prohibition era through 1967 when proprietor Martin William Baskow was murdered; later demolished during construction of Route 676.
A Bar
Bar at 826 Locust St., also known as Campana's A Bar and Dick's A Bar.
A.J.'s Touch of Class Lounge
2461 South 7th Street
Adam T. Davis Saloon
Saloon at 138-140 Kaighn Ave., licensed 1895-1900.
Admiral Bar & Grill
Bar at 2250 Admiral Wilson Blvd., operated 1950s-1999.
Adolph Newmeyer's Cafe
Bar at 1006-1008 N. 24th St. in Cramer Hill.
Al's Cafe
Bar at 1010-1012 N. 24th St. in Cramer Hill, 1954-1956.
Alex Shusko's Tavern
Tavern at 1800 Fillmore St., late 1940s.
All Nations Lounge
Bar at 1400 Sheridan St., operated 1991-2000.
An-Be Tavern
Jefferson Street bar operating into the 2000s.
Anchor Bar & Liquor Store
River Road bar, 1936–1982, Cramer Hill.
Anderson Tavern
Ferry Avenue bar; later Vic’s Cafe.
Anderson’s Grill
Axel "Bud" Anderson’s Federal Street bar, 1930s.
Apollo Bar
The Apollo Bar at 2312 Federal Street in East Camden operated under several names over the decades, including Spuhler’s Grille in the 1940s–1960, Cressman’s Cafe in the mid‑1960s, and Apollo Bar by 1970. The bar remained active until its closure in 1998 following a fatal shooting.
Aquarius Lounge
Liberty Street bar; Mr. Wiggles’ Aquarius Lounge.
Arcadia Cafe
Federal Street bar; formerly Club Royal.
Avalon Bar
Van Hook Street bar; formerly HWJ Tavern.
B & G Bar
Kaighn Avenue bar; formerly Pete Krause’s Tavern.
B & J Lounge
Mechanic Street bar; successor to Revallo family.
Bacchanal
Mechanic Street bar, 1980–1983.
Bader Cafe
538 Kaighn Avenue
Baker's Bar & Grill
45 York Street
Bazemore Lounge
701 Kaighn Avenue
Beatty's Grille
949 N. 25th Street
Bell Bar
224 Market Street
Belleview Inn
2001 Broadway
Beringer's Cafe
200-202 Federal Street
Bert's Cafe
1226 Broadway
Betty's Cafe (Mt. Ephraim Ave)
1633 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Big Ed's Place
601 Pearl Street
Big Horn Cafe
5-7-9 North 4th Street
Bill's Cafe (2079 Federal St)
2079 Federal Street
Bismark Bar
6-10 South 25th Street
Blanche Cafe
524 Jefferson Street
Blue Hour Luncheonette
1282 Liberty Street
Blue Mirror
3905 Federal Street, Pennsauken
Boleslaw Ryzinski's Saloon
1549 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Bond's Bar
538 Kaighn Avenue
Boulevard Grille
2 North 27th Street
Boulevard Inn
1195 Chestnut Street
Brady's Cafe
245 Erie Street; Mabel Brady; 1930s
Brady's Cafe
701 Kaighn Avenue; Jack Brady; later Bazemore Lounge
Brass Cafe
1067 Ferry Avenue; Fabian Brass → Helen Brass → Charles Brass
Bridge Cafe
100 Pearl Street; Tom Kenney → Gannon's Tavern
Briggs Cafe
1197 Lansdowne Avenue; Briggs and Derengowski families
Bruno's Cafe & Restaurant
1426 Mount Ephraim Avenue; Bubnoski family; 1925-1979
Bruten's Cafe
773 Central Avenue; Louis Bruten
Buck's Lounge
1299 Morton Street; Nicholson's Cafe → Morton Cafe → Buck's Lounge
Buradine's
1226 Broadway; Michael Burgo → Bert's Cafe → Tender Trap
Bussie's Cafe
Bussie's Cafe at 1400 Sheridan Street was operated by Frank Sliwinski from 1939 through at least 1947, occupying the southeast corner of Sheridan and Pershing Streets in Whitman Park.
C'est La Vie Lounge
202 South 5th Street; Ludwig Buch → Ray's Tavern → C'est La Vie
Camden Post No. 980, Veterans of Foreign Wars
Veterans club at 308-310 Broadway, later 61 South 6th Street and 216 Broadway; active from the 1920s through the 1980s
Camelot Lounge
1197 Lansdowne Avenue; Walt's Cafe → Camelot Lounge; 1990s
Campbell's Tavern
9 South 3rd Street; Mary Campbell → Chic Campbell's Cafe → Campbell's Tavern
Cane's Tavern
1058 Kaighn Avenue; Pete Krause's Tavern → Cane's Tavern → Sunrise Lounge
Carl & Eddie's Bar
852 Ferry Avenue; Anderson Tavern → Carl & Eddie's Bar; 1972
Center Tavern
5-7-9 North 4th Street; renamed from Big Horn Cafe in 1954
Central Cafe
629 Ferry Avenue; Samuel Wasiluk → Payton's Place → Velvet Lounge
Century Bar
28 Haddon Avenue; John Sutton → Century Bar; razed 1970s
Chaney's Bar
1050 Mechanic Street; Chez La Joy → Club Cadix → Chaney's Bar → Bullpen
Chapman's Cafe
1445 Haddon Avenue; Muckensturm → Chapman's Cafe → Charley's Place
Charles H. Klump's Saloon
11 South 3rd Street
Charles Krattenmaker's Saloon
942-944 Federal Street
Charles L. Irle's Saloon
Charles L. Irle Sr., a German immigrant who first ran a bakery at the address, converted his building at 949 North 25th Street into a saloon around 1907. The address at the southeast corner of North 25th Street and River Avenue in Cramer Hill continued as a bar under various names through the early 2000s.
Charley's Place
1445 Haddon Avenue
Chestnut Bar
703-705 Chestnut Street
Chez La Joy
1050 Mechanic Street
Chubby's Cafe
Collings Road & Black Horse Pike, West Collingswood NJ
Cindy's Central Cafe
629 Ferry Avenue
Clancy's Cafe
800 Fern Street
Clem Bridgeman's Saloon
939 North 3rd Street
Club Cadix
1050 Mechanic Street
Club Lido
1418 Broadway
Columbia Hotel
224 Market Street
Conaghy's / Davolos' Cafe
950 South 5th Street
Cotton Club
1102-04 South 4th Street
Crane's Tavern
949 North 25th Street
Creato's Cafe
202 South 5th Street
Cressman's Cafe
2312 Federal Street
Croker's Tammany House
Croker's Tammany House at 1944 Broadway operated from 1903 through 1914 under James P. Croker, who also ran the Tammany Club there. The building, on the northeast corner of Broadway and Jefferson Street, features painted F.A. Poth Brewery wall advertisements that still survive. George Booz American Legion Post 274 later occupied the property.
Daly's Cafe (201 Vine Street)
201 Vine Street
Daly's Cafe (800 Linden Street)
800 Linden Street
Daniel Auletto's Taproom
520 South 2nd Street
Dave's Grill
2360 Broadway
Davolo's Cafe
Davolos' Cafe was operated by Frank Davolos at 950 South 5th Street during the mid-1930s until a bar brawl in 1937 led to license revocation proceedings and his departure from the tavern business in 1938 or 1939.
Deja Vu Cafe
1627 Norris Street. Operated as Ginger’s Tavern/Cafe from 1947 through 1982, then as the Deja Vu Cafe from 1985 into the early 1990s.
Dick's Cafe (Cramer Hill)
1000 North 27th Street. Named for Richard ‘Dick’ Bowen; later became the Rio Bar.
Dio's Supper Club
3905 Federal Street, Pennsauken. Operated at the Federal Street address in 1970 featuring local rock bands.
Dominik's Cafe
1903 South 6th Street. Operated by William H. Tansky Jr. in the 1930s and 1940s, then by Dominick Kasilowski from 1946.
Donkey's Place
Donkey's Place at 1223 Haddon Avenue, corner of Haddon and Liberty, was established by Leon Lucas around 1947. Leon, a 1928 Olympic light heavyweight boxer, named the bar after his nickname. Son Bob Lucas continued operating the Camden landmark, famous for its cheesesteak sandwiches, through at least 2005.
Dr. Jekyll's High Times
3905 Federal Street, Pennsauken. Operated from 1977; drew a young and rowdy crowd.
Dreamer's Lounge
589 Pine Street. Operated under many names from 1914 through the early 1990s, including Nora’s Cafe, Steve’s Tavern, and Dreamer’s Lounge. Razed in 2012.
East Side Cafe
2400 Federal Street. Open as a bar from 1918; remained open under various owners until closing in 1983.
Ebony Showplace
1469 Broadway. Popular nightclub in the late 1970s featuring soul and R&B acts; destroyed by fire in 1981.
Egizi's Cafe
302/234 Stevens Street. Operated by Tullio Egizi in the late 1930s–1940s; became the High Speed Line Cafe by 1959.
El Bohio Bar & Grill
524 Jefferson Street. Remodeled from the An-Be Tavern by David Gonzalez in 2003; address has been a bar since at least 1908.
