Thursday, October 16, 2014

Trenton Photos #2


Iconic Photo of State and Broad, Center of Commerce, 1937


Y.W.H.A. Activities, 1927
State and Broad Looking Towards Yards, 1939
Famous Bakeries on Market Street 
Kohn's and Kunes


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Peripheral Streets to Union and Market Streets in South Trenton

Peripheral Streets to Union and Market Streets in South Trenton


17 Cooper Street


Harry Cohen


Smallest Kosher Edli


Robinson Brothers Clothiers on Ferry Street



Union Street



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Saturday, September 27, 2014

Trenton's Jewish Census figures for 1920



Trenton's Jewish Census figures for 1920
Arthur L. Finkle

Trenton's Jewish Census figures for 1920 was a population of  2,100.

Discounting 250 German Jewish families and perhaps 50 Hungarian families, we have a remainder of 1,800 Jews.

Discounting single person families, if we take a 'normal' family of seven (two parents and five children), we arrive at two hundred 260 families. (1800/7= 259 families).

Using combinations and permutations of children of Jewish families marrying children of other Jewish families, we arrive multitudinous inter-related families in Jewish Trenton.

Can you refine my math or should I get a mathematician to find the correlative probability? 



Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Trenton Photos #1



Majestic Trenton Central High School, 1932
Trenton True American sited where the Golden Swan Tavern sited

Union Street - Heart of  Jewish Community

Y.M.H.A. Basketball Team 1925


1900 Census of Union Street

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Trenton Scenes


Trenton Scenes




 Assinpink Creek Triumphal Arch Meeting George Washington, 1789



Trenton's Wards and Precincts
Thanks to Tom Glover and Hamilton Twp. Free Library




 Beutiful Cadwalader Park designed Frederick Law Olmstead


Famous Tunnel Raising Assinpink Creek for Easy Entry to Park




Cadwalader Park Entrance from Bellevue Avenue







Dunn Field at Brunswick Circle where Trenton Giants Played









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Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Trenton's Trolleys



Trenton prided itself on its five operating trolleys that connected workers to the job and consumers to but good as well as recreational, church  and other activities.

1.  Trenton Street Rail­way Company,
2.  New Jersey and Penn­sylvania Traction Company, River­side Traction Company,
3.  the Elizabeth and Trenton Railway Com­pany and
4.   Philadelphia, Bristol
5.   Trenton Traction Company

The entire system totaled a 40 mile radius that importantly connected  farming communities to urban areas.

In 1882, Trenton first trolley featured  as a  City Hall exhibition in downtown Trenton.



In 1892, the Perrine family that ran the stage coach business merged it into the electric road. Aka trolley. The original incorporators of the Trenton       electric cars were first operated exclusively as Horse Railroad Company, became interested in the business. In 1894, newly connected general electrification caused the trolleys to operate, initially on Broad, Centre amid Perry Streets.

The Trenton Street Railway Company was the only traction company operating within Trenton

Frank Thompson . writing in the November 10, 1910 Trenton Times headlined that  “Trolley Lines Have Been Important Factor In Trenton's Rise.”

In 1903 Market St extension provided better access for its Jewish population. The trolley lines also allowed the roads to connect to other urban areas. Trenton was linked with Morrisville, Yardley, New­town, New Hope, PA, Yardville, Ewing, Princeton, Lambertville, Lawrenceville and  the great farming districts of Mercer, Burlington, Monmouth and Hunterdon Counties in New Jersey with those  of Bucks County in Pennsylvania.

The Street Railway Company and the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Traction Company operated a number of branches.
.
The city placed speed limits on public conveyances. Horse-drawn vehicles were limited to seven miles per hour. The trolleys, somewhat more.
Later on the trolley line extended west beyond Prospect Street, opening the entire western section at the turn of the century.

The Johnson System traveled from Ingham Ave to Princeton
The Elizabeth-Trenton Trolley Lines carried freight and passengers to Elizabeth, within easy proximity to Newark and New York markets.

Trenton Times, Thursday, November 10, 1910