In the late 60s, I worked as a busboy, and later as a waiter, at Surf City Hotel and Restaurant. The veteran waitstaff of prior summers liked to warn us newbies, “If you think June and July are busy, just wait until August.”
Well, August is here, and half a century later, I imagine that Long Beach Island is still jumping. Since Google searches for images of the Jersey Shore often result in folks coming here to see many of the old postcard views we display here, we also get some questions which, frankly, we can’t answer.
Gotta share this one from a reader who asks,
Hello, Can you please tell me when Wida’s Hotel was built? Was it ever used as a hospital? Are there any supernatural occurances reported? I Love and Miss Wida’s. My friend and I did encounter something like a spirit – this is why I ask. Any info is appreciated. Thank you.
If anyone can weigh in on this issue with information or additional photos, please scroll down to the end of this article and leave a comment. -JMc
Five summers ago Carol J. Mann, a reader from Arizona interested in saving the Seaside Heights carousel found us when she searched online for images.
It was she who first alerted us to the effort to save the historic 1910 Casino Pier Carousel in Seaside Heights, NJ from being dismantled and parts auctioned off.
Readers, please contact Joe thru the above website if you care to support this restoration and preservation effort or can help him secure more information about the historic carousel. -JMc
We just received a comment from Mrs. Yvonne Caldwell in which she briefly revealed that her husband has “… number 5 (Martha) of the original 5” (Duster sailboats.)
Wait…what? There must be more to this.
She was responding to a post about the origin of the Duster made here last summer.
First, we’re gratified, but not too surprised, that Mrs. Caldwell found us.
As Roger Prichard, an HSR Board Member, as well as a member of Riverton Yacht Club, said, “It’s another cool connection that underscores what a great place this town is – and what a great resource the blog is!”
Her comment only served to raise more questions from Roger.
Who was the builder?
Who was the original owner?
Where it’s been in the meantime?
Where is it now?
Do they still sail it?
We will post more details if we get any. If any reader cares to add more information, photos, or documents to our Duster story, please use the contact form below, or send an email to: rivertonhistory@gmail.com
According to wunderground.com., “…the most intense and widespread heat wave (actually a series of heat waves) ever recorded in the U.S. occurred during the summer of 1936, when 17 of the 48 contiguous U.S. states and two provinces of Canada tied or broke their all-time heat records, along with hundreds of cities. Many of these records stand today.”
Years ago, my favorite was Olga’s Diner. Their coffee and cheesecake were the best!
I hear that construction of a new Olga’s Diner, unrelated to the former one, is underway less than a mile from the original diner.
Chuck Cherris, one of many contributors to the images shown here, generously provided these scans of his vintage postcards in 2005.
A google search for Camden images led a recent visitor to inquire if we could help him find a vintage photo of a lunch wagon in Camden, c. late 19th – early 20th centuries.
Maybe a reader out there in cyberspace can help Michael Gabriele, a Clifton, NJ author, find one.
Michael explains…
Six years ago I wrote a book about NJ diner history, published by The History Press (see attached image).
I’m in the final stages of a new project and trying to track down some material on lunch wagons (the precursors to modern diners) that operated in Camden in the 1890s and early 1900s. In particular, I’ve come across info on a Lunch wagons were the lunch wagon that operated at the Arch and Federal “triangle” intersection in downtown Camden.
If any of your colleagues has information, I would greatly appreciate it if they can share it with me. It would be super if someone has a vintage postcard collection that depicts a lunch wagon on the streets of Camden.
Let us know if you can help, or leave a comment about a Jersey diner. -JMc
It took a while, but one of our articles in The Positive Press, Regina Collinsgru’s long-running free monthly community newspaper that used to be distributed to riverfront towns in Burlington County, recently resulted in the sale of a mug.
A couple of weeks ago Elizabeth from Riverside called me to ask if we still had mugs available. In preparing for a move to Florida she came across a clipping she had saved from an old issue of The Positive Press that pictured some of our mugs that feature historic scenes of the area.
I just delivered her mug to her and she was delighted to have a souvenir of Riverside to take with her.
The exchange reminded me how much I have been missing that undeservedly defunct newspaper.
True to its name, The Positive Press printed news stories and human interest articles with an upbeat perspective, often with a nostalgic aspect.
“News about YOUR neighborhood” was Regina’s motto.
Will Valentino’s popular “Back In Time” articles always illuminated a little known chapter of Palmyra’s rich history with stories about Lena Blackburne, the originator of baseball’s famous rubbing mud, and Titanic survivor Adolph Weikman.
Despite increasing its circulation about four-fold from 5,000 in 1995 to 19,000 in 2013, increased costs and undercutting competition from corporate-owned periodicals caused Regina’s one-woman publishing house to close, I believe, at the end of 2015. rev. 2-1-2021: end of 2017
The demise of that fine publication and the loss of all of the history contained in it is a somber reminder of how easily local lore can be lost.
If the Society had not preserved to microfilm hundreds of old Palmyra and Riverton newspapers in the 1990s, we would not have been able to offer the digitalized files on our website in 2012. (See our Historical Newspapers tab)
Where else would one find gems like these?
Ok, so some of this did not make the national news, but these local publications chronicled the area’s everyday news, big and small, momentous to the mundane.