Emil Muckensturm's Saloon
Emil Muckensturm's Saloon was established in Camden at 1473 Haddon Avenue in 1906 before moving to 1445 Haddon Avenue by 1914. Emil Muckensturm died in 1925; his wife Ruth continued the bar after Prohibition's repeal. The address later became Chapman's Cafe and then Charley's Place.
Ernest Stuebing Jr.'s Cafe
521 South 5th Street. Listed in the 1931 Camden City Directory; the Stuebing family operated multiple tavern establishments in the area.
Fairview Gardens
Fairview Gardens, known to Fairview residents for years as The Pink Cat, was officially chartered as the Fairview Grill Association at 3007 Fenwick Road. Started as a speakeasy by Peter Gondolf during Prohibition, it became a licensed private club after 1933 and remained a neighborhood institution through the late 1980s.
Fern Grille
800 Fern Street. Operated under several names including Clancy’s Cafe, New Mill Bar & Grill, Stew’s Bar & Grille, and Fern Grille before closing in 1968.
First & Last Chance Bar & Liquors
First & Last Chance Bar & Liquors at 1473 Haddon Avenue operated from 1910 through 2001. William Smith, the original proprietor, died by suicide in 1922 on the eve of a Prohibition hearing. Through various owners and names — including Last Chance Cafe, Lenny's Pub, and Francine's — the bar served the Parkside neighborhood for over ninety years.
Five Fifty Cafe
550 North 27th Street. Licensed after Prohibition; Joseph J. Guetherman licensee in 1939.
Flash Gordon's
1703 Mulford Street. Formerly the Knast Cafe, relocated from Ferry Avenue in the early 1950s; known as Flash Gordon’s from 1977, then Wildfire’s Place.
Flat Iron Hotel
Northwest corner of Broadway and Ferry Avenue
Florentine Grill
941 South 4th Street. Operated by Joseph Cuffari and family from 1939 through the early 1980s; previously the Florentine Beer Garden.
Four Point Cafe
Bar at 1 Haddon Ave. and Federal St.
Frank's Cafe (1135 South 4th Street)
1135–1137 South 4th Street. Operated by Frank Auletto from 1929; later known as Johnny’s Cafe and then Playgirls.
Frank's Cafe (601 Ferry Avenue)
601 Ferry Avenue. Operated by Frank Corado for over 30 years from 1933; later known as the Silver Door Cafe.
Freddy's
2 North 27th Street. Previously the Boulevard Grille (1943–1977); purchased by Freddy in 1989.
French Quarter
Camden bar formerly known as the Holiday Tavern & Lounge, later operating as the French Quarter on Admiral Wilson Boulevard.
G. Whilliker's
3905 Federal Street, Pennsauken
George Brunner Third Ward Democratic Club
Democratic social club at 438 S. 3rd St.
George Dilmore's Saloon
George Dilmore Sr. operated a saloon at 339-341 Kaighn Avenue, northwest corner of South 4th Street and Kaighn Avenue, from his first appearance in the 1894 Camden City Directory through at least 1906. In December 1896, patron Edward T. Melson shot and killed former policeman Daniel Lee inside the saloon; Melson was acquitted at trial in January 1897.
Giacomo's
1674 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Ginger's Cafe
1627 Norris Street
Gorhan's Cafe
538 Kaighn Avenue
Green Rag Cafe
1633 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Gregory's Cafe
1010-1012 North 24th Street, Cramer Hill
Gretta's Inc.
1898 River Avenue, Cramer Hill
Haddon Tavern
1000 Haddon Avenue
Hi Hatter's Club
224 Market Street; Columbia Hotel (1887–1903), Victor Hotel (1924–1932), Hi Hatter's Club (1936–1956), Bell Bar (1959–1984)
Hi Step Hotel
2366 Broadway; Charlie Kuski's bar serving New York Shipbuilding workers; operated into the mid-1990s
Hi-Lite Tavern
400 Mechanic Street
Hotel Aldine
39 South 6th Street; New Junction Hotel (1889), Hotel Dubosq (~1910), Hotel Aldine (1916–1924); raided as speakeasy; Camden Lime Co. took over 1925
Hotel DuBosq
39 South 6th Street
Hubert's Cafe (1200 Jackson Street)
1200 Jackson Street; William H. Hubert's earlier bar location
Hubert's Cafe (1674 Mount Ephraim Avenue)
1674 Mount Ephraim Avenue; William H. Hubert 1954–1973; later Giacomo's
Hudson Tavern
12 Hudson Street; Cafe Hudson (1931), Hudson Cafe (1934), Hudson Tavern (1956–1990s); Sam Lennox and Miraglia family
Hughie's Tavern
400 Jasper Street; Walter's Cafe (1918–1943), Zenie Cafe (1947), Jasper Cafe/Tavern (1966–1970s), Hughie's Tavern (late 1970s)
Hyde's Cafe
1600 South 6th Street; Hyde family bar 1892–1956; also known as Hyde's Saloon and Hyde's Tavern
ICAC
1250 Collings Road, Fairview; Independent Citizens Athletic Club of Fairview; club license since 1930s
Iggy's Cafe
1600 Broadway; Jack's Cafe (pre-Prohibition), Iggy's Cafe (1933–1943), Jackson Cafe (1946), Mr. Broadway Bar (1970s)
Jack's Cafe
Jack's Cafe at 1600 Broadway, on the southeast corner of Broadway and Jackson Street, was the name of the bar at this address in the years leading up to Prohibition. The address later became Iggy's Cafe, the Jackson Cafe, and eventually Mr. Broadway Bar.
1600 Broadway
Jackson Cafe
The Jackson Cafe at 1600 Broadway, on the southeast corner of Broadway and Jackson Street, was known by that name from at least 1946 through the late 1960s. The address had previously been Jack's Cafe and Iggy's Cafe, and later became Mr. Broadway Bar.
1600 Broadway
Jacob Merger's Cafe
Jacob Merger's Cafe at 1148 North 26th Street, on the northeast corner of North 25th Street and Pierce Avenue in Camden's Cramer Hill section, was granted a retail liquor license in June of 1939. The bar does not appear in the 1943 or 1947 Camden City Directories.
1148 North 26th Street
James McAninley's Saloon
James McAninley saloon, 1915 to 1920.
Jasper Cafe
The Jasper Cafe at 400 Jasper Street, on the corner of South 4th and Jasper Street, was the name of the bar at this address in 1966. The building housed a bar under various names from World War I through the 1970s, including Walter's Cafe, the Zenie Cafe, the Jasper Tavern, and ultimately Hughie's Tavern.
400 Jasper Street
Jasper Tavern
The Jasper Tavern at 400 Jasper Street, on the corner of South 4th and Jasper Street, was known by that name from 1967 through at least 1970. The principals of Jasper Tavern Inc. were Hugh J. Powell, Anthony Potts, and Joseph F. Powell. The building later became Hughie's Tavern.
400 Jasper Street
Jefferson House
The Jefferson House at 2000 South 7th Street, on the northeast corner of 7th and Jefferson Street, was operated by Joseph S. Wisniewski before and after Prohibition. By 1943 Wisniewski had moved his bar south to 2277 South 7th Street, where it became Joe's Bar.
2000 South 7th Street
Jimmy's Tavern
Jimmy's Tavern at 2802 Buren Avenue in Camden's Cramer Hill section operated from the 1940s through the late 1970s. Under proprietor James 'Wally' Eskridge, the bar was known for live Country & Western entertainment, attracting acts including Tommy Cash, Dottie West, and Marvin Rainwater.
2802 Buren Avenue
Joe Herman's Bar
Joe Herman's Bar at 1401 Broadway, on the southwest corner of Broadway and Mechanic Street, was previously Philip's Cafe under Philip Mistichelli. By 1966 the bar had been sold and renamed Joe Herman's Bar; it remained open as of 2006.
1401 Broadway
Joe O'Brien's Bar
Joe O'Brien's Bar at 11 South 3rd Street operated from at least 1936 through 1939. The address had previously been a saloon under Thomas Madden in the late 1880s, and under Charles Klump from 1918 through 1929. By 1947 the building had been converted to residential use.
11 South 3rd Street
Joe Wandy's Chateau
1006-1008 North 24th Street
Joe Zawitkowski's Bar
45 York Street
Joe's Bar
Joe's Bar at 2277 South 7th Street, on the corner of 7th and Woodland Avenue, was operated by Joseph Wisniewski from 1943 through the early 1970s. The address was previously the Jefferson House saloon operated by Wisniewski at 7th and Jefferson Streets.
2277 South 7th Street
John Asbert Saloon
John Asbert operated a saloon at 671-673 Ferry Avenue, on the northwest corner of Ferry Avenue and Van Buren Street, from at least 1919 until Prohibition. The property was later occupied by the Knast Cafe under Felix and Mary Knast through the early 1970s, until displaced by urban renewal projects.
671-673 Ferry Avenue
John Pennington Tavern
John A. Pennington operated a tavern at 818 Broadway during the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. The bar had previously been owned by William H. Lickfeld until 1919, and was later known as Pink's Tavern through the late 1980s.
818 Broadway
John Revallo's Tavern
John Revallo's Tavern at 1201 Mechanic Street, on the northeast corner of Louis and Mechanic Streets, was operated by the Revallo family from the 1920s through the early 1970s. It later became the B & J Lounge by 1977.
1201 Mechanic Street
Johnnie's Cafe
1674 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Johnny's Tavern
3014 Marlton Pike, Pennsauken
Joseph Ragan's Saloon
697 Sylvan Street
Joseph Schneider Saloon
1939 Fillmore Street
Jules' Grill
2101 Broadway
Juno's Tavern
949 North 25th Street
Kaighn Avenue Bar
1101 Kaighn Avenue
Keating's Tavern
2000 River Avenue
Kelly's Cafe
69 State Street
Kirby's Tavern
419 Federal Street
Knast Cafe
671-673 Ferry Avenue
Knast's Cafe
1703 Mulford Street
Knauer's Cafe
1674 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Krystal Lounge
789 Chestnut Street
L. Najulis Saloon
751 Ferry Avenue
La Victoria Cafe
1101 Kaighn Avenue
LaMaina's Cafe
501 Trenton Avenue
LaMaina's Tavern
824 South 3rd Street
Lansdowne Cafe
1447 Broadway
Larry's Cafe
701 South 4th Street
Lev's Bar
302-304 Stevens Street
Lin-Rick Tavern
2000 River Avenue
Linden Grill
800 Linden Street
Line Cafe
519 Line Street
Little Ritz Cafe
1122 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Lobey's Bar
400 Kaighn Avenue
Luby Vann's Jam Lounge
Luby Vann's Jam Lounge at 1240 Kaighn Avenue has been a bar since at least 1918. It operated as the Parkside Tavern and Daly's Grille through 1947, then as Kaighns Bar and the Public Bar through the 1950s, before becoming Luby V and Bev's Jam Lounge in the late 1970s and finally Luby Vann's Jam Lounge in the early 1990s.
1240 Kaighn Avenue
Ludwig Buch's Saloon
202 South 5th Street
Lynch's Cafe
938 North 3rd Street
M&A Bar and Grille
Michael & Antoinette Spiduro bar, 1955 to 1970.
Mac's Bar
John MacDougall bar, pre-WWI through 1959.
Malin's Cafe
Louis Malinowski bar, 1947 to 1959.
Mancine's Bar
Mancine family bar and Bali Club, 1940s on.
Marco Marino's Saloon
Marco Marino saloon, 1918 to 1919.
Martin & Owens' Bar
Anthony Martin and Joe Owsianka bar, 1948 to 1960.
Martin's Bar
Martin Ginsburg's bar on Morgan Boulevard, 1959 to 2003.
Marty's Olde Tappe House
Also known as Marty's Tap House and Siegle's Bar, 1990 Federal Street
McKenna's Cafe (319 Federal St)
John McKenna original cafe, 1931 to 1939.
McKenna's Cafe (650 Clinton St)
John McKenna bar at Clinton St, 1939 to 1947.
McKenna's Tavern
Bar at 640 Pine St., listed in 1904 Camden Excise Commission licenses.
McKenna's Tavern (Pine Street)
McKenna's Tavern at 640 Pine Street, corner of Pine Street and Newton Avenue, was operated by John McKenna, a Northern Ireland immigrant, from 1918 through his death in 1931, then by his widow Mary McKenna through 1938.
Michael Jordan's
Bar at 318 Federal St., later 318 Club/Marjay's.
Mid City Bar
Federal Street bar, closed 1970.
Mindy's Restaurant & Bar
Mindy's Restaurant & Bar at 340 Federal Street was licensed after Prohibition to Edward Markowitz and first operated as the Wall Street Club through 1936. Renamed Mindy's by 1947, it remained open through 1967.
Minnie's Lounge
Admiral Wilson Boulevard bar, closed 1985.
Morris Lounge
Sheridan Street bar, closed 1999.
Morton Cafe
Morton Street bar and restaurant, 1939–1990.
Mr. Broadway Bar
Broadway bar with a century-long history.
Mr. D's Society Lounge
1122 Mount Ephraim Avenue
New Mill Inn
800 Fern Street
Newfoundland American Club
Whitman Avenue social club, 1941–1972.
Nicholson's Cafe
Morton Street cafe, 1936–1939.
Nick & Sophie's Tavern
Central Avenue tavern founded 1932.
Niewinski's Cafe
1898 River Avenue
Niewinski's Cafe (Mechanic St.)
Mechanic Street bar, closed 1982.
Ninth Ward Republican Club
Political and social club at 536 Broadway.
Nora's Cafe
Pine Street bar operated by the Barbalace family.
O'Donnell's Restaurant & Cafe
3905 Federal Street
Obsession Lounge
2224 Federal Street
Oetzel's Saloon
438 Arch Street
Oetzel's Saloon
John A. Oetzel owned and operated a saloon at 438 Arch Street, on the southwest corner of North 5th and Arch Streets, from 1888 to about 1922. Family legend held that Walt Whitman was a well-known customer of the establishment. The building was demolished and the lot stood vacant by the mid-1920s.
Olde City Brewery Tavern
949 North 25th Street
Paradise Cafe
702 South 2nd Street
Paul's Tavern
1819 Broadway
Pavonia House
The Pavonia House was a long-operating Camden, New Jersey bar and tavern located at 26th Street and River Road. Established before 1912, it was operated for decades by the Strahle and Donato families and remained in business until the 1980s.
Payton's Place
629 Ferry Avenue
Pepeta's Cafe
1101 N. 27th Street
Pete Krause's Tavern
1058 Kaighn Avenue
Pete's Cafe
Pete's Cafe at 1102 South 4th Street was a Camden bar with roots dating to 1887, later known as the Cotton Club.
Peter C. Verga's Saloon
11 Market Street
Petro's Cafe
Petro's Cafe at 501 Trenton Street operated from 1959 through the early 1970s at the corner of Trenton Street and Newton Avenue, following stints as LaMaina's Cafe and Stanley's Tavern.
Philip's Cafe
1401 Broadway
Pine Grill & Bar
South Camden bar at 5th and Pine Streets.
Pine Street Tavern
Bar at 589 Pine Street, South Camden.
Playgirls
Playgirls at 1135-1137 South 4th Street was a Camden bar that had operated under several names since 1918, known as Playgirls from around 1970.
Progressive Democratic Club 8th Ward
Democratic club at 1009 Ferry Ave.
Purdy's Cafe
Bar at 1674 Mount Ephraim Avenue, Camden.
R&R Bar
The R&R Bar at 938 North 3rd Street was a North Camden bar with a history dating to at least 1908 under various names including Lynch's Cafe.
Ray's Tavern
Bar at 202 South 5th Street, Camden.
Rio Bar
The Rio Bar, located at 1000 North 27th Street in Camden’s Cramer Hill neighborhood, operated from the late 1930s through the 1970s under various owners including August W. Oswald Jr., the Bowen family, and later Vincent and Helen Bembas with Charles and Martha Kmiec. It was named after the adjacent Rio Theater and later became Connie’s Corner before closing in the 1980s.
Rodeo Ray's Dude Ranch
Nightclub at 3014 Marlton Pike, Pennsauken.
Roma Cafe
Bar at 600 South 3rd Street, South Camden.
Ron Day Voo Bar
3905 Federal Street, Pennsauken
Rosedale Inn
Bar and nightclub at 3601 Federal Street, Pennsauken.
Rosemont Cafe
Bar at 2051 Arlington Street, Camden.
Roy Steele's Tavern
Bar at 560 Carman Street, downtown Camden.
Roy's Cafe
Bar at 202 South 5th Street, Camden.
Rudy & Chink's Bar
701 Kaighn Avenue
Salvatore's Cafe
1132 South 3rd Street
Sam's Tavern
1819 Broadway
Schemenski's Tavern
1501 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Schoell's Tavern
949 North 25th Street
Sciamanna's Cafe
601 South 4th Street
Seven Brothers Cafe
713 South 3rd Street
Seven-O-Five Bar
Bar at 703-705 Chestnut St., founded by Schwoeri family.
Silver Door Cafe
601 Ferry Avenue
Silver Rail Grill
933 North 27th Street
Sons of Italy at 1324 Mechanic Street
1324 Mechanic Street
South Camden Bocce Club
408-410 Line Street
Spooly's Cafe
1501 Mount Ephraim Avenue
Spuhler's Grille
2312 Federal Street
Stanley Bar & Grill
1700 Federal Street
Stanley's Cafe
1901 South 4th Street
Stanley's Cafe / Zibby's
1199 Chase Street
Stanley's Tavern (Newton Avenue)
Stanley's Tavern at 501 Trenton Street operated in the mid-1950s at the corner of Trenton Street and Newton Avenue, following LaMaina's Cafe and preceding Petro's Cafe and Syl's Tavern at the same address.
State Bar
226 State Street
Step Inn Lounge
2802 Buren Avenue, Cramer Hill
Stephen Stefaniak's Saloon
1451 Broadway
Stetser's Tavern
2046 Federal Street
Steve's Cafe (Cramer Hill)
1010-1012 North 24th Street, Cramer Hill
Steve's Tavern
1800 Fillmore Street, Southeast Corner of Ferry Avenue & Fillmore Street
Stew's Bar & Grill
800 Fern Street
Stewart's Toby Tavern
571 Haddon Avenue
Sunrise Lounge
1056-1058 Kaighn Avenue
Sunshine Lounge
1898 River Avenue
Syl's Tavern
Syl's Tavern at 501 Trenton Street was operated by Sylvester Malandro during the mid-1960s and early 1970s at the corner of Trenton Street and Newton Avenue.