Imagine the irreplaceable loss to posterity if all 100 of Betty Hahle’s “Yesterday” columns appearing in back issues of the Gaslight News were deleted from our website.
Or if this website ceased to exist?
In the long run, the Historical Society of Riverton will only survive if it has the active support of the community which it serves or it will suffer the same fate that befell The Positive Press.
Even though The Positive Press is no longer in business, I found only 24 issues (about ten percent of the 20-year run) still alive on the world wide web. Better look sooner rather than later in case they disappear.rev. 2-1-21: The internet caught up with us and the links below no longer work. See Regina Collinsgru’s comment below this post.
Here are the very first eight newsletters (1974-1977) of the Historical Society of Riverton. Then-president Marilyn Colozzi probably wrote most or all of the single-page issues (Secretary Mary Jane Wittmeyer signed #8)
Incidentally, the names listed for the members of the Board of Directors are exclusively female.
So, thanks for the history, ladies!
In existence since June 1970, the young band of history enthusiasts struggled earnestly those first years to offer activities and programs, sponsor trips and tours to places of interest, recruit more members, and engage public interest in Riverton history.
The subject of Gaslight News #6, dated October 28, 1976, tells of a meeting that almost led to the undoing of the fledgling association.
A special meeting of the board was held October 5th to discuss the continuation of the Historical Society. After much discussion pro and con it was recommended, by those present, that the Historical Society should be dissolved.A motion was made to that effect. On October 20th the board met again. It was decided at this time to continue holding our programs, as planned, for this coming year.
Whew! We almost didn’t make it.
So here we are in 2019, approaching the Fiftieth Anniversary of our founding (June 2020), and we still strive to engage a community to understand and preserve local history.
Currently, only about 68 of 997 Riverton households support the Society with their membership. “Likes” on social media do little to materially advance our mission to “…create an awareness of our heritage, to discover, restore, and preserve local objects and landmarks, and to continue to expand our knowledge of the history of the area.”
What does move the Society’s agenda forward?
Gifts of time and money, and contributions of images, documents, artifacts, and other such evidence of our past by countless persons have made this online archive possible. Please join this group of ardent lovers of local history or donate at any time so that we may continue this worthy undertaking.
In October 1976, the Historical Society of Riverton almost dissolved. Starting in December 1977, under President and Editor Betty Hahle’s leadership, the Society continued to offer activities and programs, expanded the newsletter from its previous one-page format, and pursued historic preservation projects.
In these issues follow the organization’s efforts to save the gaslights from extinction and preserve the film “Romance of Riverton.” Read the first of Betty Hahle’s informative “Yesterday” articles. She went on to produce over 100 of her signature historical essays from 1977 – 2001.
Editor’s Note: If I can locate it, I will post that Charles Stonaker interview mentioned in the Dec. ’77 issue. Is there anything mentioned in these early issues about which you would like to know more? -JMc
Editor’s Note: The pages of these newsletters chronicle the early days of the Historical Society of Riverton.
A previous post noted that the research and historical preservation efforts of many pioneering HSR members have given us the understanding we now have of Riverton history.
Much of that history is recorded in about 180 issues of the Society’s newsletter (thru May 2019).
Shortly after I took on the job of editor in September 2007, I set out to scan back issues of our newsletter. I was disappointed to find many issues missing from the file cabinet in the Riverton Library basement in which they were stored.
Luckily, former HSR President and newsletter editor Betty Hahle had her own duplicate files. She let me borrow copies that were missing, but there were still gaps in the full publication run of the Historical Society’s own newsletter.
Further rummaging through our storage area in the basement of Riverton Library yielded a manila folder full of newsletters that had belonged to Mrs. Joan Hartmann. Its contents filled in a few more missing pieces of the Gaslight News record.
The first eight single-page issues written by then-president Marilyn Colozzi proved to be elusive for a while more, but now, even those take their place in this archive of newsletter back issues.
Only two more, dated January and November 2006, remain missing. Please contact the Society if you are able to help in completing this important record of those first formative years of the Historical Society of Riverton. – JMc
Incorporation of the Society, its certification as a non-profit, curating engaging historical programs, publishing newsletters, surveying Riverton, combing through period resources, securing a National Register of Historic Places designation, collecting and storing artifacts, images, and documents, and other work of historical preservation have brought us an understanding of what renowned historian David McCullough called “… who we are and why we are the way we are.”
Creating a website, updating it, refreshing the newsletter, and establishing a Facebook page, tasks for another generation of HSR members, would never have occurred without the pioneering endeavors of many who came before.
Who do you recognize among the persons mentioned in these five issues?
Louise Vaughn, “Sister” Probsting, Joan Hartmann, Nell Layton, EllaMay Moore, Ruth Schmierer, Betty Hahle, Carl and Walter McAllister, Harold Zayotti, William Baxter, Alice Myers, Pete Dechnik, Lloyd Griscom, Nancy Hall, John Parry, Betty Lockhart, Marilyn Colozzi…
And who among you will carry on our mission into the 21st century?
THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF RIVERTON Constitution – Article II – Purpose
The purpose of the Society shall be to bring together those people who are interested in history and especially the history of the Borough of Riverton, but not limited thereto. The Society’s major function will be to create an awareness of our heritage, to discover, restore, and preserve local objects and landmarks, and to continue to expand our knowledge of the history of the area.
Can you support this noble work with your membership or a donation?