T&A Cafe
1400 Sheridan Street, Southeast Corner of Sheridan and Pershing Streets
T&V Bar
1900 Fillmore Street, Southeast Corner of Fillmore and Viola Streets
Tansky's Cafe
1903 South 6th Street
Tee's Cafe
619 Ferry Avenue
Television Cafe
1900 Fillmore Street, Southeast Corner of Fillmore and Viola Streets
The Bullpen
Bar at 1050 Mechanic Street, SW corner of Mt. Ephraim Avenue and Mechanic Street; previously Chez La Joy, Club Cadix, and Chaney's Bar
The Chateau
1787 River Avenue
The Corner
571 Haddon Avenue
The Debonair Lounge
1447 Broadway. Operated as the Lansdowne Cafe, the Jewel Box Cafe, and the Debonair Lounge before closing in 1988.
The Frosty Mug
2051 Arlington Street. Previously the Rosemont Cafe (1931–1977); known as the Frosty Mug until 1982. Razed February 2004.
The Little Tavern
1010-1012 North 24th Street
The Lost Seagulls of Stockholm Sweden, Inc.
1324 Mechanic Street
The Oasis
211 Market Street
The Palace
1101 Broadway
The Red Carpet
The Red Carpet at 1037-1039 Broadway was a Camden bar owned and operated by Elaine Gardiner Brundage from the 1980s into the late 1990s.
The Silent Club
431 Broadway, Second Floor
The Spot
The Spot at 547 Liberty Street (through 1956) and 535 Liberty Street (1959-1970) was operated by Roland Farmer, a Lawnside native who also listed the bar as Roland Farmer's Tavern.
The Stag Cafe
Bar at 318 Market St., later Majestic Restaurant.
The Tavern
Bar at 109 North 6th Street, open for over 60 years; later reopened as the 6th Street Lounge in 2003
The Tender Trap
1226 Broadway
Thirteenth Ward Republican Club
Parkside political and social club, 1900–1965.
Thomas Bell Saloon
201 Arch Street
Thomas P. Timmons' Beer Saloon
18 South 4th Street
Thompson's Cafe
571 Haddon Avenue
Three-O-Three Bar
Bar and liquor store at 303 Kaighn Avenue.
Tierra Dominicana Bar
Bar at 2224 Federal Street in East Camden serving the Dominican community; formerly the Obsession Lounge and U-Need-A Cafe
Time & Place Lounge
Bar at 1199 Chase Street, NW corner of Louis and Chase Streets; successor to Zibby's and La Copa Del Oro
Tioga Tavern
1057 Central Avenue
TMT Lounge
941 South 4th Street
Togetherness Bar
303 Kaighn Avenue, formerly Three-O-Three Bar & Liquor Store
Tony & Rab's Bar
1400 Sheridan Street
Tony's Grill
529 South 6th Street
Towers Bar
1990 Federal Street
Traveler's Home Port
202 South 5th Street
Triangle Tavern
1701 Ferry Avenue
TV Tavern
1900 Fillmore Street
U-Need-A Cafe
Bar at 2224 Federal Street in East Camden, known for the longest bar in town; operated by Dominic Guglielmi from 1935 through the early 1970s
Union of Brotherly Love
524 West Street; Italian-American social club; 1947-1967
Vasco's Cafe
Bar and restaurant at 713 South 3rd Street in Camden's Little Italy, known for tomato pies and mussels; formerly the Seven Brothers Cafe
Vesper's Cafe
15 South 4th Street
Victor Hotel Club
224 Market Street
Victoria Hotel
Hotel and bar at 201 Kaighn Avenue, built around 1907; a center of civic life in early 20th-century Camden
Victory Cafe
Bar at 1301 Decatur Street, NE corner of Decatur and Norris Streets in North Camden
Villa Roma Cafe
Villa Roma Cafe at 1633 Mount Ephraim Avenue operated around 1940, between the Green Rag Cafe (1931) and Betty's Cafe (1943) at the same address. The bar closed permanently by 1947.
Village Cafe
697 Sylvan Street
Vince & Fred's Tavern
Bar at 589 Pine Street, NW corner of 6th and Pine Streets; previously the Pine Street Tavern, Nora's Cafe, and Steve's Tavern
Vittorio Veneto Lodge
900 South 4th Street
Waldorf Tavern
Waldorf Tavern at 4100 Federal Street began as a liquor store, became the Waldorf Bar by 1966, and operated as Cafaro's Waldorf Tavern from 2000 after the Giambrone family's ownership in the 1990s.
Wall Street Club
340 Federal Street
Walnut Cafe
950 South 5th Street
Walt's Cafe
Walt's Cafe at 1197 Lansdowne Avenue operated in the late 1960s and early 1970s, preceded by Briggs Cafe and followed by the Camelot Lounge at the same corner of Lansdowne Avenue and Louis Street.
Walt's Place
1898 River Avenue
Walter's Cafe
400 Jasper Street
Ward's Cafe
400 Kaighn Avenue
Wardach's Cafe
1448 Rose Street
Weber's Hof Brau
Crescent Boulevard, Pennsauken
Weisfeld's Cafe
789 Chestnut Street
Wildfire's Place
1703 Mulford Street
William H. Greenan's Cafe
William H. Greenan's Cafe at 2376 South 7th Street operated as a soft drinks business from the 1920s. Greenan was a Camden mounted police officer who ran the business until his death sometime before 1947.
William Merkle's Saloon
227 North 9th Street
William Plevinsky's Saloon
William Plevinsky's Saloon at 625 Ferry Avenue served Poth's Beer in the years before Prohibition.
Ye Olde Tymers Club
924 South 5th Street
Yugoslav Workers Club #578
619 Ferry Avenue
Zenie Cafe
400 Jasper Street
Zippilli's Cafe
1819 Broadway
Bottlers
Architects & Builders
Camden NJ Architects and Builders
Architects
Builders
Camden Bakeries
Bakeries in Camden
Bakeries
Camden Banks
Banks in Camden
Banks
American National Bank
Camden Bank
Broadway Trust
Camden National Bank
The Camden National Bank was established in 1885 at 259 Kaighn Avenue. It moved to a new building at 2nd and Kaighn Avenue in 1888, then to Broadway and Sycamore Street in 1906. It merged with the First Camden National Bank & Trust on July 1, 1927.
Camden Trust Company
Major Camden bank, founded 1899.
Central Trust Company
The Central Trust Company was organized in 1891 at Federal Street, Camden. It moved to a new building at 4th and Federal Streets in 1900. The bank was absorbed by the Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Company in 1927, which later became Camden Trust.
East End Trust Company
2614-2616 Federal Street; organized 1905, merged with Camden Trust by 1936
First Camden National Bank & Trust
First National Bank
Merged with National State Bank in 1922 to form First National State Bank
Merchants Trust
18-20 Broadway; opened 1912, merged with Broadway Trust in the 1920s
National State Bank
The National State Bank traces its roots to the State Bank at Camden, incorporated in 1812. It became a national bank in 1865, merged with First National Bank in 1922, then merged with Camden National Bank in 1927 to form the First Camden National Bank & Trust.
Parkside Trust
Haddon & Kaighn Avenues; opened 1918, merged with West Jersey Trust in 1927
Security Trust Building
3rd & Market Streets
South Camden Trust
Broadway & Ferry Avenue; opened 1921, failed during the Depression
Third National Bank & Trust
Third National Bank was organized in January 1928 at 27th Street and Westfield Avenue in East Camden. It survived the Depression and operated as the Third National Bank & Trust until the 1970s, when it merged into United Jersey Bank.
General
Camden Buildings
Buildings in Camden
Buildings
Camden City Directories
Camden City and Phone Directories
Directories
1906 Camden City Directory
Complete
1906 Camden Telephone Directory
The Delaware & Atlantic Telephone & Telegraph Company
1910-1911 Camden City Directory
Incomplete
1912-1913 Camden City Directory
Partial
1918-1919 Camden City Directory
Complete
1927 Camden City Directory
Complete
1936 Camden, NJ Phone Directory
Complete
More Camden, NJ Directories
Check out camdenhistory.com for more documents
Clubs & Frats
Clubs, Fraternaties, and Organizations
Clubs
12th Ward Athletic Association
Camden athletic club, active 1950s.
A.M. Mucci Post No. 2685, Veterans of Foreign Wars
South Camden VFW post, Italian-American community band.
August F. Walters Chapter No. 4, Disabled American Veterans
Camden DAV chapter, named for Private August F. Walters, WWI.
Camden Aerie
Fraternal Order of Eagles
Camden Chapter No. 59, Sojourners Club
Camden Chapter No. 59, Sojourners Club
Camden Masonic veterans organization, 1920s, Walt Whitman Hotel.
Camden Chiselers Club
Camden social club founded 1930.
Camden County Polish American Republican Club
Polish-American political organization active in Camden, meeting at Tenth and Liberty Streets.
Camden Elks Lodge 293
Benevolent Protective Order of Elks
Camden Home for Friendless Children
The Camden Home for Children
Camden Rescue Mission
Charitable mission for men in need, founded 1927.
Camden Wheelmen
Camden bicycling clubs of the 1890s: Camden Wheelmen, Century Wheelmen, Crescent Wheelmen, and Stockton Wheelmen.
Carteret Club
Social club for prominent young men in Camden, active 1890s–1906.
Dooley Athletic Association
Camden Sports Club
Hatch League No. 2
Loyal Ladies League
Independent Order of Odd Fellows
Knights of the Golden Eagle
Loyal Order of Moose Camden Lodge 111
Loyal Order of Moose
Memorial Day in Camden and South Jersey - 1933
Newspaper coverage of Memorial Day 1933 in Camden, NJ.
Mummers: The Camden Clowns
Rotary Club of Camden NJ
Sixth Ward Republican Club
Republican political club active 1890s–1947, 908 Broadway
Soroptimist Club
St. Joseph's Polish Athletic Association
Camden Polish athletic and social club, South 10th and Liberty Streets.
The Alpha Club
The Aquinas Club
The Camden Wheelmen
The Century Wheelmen & the Stockton Wheelmen
The Carteret Club
The Woman's Club of Camden, N.J.
1894-1919
Theosophical Society
Twelfth Ward Republican Club
Republican political club, East Camden, 1906–1947.
United Spanish War Veterans
VFW Memorial Post 274
Victor Athletic Association
West Jersey Orphanage
YMCA
YMCA - Hunton Branch South Camden YMCA
Young People's Socialist League
Camden branch of the Young People's Socialist League, active 1933, headquartered at 312 Market Street.
Free and Accepted Masons
Camden Wheelmen
Camden bicycling clubs of the 1890s: Camden Wheelmen, Century Wheelmen, Crescent Wheelmen, and Stockton Wheelmen.
Carteret Club
Social club for prominent young men in Camden, active 1890s–1906.
Ionic Lodge #94
Free & Accepted Masons of the State of New Jersey
Ionic Lodge No. 94, F. & A.M.
Free and Accepted Masons, constituted 1869.
Trimble Lodge #117
Free & Accepted Masons of the State of New Jersey
Young People's Socialist League
Camden branch of the Young People's Socialist League, active 1933, headquartered at 312 Market Street.
Grand Army of the Republic
Camden Wheelmen
Camden bicycling clubs of the 1890s: Camden Wheelmen, Century Wheelmen, Crescent Wheelmen, and Stockton Wheelmen.
Carteret Club
Social club for prominent young men in Camden, active 1890s–1906.
Post #102 - Gen. John A. Logan
Grand Army of the Republic
Post #37 - William B. Hatch
Grand Army of the Republic
Post #5 - Thomas M. K. Lee
Grand Army of the Republic
Post #51 - William P. Robeson
Grand Army of the Republic
Young People's Socialist League
Camden branch of the Young People's Socialist League, active 1933, headquartered at 312 Market Street.
Republicans
Camden Wheelmen
Camden bicycling clubs of the 1890s: Camden Wheelmen, Century Wheelmen, Crescent Wheelmen, and Stockton Wheelmen.
Carteret Club
Social club for prominent young men in Camden, active 1890s–1906.
Sixth Ward Republican Club
Tenth Ward Republican Club
Twelfth Ward Republican Club
East End Republican Club
Young People's Socialist League
Camden branch of the Young People's Socialist League, active 1933, headquartered at 312 Market Street.
Socialists
Camden Wheelmen
Camden bicycling clubs of the 1890s: Camden Wheelmen, Century Wheelmen, Crescent Wheelmen, and Stockton Wheelmen.
Carteret Club
Social club for prominent young men in Camden, active 1890s–1906.
Young People's Socialist League
Young People's Socialist League
Camden branch of the Young People's Socialist League, active 1933, headquartered at 312 Market Street.
Crime
Crime in Camden, NJ
Riots
Unsolved
Education
Education in Camden, NJ
Schools
Benjamin C. Beideman School
Abraham Lincoln School
Broadway Elementary School
C. A. Bergen School
Camden High School
Camden Manual Training & High School
The original Camden High School
Camden Manual Training & High School
Graduation Program, June 14, 1910
Central School
Charles K. Evered School
Charles Sumner Elementary School
Clara S. Burrough Jr. High School
Junior High School No. 1
Cooper B. Hatch Middle School
The Cooper-Grant Schools
Ulysses S. Grant School
Cramer Elementary School
E. A. Stevens School
Camden public school, 430 South 4th Street, 1867–1954.
George Genge School
George Washington Elementary School
George Washington School
H. B. Wilson School
Harrison School
Harry C. Sharp Elementary School
Henry H. Davis Elementary School
Henry L. Bonsall School
Isaac S. Mulford School
James A. Garfield School
James G. Blaine School
James M. Cassady School
Jesse W. Starr School
John S. Read School
John W. Mickle School
Kaighn Public School
Liberty School
Lincoln School
Claudius W. Bradshaw School
Linden School
Mount Vernon Street School
South Camden Alternative Middle School
Northeast School
North East School
Octavius Catto Elementary School
Parkside Elementary School
Pyne Poynt Middle School
Richard Fetters School
St. Joseph High School Alumni
Thomas H. Dudley Elementary School
William F. Powell Elementary School
William Joyce Sewell School
William McKinley School
Yearbooks
Purple & Gold Yearbook
1919
Purple & Gold Yearbook
1923
Purple & Gold Yearbook
1926
Purple & Gold Yearbook
January 1928
Purple & Gold Yearbook
June 1929
Purple & Gold Yearbook
January 1930
Purple & Gold Yearbook
June 1930
Purple & Gold Yearbook
June 1931
Purple & Gold Yearbook
January 1932
Purple & Gold Yearbook
January 1937
Purple & Gold Yearbook
1942
Purple & Gold Yearbook
1953
Purple & Gold Yearbook
1955
St. Joseph High School
Class of 1968 website
Families of Camden
Prominent Families in Camden, NJ
Families
A Polish Family - The Blachniaks
Abramis & Abramson Family
Casden & Cohen Family
Connected Familes: Kelly, Griffee, Roles, Engel, Hyde, & McKenna
Four Familes: The Hineline, Budd, Haines, & Wilson Families
La Familia Sanabria
Pustilnik Family
THE WILLIAMSON-HORNEFF FAMILY 1913
The Auerbach Family
The Bass Family in Camden
The Bunting Family of the Eighth Ward
The Children of Becky Silverman: Denker - Levin - Ross - Zelnick
The Conley Family: Fairview & South Camden
The Coplein Family
The Girgenti Family of Camden, New Jersey
The Griffee & Alloway Family
The Kaplan Family in Camden
The Large, Magee, and Tracy Families of Camden
The Linthicum Family of North Camden
The Louis Okeson Family
The Max Bush Family in Camden
The Munion Family
The Palumbos of Giuliano Teatino
The Petrillo Family of Camden, New Jersey
The Pigliacelli Family of Camden, New Jersey
The Ross& Silverman Family
The Rosselli Family of Camden, New Jersey: Jimmy Rosselli's story
The Tarter Family of Camden NJ
The Venella Family of Camden, New Jersey
The Yates Family
The Zippilli Family of Camden, New Jersey
Camden Fire Dept.
Fire Department, Camden, NJ
Fire Dept.
Entertainers
Musical Artists and Entertainers of Camden, NJ
Authors & Columnists
David W. Belisle
Journalist, author, and Mayor of Atlantic City
Sinnickson Chew
West Jersey Press editor and publisher
Daniel Cooperson
East Camden author of five poetry and autobiographical works
A. Charles Corotis
Journalist, author, and public relations agent from Camden
Andrea Dworkin
Feminist author and activist born in Camden
Phillip A. Glass
Advertising columnist and nom de plume writer for the Camden Courier
John C. Harper
Editor of the Camden Daily Courier, 1889-1918
Samuel T. Holmes
Journalist and Camden community activist
E. Allen Hughes
Camden Courier-Post reporter and copy editor
Charles L. Humes
Camden Courier-Post columnist and reporter
Carole 'Ife' Keene
Camden-born author and community activist
Frank Kopesky
Sports journalist; SIDELINE SLANTS columnist, 1930s
Martin M. Laibow
Author of My Life and Not Very Hard Times; born Camden 1912
Peter Liwoch
Polish journalist and community leader, Cross of Valor recipient
Gordon MacKay
Sportswriter and 'Is Zat So!' columnist
Oscar W. Magnuson
Camden city official and Courier-Post reporter
Dan McConnell
Camden reporter and columnist for the Post-Telegram and Courier-Post; wrote the Sidelights column
Charles L. McKeone
Camden reporter and 'Peppery Pot' columnist, 1919-1927
Charles L. McKeone
Camden Courier-Post 'Do You Remember' columnist
Joseph J. Di Mona Jr.
Camden-born author and screenwriter (1923-1999)
Stephen M. O'Keefe
Courier-Post journalist for 57 years, Crossroads in History columnist
James M. O'Neill
Courier-Post executive editor and 'Jiminy' columnist for four decades
S. Conrad Ott
Camden journalist and lawyer; city editor of the Camden Courier (1891)
Stephen Pfeil
Camden journalist and NJ Conservation Board member
Tom Ryan
Sports editor of the Camden Courier-Post for 35 years (1926-1961)
Frank Sheridan
Camden Courier-Post reporter, city editor, and WWI historian
Martin Sherman
Camden-born Broadway playwright, Bent and Rose
Robert A. Stanton
Camden-born author and historian of Camden and Philadelphia transportation history
Nick Virgilio
Camden haiku poet who helped popularize Japanese haiku in America
Walt Whitman
Camden's Good Grey Poet, resident 1873-1892
Paul Zachary
Journalist, historian, and author of the Heard on the Avenue column
Comedians
Albert Bedell
Dino the Clown; Belgian-born Camden entertainer who performed clown and tightrope acts for Camden schoolchildren
Jimmy Conlin
Vaudeville comedian and Hollywood character actor; appeared in over 150 films
John F. 'Scotty' Friedel
Vaudeville comedian on the Keith circuit
Performers
Albert Berul
Founder of the Berul School of Music in Camden
Ann Pennington
Ziegfeld Follies dancer, Black Bottom originator
Ann Pennington
Ziegfeld Follies dancer, Black Bottom originator
Antoinette Tisa
Opera singer who starred in Aida, La Traviata, Faust
Bernice Massi
Biography of Bernice Massi, Miss New Jersey 1952, Broadway actress known for roles in What Makes Sammy Run? and Man of La Mancha.
Carla L. Benson
Camden vocalist, background singer, Grammy-winning recordings
Charles 'Buster' Williams
Camden jazz bassist born in 1942. Played with Herbie Hancock's Mwandishi Sextet, Nancy Wilson, Sarah Vaughan, Miles Davis, and dozens of jazz legends.
Chauncey Olcott
Renowned Irish tenor who composed My Wild Irish Rose
Cindy Birdsong
Member of The Supremes, raised in Camden
Clarence Fuhrman
Pianist, bandleader, Fuhrman School of Music founder
Don Traveline
Camden pianist, songwriter, and radio music director
Dorothy Short
Collingswood actress, starred in Reefer Madness (1936)
Eddie Nichols
Depression-era walkathon entertainer and singer known as 'The Man with a Million'
Frank M. Traveline Jr.
New Jersey State Assemblyman in the 1930s
Frank Tiberi
Camden jazz musician and leader of the Woody Herman Orchestra
James Cardwell
Camden-born actor who appeared in 26 Hollywood films (1944–1954), including The Sullivans, He Walked by Night, and A Walk in the Sun
Jay Jerome
Camden bandleader, Jay Jerome Orchestra
Jennings' Band
Joe Lang
Camden labor leader; Campbell Soup union organizer; musician known as Joe Lang
Joe Seddon Jr.
Cramer Hill musician, artist, and snake handler
Joseph Jennings
Bandleader of Jennings' Sixth Regiment Band and Jennings' Third Regiment Band, famous in Camden from the 1880s through 1912.
Lawrence Fotine
Camden-born musician who wrote 300+ songs with Duke Ellington
Len Antonelli
Camden actor, appeared in Hollywood film with Rosalind Russell
Leon Huff
Camden-born Philadelphia International Records co-founder, Gamble & Huff
Lola Falana
Singer, Actress
Martin Portnoy
Camden bandleader and musician
Martin Portnoy
Camden bandleader and musician
Richard 'Groove' Holmes
Camden-born jazz organist (1931–1991), known for his soulful Hammond organ style and 1965 hit recording of 'Misty'
Russ Columbo
Camden-born singer, violinist, and actor (1908–1934); crooning rival of Bing Crosby; famous for 'You Call It Madness, But I Call It Love.'
Sam Yellin
Stratford diner owner and police chief
Steve Rico
Hawaiian musician killed in train-auto accident, 1962
T. Hank Cook
TRU
Vincent A. Tydeman
Vaudeville acrobat and minor league baseball outfielder
William Parke
Silent film director and stage manager, 1895–1941
Singers
Johnny B. & the Rock A Bops
The Four Blues
Savannah Churchill
Jazz, Blues, and R&B singer
Doles Dickens
Bob Eberly
The Ebonys
Camden R&B group, Philadelphia International Records
Patty and the Emblems
Camden soul group, Mixed-Up Shook-Up Girl (1964)
Billy Hays & his Orchestra
H. H. Holmes
The Devil in the White City
Emma Janvier
Harry Kahn
Julius Lande
Emilie Longacre
Art Lund
The Mel-Tones
South Camden vocal group, 1950s–1960s
Harry F. Powers
The West Virginia Bluebeard
Frank Richardson
aka Frankie Richardson
Sholom Secunda
The Story of Bei Mir Bist du Schön
Executive Suite
Camden R&B vocal group formed in 1969, featuring Henry Tuten, Billy Tyler, Charles Conyers, and Vincent Unto. Charted three Billboard R&B hits in 1973-1974.
Dick Todd
Frank Virtue
Eve Young - Karen Chandler
Vaudeville
Thomas Burnett
Former vaudevillian and sea captain who collected Abraham Lincoln and American stage memorabilia
Irish Billy Carroll
Vaudeville actor and Irish comedian who died on stage at Camden's Broadway Theatre, 1909
Jimmy Conlin
Vaudeville comedian and Hollywood character actor; appeared in over 150 films (1928–1959)
John F. 'Scotty' Friedel
Vaudeville comedian on the Keith circuit
Joe Hamilton
Camden's famous minstrel performer and vaudeville entertainer
Kay Hamilton
Camden vaudeville singer and blues performer
Jesse P. Johnson
Vaudeville actor
Don Langford
Vaudeville entertainer and master of ceremonies
Gaston Palmer
Jongleur
Walter Stanton
Camden vaudeville performer and RKO artist
Tydeman & Dooley
Comedic acrobats on the B.F. Keith vaudeville circuit, 1900s–1910s; Vincent A. Tydeman grew up in Camden
Postcards - Camden NJ
Postcards of Camden, NJ
Postcards
A Postcard's Story
One Postcard. Two Destinations. Three Continents. Four People. 102 Years.
A Postcard's Story Continues
A postcard's story continues.
Mystery Postcard
Who was John Randall Watson?
Postcard Images
Images of Historic Camden, NJ via Postcards
The Walt Whitman House
328 Mickle Street, Camden, NJ
Religion
Religion in Camden
Churches
A Self-Guided Tour of Saint Joseph's Polish Church
Another St. Joseph's Church web-page
Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church
Baptist Temple Church
Bethany Methodist Episcopal Church
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church
Bethel Church
Bethel Methodist Episcopal Church
Broadway Methodist Episcopal Church
Calvalry Presbyterian Church
Camden Rescue Mission
Centenary Methodist Episcopal Church
aka Centenary-Tabernacle Methodist Episcopal Church
Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church
Church of the Holy Name
Church of the Immaculate Conception
aka Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception
Church of the Immaculate Conception 50th Anniversary
November 12th, 13th, and 14th, 1905
Church of the Sacred Heart
Congregation Beth El
Congregation Beth El
Moved to Cherry Hill - December 1967
Congregation Beth El - Parkside
1950s-1960s
Congregation Beth Israel
Convent of the Dominican Sisters of the Perpetual Rosary
Eighth Street Methodist Episcopal Church
Emanuel United Brethren Church
Emmanuel Baptist Church
Epiphany Evangelical Lutheran Church
Fairview Methodist Episcopal Church
Fairview Village Methodist Church
Ferry Avenue Methodist Church
First Baptist Church
Hope Memorial Baptist Church
Kaighn Avenue Baptist Church
Kaighn Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church
The Lichtenstein Shul
on Liberty Street. Also known as Congregation B'nai Abraham
Linden Baptist Church
Macedonia African Methodist Episcopal Church
Memorial Methodist Protestant Church
North Baptist Church
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel
Roman Catholic Church School, 1953 Kindergaten Class
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel
Roman Catholic Church, 1903-1953 - 50th Anniversary Book
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel & Fatima
Roman Catholic Church
Parkside Methodist Church
Perpetual Rossary Shrine
Resurrection of Christ Church
Polish National Catholic Church
Scott Methodist Episcopal Church
Seventh Baptist Church
St. George's Methodist Episcopal Church
St. John's Episcopal Church
St. Joseph's Polish Church
Newsletters from World War II
St. Joseph's Pro Cathedral
The East Camden Parish
St. Michael's Ukrainian Catholic Church
St. Paul's Episcopal Church
St. Peter's and St. Paul's German Catholic Church
St. Wilfrid's Church
State Street Methodist Episcopal Church
Tabernacle Baptist Church
Tabernacle Methodist Episcopal Church
Talmud Torah School / Masonic Center
The Broadway Baptist Church
The Centennial Celebration of Camden Methodism
The Church of Our Saviour
The First Presbyterian Church
The Home for the Aged and Infirm of the Methodist Episcopal Church
The Presbyterian Mission
The Second Baptist Church
The Second Presbyterian Church
The Third Presbyterian Church
Third Baptist Church
Third Street Methodist Episcopal Church
Trinity Baptist Church
The Victor Talking Machine Recording Studio
Trinity German Evangelical Lutheran Church
Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church
aka Fillmore Street Methodist Episcopal Church
Ukrainian Baptist Church
Union American Methodist Church
Place of Worship
Union Methodist Episcopal Church
Wesley Methodist Episcopal Church
Wiley Methodist Episcopal Church
Wynn Memorial Baptist Chapel
Zion Church
General Religion
Sports
Sportsmen in Camden
Baseball
The Camden Braves
North Camden Baseball Club
12th Ward Athletic Association
Garrett Cowls
Grandfather of baseball in Camden
Vincent Ariel Tydeman
Camden, NJ, Professional Baseball Player
Neil Deighan
Neil F. Deighan (1892–1967) was born in Florence, NJ and raised in Camden. He played professional basketball for the Camden Alphas and Crusaders of the Eastern Basketball League (1913–1923), winning the 1919–1920 EBL championship. After his athletic career he became a prominent restaurateur and three-term president of the New Jersey Licensed Beverage Association.
Weston D. 'Wes' Fisler
Camden native who scored the first run in National League history on April 22, 1876; played for the Philadelphia Athletics.
Rocco 'Rox' Gimello
Rocco 'Rox' Gimello led the Camden Collegians baseball dynasty (1934–1937), winning four consecutive city league championships; also a WWI veteran who served with the 114th Infantry in France. Inducted into the South Jersey Baseball Hall of Fame in 2003.
William 'Kid' Gleason
William J. 'Kid' Gleason (1866–1933) was a Camden-born major league baseball star who pitched and played for 22 seasons, then managed the 1919 Chicago White Sox through the Black Sox scandal.
Ed 'Eggie' Lennox
Camden-born major league third baseman who played for the Philadelphia Athletics, Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, and Pittsburgh Rebels (Federal League). Led all NL third basemen in fielding in 1909.
Charley Smith
Manager, Old Highland semipro baseball club
Cy Perkins
Camden first baseman and team manager who played semi-professional baseball from 1896 to 1913, alongside Kid Gleason, Eggie Lennox, and other Camden baseball legends.
Grover Wearshing
William Grover 'Worm' Wearshing (1906-1991), Camden multi-sport athlete and coach
Elwood Bearint
Camden semi-pro baseball pitcher (c.1906–1954); signed by Philadelphia Athletics, played for Defiance Athletic Club and 12th Ward team
Eddie Novak
Eddie 'Pepper' Novak was a South Camden catcher who signed with the Jacksonville club of the Florida State League in 1928 and later caught for the Camden All-Stars against Negro National League teams.
Joe Hyde
Camden professional basketball player and baseball catcher (1897–1943); member of 1919–20 Camden Crusaders Eastern Basketball League champions
Vincent A. Tydeman
Vaudeville acrobat and minor league baseball outfielder
Paul Bearint
Camden minor league baseball player, roommate of Rizzuto and Berra
The Camden Braves
William Ferguson
Manager of Ferguson Baseball Club
Lou Schaub
Lou Schaub led the group that owned and managed Camden's independent professional baseball team from the 1920s through the 1930s, scheduling matches against top Negro League clubs and employing several former major leaguers.
Rocco Nasuti
WWII veteran with the 3rd Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron, Purple Heart recipient; carpenter for the Pennsylvania Railroad; youth sports coach at the Cramer Hill Boys Club
Al Bass
Camden High and Woodrow Wilson coach, three-time South Jersey hall of famer
Joe Snyder
Camden semi-pro baseball shortstop, 12th Ward and Schaub club
Fred Heimach
Camden native who pitched for Yankees, 1920s
Sig Jakucki
Camden-born pitcher who clinched the 1944 St. Louis Browns pennant
'Ott' Laxton
Samuel Arthur 'Ott' Laxton (1904-1983), Camden basketball and baseball player
Nathan F. Cowan
Camden banker and baseball pioneer, 50 years at National State Bank
Morris 'Farmer' Steelman
Morris James 'Farmer' Steelman (1874-1944), Camden professional baseball catcher and police officer
Sam Croge
Samuel Croge Jr. (c. 1937–2012) was a star pitcher at Woodrow Wilson High School who signed with the Philadelphia Phillies, and was inducted into both the South Jersey Baseball and Scholastic Basketball Halls of Fame.
Isaac S. 'Ike' Toy
Camden baseball player and police officer, 1871–1906
Walt Bubien
Walter John Bubien (1925–2008) grew up in Camden, lettered in three sports at Camden High School, played football and baseball at the University of Pennsylvania, served in the U.S. Navy during WWII, and played minor league baseball in the Philadelphia Athletics farm system in 1946.
Chuck Bearint
Semi-pro baseball player, South Jersey Hall of Fame
Danny Green
Camden-born major league baseball outfielder
Lou Bobo
Semi-pro baseball pitcher; South Jersey Baseball Hall of Fame inductee (2010); longtime Cramer Hill resident.
Zuni A.A.
The Zuni Athletic Association sponsored semi-pro sports teams as early as the spring of 1930 and into the early 1960s, winning Eastern Professional Football Conference championships in 1941 and 1942.
Walt Stanton
Camden police officer and baseball player nicknamed 'Weep,' known for the 1907 Camden Police baseball team
Neil Deighan
Neil F. Deighan (1892–1967) was born in Florence, NJ and raised in Camden. He played professional basketball for the Camden Alphas and Crusaders of the Eastern Basketball League (1913–1923), winning the 1919–1920 EBL championship. After his athletic career he became a prominent restaurateur and three-term president of the New Jersey Licensed Beverage Association.
Bad Bill Eagan
Camden second baseman who played for the St. Louis Browns, Chicago Colts, and Pittsburgh Pirates
Bob Winters
Minor league baseball player, NJ State Police
Mark J. 'Marty' Devine Jr.
Camden baseball pitcher for Camden High School and semi-professional teams; arm injury ended his career around 1923
George Clayton
Camden police captain and minor league baseball catcher
Harry Gleason
Camden-born major league baseball infielder who played for the Boston Americans and St. Louis Browns (1901-1911). Brother of Kid Gleason.
Mike Hallahan
North Camden boxer, baseball manager, First Ward politician
Basketball
Professional Basketball in Camden
The Early Years
The Camden Bullets
Professional Basketball Team
Edward A. 'Dick' Malan
Local athlete and railroad worker who lived in North Camden and later Pitman.
Jimmy 'Soup' Campbell
Eastern Basketball League champion with Camden Skeeters
William 'Billy' Morgenweck
National Basketball League pioneer, owner and player-coach of the Camden Electrics basketball team in the 1890s-1900s.
Eddie Ferat
Member of the NBL champion Camden Electrics basketball team (1903–04); later employed 25 years in the tax office at Camden City Hall.
Neil Deighan
Neil F. Deighan (1892–1967) was born in Florence, NJ and raised in Camden. He played professional basketball for the Camden Alphas and Crusaders of the Eastern Basketball League (1913–1923), winning the 1919–1920 EBL championship. After his athletic career he became a prominent restaurateur and three-term president of the New Jersey Licensed Beverage Association.
Frank 'Pop' Morgenweck
Pioneer pro basketball coach, Basketball Hall of Fame 1962
Dr. Charles B. Helm
Veterinarian, basketball team owner, city purchasing agent
Andrew J. McMahon
Athlete, boxer, and Camden County Freeholder
Bill Smothers
Legendary Woodrow Wilson High School basketball coach
Samuel Lennox
Camden Crusaders 1919-20 EBL champion; Hudson Tavern owner
Ron 'Itchy' Smith
Camden High basketball star, Group 4 titles 1959 and 1960
Ronald 'Fang' Mitchell
Camden basketball coach, Coppin State all-time wins leader
Valerie Renee Still
Famous and notable people of Camden, NJ.
Tony Alfano
Camden High basketball coach, 428–129 record, state champion
Clarence Turner
Camden High School boys’ basketball coach, 1971–2008; 775–146 career record, seven state titles, named South Jersey’s all-time career wins leader
Rich Deighan
Professional basketball player who played for the Camden Skeeters (Eastern League), Trenton Royal Bengals, and Cleveland Rosenblums (American Basketball League) in the 1920s.
Charles O'Neil
Camden basketball player, Immaculate Conception, 1920s
Bartholomew A. Sheehan
Camden judge, NJ Assemblyman, Jesuit brother
Grover Wearshing
Camden resident who figured prominently in 1930 criminal cases including the Hotel Camden holdup and Solury murder case; sentenced to 10–15 years in 1936 for highway robbery.
Alfred Geddes
Early pro basketball player, Camden Electrics
Joe Hyde
Camden professional basketball player and baseball catcher (1897–1943); member of 1919–20 Camden Crusaders Eastern Basketball League champions
Valerie Still
Camden basketball star, Kentucky all-time scorer
Roy Steele
Henry Roy Steele (1886–1946), professional basketball player in the Central and Eastern Basketball leagues (1906–1924), later owner of Roy Steele's Tavern on Carman Street and Steele's Ship Bar in Somers Point NJ.
Lenny Hall
Camden High basketball star, first Black player at Florida State University (1966), and Camden police officer
Al Bass
Camden High and Woodrow Wilson coach, three-time South Jersey hall of famer
'Ott' Laxton
Samuel Arthur 'Ott' Laxton (1904-1983), Camden basketball and baseball player
Eddie Dolin
Professional basketball player; Camden Alphas, Crusaders, and Skeeters (1912–1923) in the Eastern Basketball League
Bill Culbertson
Rutgers-Camden Basketball Coach
Ed Biehler
Outstanding Camden area basketball player
Horace B. Parker Jr.
Camden semi-pro basketball and baseball player
Rasheer Fleming
Bicycle Racing
Boxing
Camden, NJ Boxing
Camden and the Fight Game
Max Baer v Max Schemling
June 8, 1933
History of Boxing in Camden, NJ
Through 1955
Philly Boxing History
John DiSanto's site honoring Philadelphia and Camden Boxers
Veteran's Boxing Association
Ring #6 — 13th Annual Banquet
Frankie Conway as 'Man of the Year' — 1961
Sunday Evening Courier — May 7, 1961
Frank A. Abbott
Camden City Commissioner and Director of Public Works
Prince Badi Ajamu
Camden professional light heavyweight boxer who competed in the 2000s
Max Alexander
Camden super middleweight boxer, appeared on The Contender
Joey Allen
aka Angelo A. Levecchia
Roxie Allen
Rocco Auletto, known as Roxie Allen, was a South Camden welterweight boxer who competed from 1925 to 1937, winning 32 bouts with 5 knockouts.
Al Barge
Camden welterweight boxer, 12 professional bouts 1947–1954
Black Bill
Heavyweight boxer known as Black Bill, 1902-1927
Frankie Blair
South Camden welterweight boxer, 1933–1944, 24 wins, 17 losses, 2 draws
Mickey Blair
Professional boxer (1925-1936), Camden NJ super featherweight and lightweight; murdered November 4, 1941
Felix Bocchicchio
Boxing manager who guided Jersey Joe Walcott to title
Joseph Borsa
aka Joe Moran
James J. Braddock
aka The Cinderella Man
Dwight Braxton
aka Dwight Muhammed Qawi
Frankie Carlin
Camden boxer (1915–1988), fought as Frankie “Kid” Carlin; super featherweight with 9 wins in first 10 bouts
Philip J. Carlin
aka Johnny Toomey
Eddie Chaney
Camden lightweight boxer and Chaney's Bar owner
Frankie Conway
Camden bantamweight and featherweight boxer, 200+ bouts
Arnold Cream
aka Jersey Joe Walcott
Al Daley
South Camden featherweight and bantamweight boxer who fought professionally as 'Al Daley' in the 1930s; also served as an officer of the Veteran Boxer Association Ring 6
F. George Delker
Frederick George Delker was born in Philadelphia on December 21, 1879. He came to Camden and was known as a prizefighter. He was associated with the Camden Public Safety Committee during World War I and served with the Home Guards.
Forrest Eisenhart
aka Dutch Eisenhart
Watson Finch
Camden, New Jersey welterweight boxer, 1920s
Dan Flynn
Camden boxer and pigeon fancier
Anthony Georgette
Camden boxing manager, trainer, and promoter; nation's youngest boxing manager at 15; managed Frankie Rapp, Mickey and Frankie Blair, and Joey Powell
Francis W. Guetherman
aka Tip Gorman
Daria Hill
Camden professional boxer known as D' Hit Woman. Third-generation boxer, ranked in top 10 as a welterweight and junior middleweight as of 2005.
Jackie Hindle
Camden boxer Jack Hindle, active 1890s–1900s
Max Hoff
aka Boo Boo Hoff
Chick Hunt
Camden boxer and laborer, 1900-1970
McCoy Jones
McCoy Jones, Camden-based welterweight boxer active 1944–1952 with 43 recorded bouts (W 13, L 28, D 2).
Vince Lauria
aka Duke Lauria
Johnny Lucas
Johnny Lucas, 'the pride of Whitman Park,' was a Camden lightweight and welterweight boxer of the 1920s and 1930s who drew with world junior-welterweight champion Johnny Jadick on February 3, 1933.
Leon Lucas
1928 Olympic boxer and Donkey's Place tavern owner
Battling Mack
Camden featherweight boxer (Mattheo Fanelli) active 1917–1926; founded gym where Jersey Joe Walcott trained
Charlie Mack
Camden boxer Charles Fanelli, professionally known as Charlie Mack
Gordon Mackay
Sportswriter and 'Is Zat So!' columnist
Angelo D. Malandra
Lawyer, deputy mayor, and judge
Daniel P. McConnell
Dan McConnell (born c. 1873, Pennsylvania) was one of the best South Jersey lightweights of the 1890s, with a documented record of 41 wins, 21 losses, and 7 draws across 69+ professional fights from 1896 to 1902.
Frank McLaughlin
Camden amateur boxer and Emerson Athletic Club member
Andrew J. McMahon
Athlete, boxer, and Camden County Freeholder
Robert Patrick Munro
Camden laborer, boxer, and veteran
Patsy Mozier
Camden boxer who later became a merchant marine engineer and launched a one-man campaign to bring garden seeds to impoverished people in Asia
Nick Nichols
'Sailor' Nick Nichols was a Camden light welterweight boxer of the 1920s and early 1930s, also known as a letter carrier.
Joey Powell
Joey Powell (Joseph Pawelek), born December 17, 1909 in Camden, New Jersey, was a professional featherweight boxer who fought more than 70 fights under the ring name Pat Murphy during the 1920s and 1930s.
Dawn Quinton
Camden native, professional boxer and PATCO transit officer
Joe Reno
Camden police officer and professional boxer 'Joe Reno' (1916–2002)
Tommy Ricco
Camden featherweight boxer (1917–1960); fought professionally as Tommy Ricco; 16-13-3 record; Highway Department employee.
Kentucky Rosebud
Camden boxer (1854–1930), known as “Kentucky Rosebud”; featherweight who fought professionally 1886–1921, fought and knocked out featherweight champion George Dixon in 1894
Pee Wee Ross
Camden, New Jersey bantamweight boxer, 1920s; later a life member of NJ Veterans Boxing Association Ring No. 6
Lew Skymer
Lew Skymer (1906–1980) was a Camden professional boxer with a career record of 49 wins against 6 defeats. Forced to retire due to eye injuries, he later operated Skymer's Tire Service on Broadway and was inducted into the Pennsylvania Boxing Hall of Fame in 1981.
Thomas J. Skymer
aka Tommy Skymer
Raymond Smith
aka Sgt. Ray Smith
Raymond F. Smith
aka Little Ray Smith
Joe Spearing
Joe Spearing, born Thomas Joseph Spearing in Philadelphia in 1904, was Camden's 'fiddling boxer' — known for playing violin before every fight to calm his nerves. He compiled a 10–6–4 record as a professional lightweight and later served as president of Veteran Boxers Association Ring 6 in Camden.
Harry A. Stahl
Joey Straiges
Joseph A. 'Joey' Straiges was a South Camden junior lightweight and lightweight boxer who fought in the mid-1930s, most notably facing Pedro Montanez who twice challenged for the world lightweight title.
Walter West
Walter E. Kennedy (1892-1949), Camden welterweight boxer who fought as Walter West from 1911 to 1915, later a WWI veteran and cafe owner.
Bobby 'Buzz-Saw' Zimmerman
Camden flyweight boxer and South Jersey champion
Dog Show
Mrs. William MacFarland
Camden horse and dog breeder whose champion Chow, Far Land Thundergust, won Best of Breed at the 1936 Westminster Dog Show and Best of Non-Sporting Group in 1937.
Far Land Thundergust
Camden horse and dog breeder whose champion Chow, Far Land Thundergust, won Best of Breed at the 1936 Westminster Dog Show and Best of Non-Sporting Group in 1937.
Football
South Camden Lions Midget Football
Zuni Indians
Zuni Athletic Association
Charley Rogers
Charles Stagg Rogers, known as the “Camden Comet,” was an All-America halfback at the University of Pennsylvania and played for the Frankford Yellow Jackets in the NFL.
Mike Rozier
Star running back at Woodrow Wilson High School, 1983 Heisman Trophy winner at the University of Nebraska, and NFL running back with the Houston Oilers and Atlanta Falcons.
Art Still
NFL defensive end, four-time Pro Bowl selection
George Almon Munger
Penn Quakers football coach, 84 wins, 14 All-Americans
Bill Seitzinger
Camden Catholic High School football star, University of Georgia
Walt Bubien
Walter John Bubien (1925–2008) grew up in Camden, lettered in three sports at Camden High School, played football and baseball at the University of Pennsylvania, served in the U.S. Navy during WWII, and played minor league baseball in the Philadelphia Athletics farm system in 1946.
Zuni A.A.
The Zuni Athletic Association sponsored semi-pro sports teams as early as the spring of 1930 and into the early 1960s, winning Eastern Professional Football Conference championships in 1941 and 1942.
Derrick Ramsey
NFL tight end, Oakland Raiders and Patriots
Donovin Darius
NFL safety, Jacksonville Jaguars first-round pick
Vince Zizak
NFL player with Chicago Bears and Philadelphia Eagles
George Savitsky
Four-time All-American, 1948 Eagles champion
Benjamin Morell
aka Sonny Morrell
Running
John Glazer
Camden long-distance runner and South Jersey running pioneer
Camden County Sports Hall of Fame and Sports Legends
Wrestling
Photos of Camden Carousel
Camden NJ Water Tower
At the base of Elm Street, at the Delaware River.
Sunrise over City Hall, November 2004
Photo by Craig Campbell.
Camden, NJ Arial
Cooper Street to State Street — 1952
The Sun Rises over Camden, November 2004
Photo by Craig Campbell