<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/browse?tags=Doctors&amp;sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CCreator&amp;sort_dir=a&amp;page=1&amp;output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T13:11:59-04:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>1</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>22</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="16" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="22">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/617ffd39eced02a48b4246331d1f2d9b.pdf</src>
        <authentication>17888bf7473f29f8b2c775ce0dba6d79</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="1">
            <name>Dublin Core</name>
            <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="50">
                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="181">
                    <text>Two Glass Syringes</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
              <element elementId="39">
                <name>Creator</name>
                <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="182">
                    <text>Timothy J. Potero</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="3">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="134">
                  <text>Research Reports</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="136">
                  <text>Research by student and faculty investigators.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="137">
                  <text>Rutgers University-Camden</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="37">
              <name>Contributor</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="340">
                  <text>Tia Antonelli, Lucy Davis, William Krakower, Charlene Mires, Timothy Potero</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="177">
                <text>Two Glass Syringes</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="178">
                <text>Timothy J. Potero</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="179">
                <text>Rutgers University-Camden</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="180">
                <text>Copyright 2018 Timothy J. Potero; do not distribute or cite without permission of the author.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>300 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Archaeology</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="33">
        <name>Civil War</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="7">
        <name>Health and Medicine</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="45" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="61">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/3a12ccb3c7c2764eca687d5031d7746c.jpg</src>
        <authentication>d3b9777c3142a594c14ec26a2ae3a8cb</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="62">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/87e37318d82fa64e9dcf0967d322c7e9.jpg</src>
        <authentication>3c7963464a504b72fa3c8c4c80266914</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="63">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/8f3f217f460f620d275a824cf8a311a1.jpg</src>
        <authentication>1cd76384a1344dceb1e6bd837d5f1546</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="500">
              <text>Originally a Greek Revival rowhouse, modified with Italianate influences and bay windows during the early twentieth century (prior to 1926).</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="501">
              <text>1853</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="502">
              <text>In March 1853 the Philadelphia &lt;em&gt;Public Ledger&lt;/em&gt; observed, "Mr. Atwood has nearly finished two exquisitely, ornamentally and conveniently arranged dwelling houses on Cooper Street. They are fine additions to the improvements of that part of the city." With this brief note, the newspaper documented the construction of 415 and &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/48" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;417&lt;/a&gt; Cooper Street. "Mr. Atwood" was Jesse Atwood, a Philadelphia-based artist whose wife, Hannah, had purchased property on the north side of Cooper Street from the Cooper family in 1845 and 1846. The frontage of the property accommodated three houses, initially a wood-frame house at &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/70" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;413&lt;/a&gt; Cooper Street followed by the two brick houses erected in 1853. The Atwoods also developed four smaller dwellings on the back of the property, facing Lawrence Street.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For most of the century following their construction, the houses at 415 and 417 Cooper Street were jointly owned with one or both treated as investment properties rented out to others. &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/54" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Hannah Atwood&lt;/a&gt; derived a steady rental income as her husband pursued his career as an itinerant artist, and she bequeathed the houses to her granddaughter for the same purpose in 1883. The family sold the houses to others, but they remained rental properties.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; It is possible that the Atwoods lived in either 413, 415, or 417 Cooper Street between 1853 and 1860, as they appear in city directories at "Cooper above Fourth." But for nearly eighty years, 415 Cooper Street had just two long-term resident families: the Brownings (c. 1860-1901) and the Franklins (1904-1938).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Widowhood and&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;strong&gt;Boarders&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Jerusha Browning, who headed the household at 415 Cooper Street by 1860, was a member by marriage of the prominent Browning family of South Jersey. Her husband, Lawrence, had 17 siblings born from his father's two marriages, which gave Jerusha a vast network of relations while she lived on Cooper Street for more than two decades after the death of her husband. By marriage or lineage, her relatives included the Doughtons and Hollinsheads next door (413 Cooper), the Hinchmans (417), and other Browning households across the street (414) and in the 500 and 600 blocks.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Jerusha apparently rented the three-story brick row house from its original owners, who relocated to Philadelphia but retained title until the 1880s. We cannot know why she made this choice, given that she and her son, Abraham, had inherited considerable property after her husband's death in 1858. If the $12,000 in inherited real estate lay in the South Jersey countryside, where the Brownings were extensive land holders, she may have opted for the proximity to neighbors or the potential to support the household by taking in boarders. In 1860, the residents at 415 Cooper Street included Jerusha, then age 60, Abraham, 26, another son, George, 22, daughter Margaret H., 30, and a servant, Margaret Welsh, 20.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;During the 1860s and 1870s, various other Browning relatives lived with Jerusha's family for short periods of time. They also continued to employ servants, including Lydia Pernell, who was African American, in 1874. Over time, however, Jerusha and her daughter Margaret began to accept boarders in their home. This began in a genteel manner by 1876, when Jerusha was 76 and her daughter 46, and their boarders included the English-born architect &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/47" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Arthur Truscott&lt;/a&gt; and his two brothers in the insurance business, James and Millwood. They would have been low-risk boarders, given that they were nephews of an insurance man already established in Camden. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of the three Truscott brothers, the architect remained with the Brownings the longest, for at least twelve years between 1876 and 1888. During this period, he established his architecture practice in Philadelphia and designed the &lt;a href="https://www.preservationnj.org/listings/new-jersey-safe-deposit-and-trust-company/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;New Jersey Safe Deposit &amp;amp; Trust Company building&lt;/a&gt; at Third and Market Streets in Camden (1887). Later he served as a supervising architect during construction of the Camden High School built on Park Boulevard 1916-18. His firm Baily and Truscott also contributed new buildings to Cooper Street with the Chateauesque trio of houses at 538-42 Cooper Street (c. 1892)--later retained as facades for the LEAP Academy Charter School--and the Colonial Revival house at 514 Cooper (1903).  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;After Jerusha Browning died in 1884, Margaret continued to operate the boarding house and to advertise it actively in Camden newspapers. She offered rooms for boarders on the second and third floor, in some cases connecting rooms that could be rented together. She remained in the home and in the boarding house business into her 70s. The Browning family association with 415 Cooper Street ended at the turn of the twentieth century, with Margaret H. Browning's death in 1901.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;From Horses to Automobiles&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The next long-term occupant of 415 Cooper Street, Joshua B. (for Benjamin) Franklin, purchased this house as well as the adjacent 417 Cooper Street in 1903. Franklin and his family lived in 415 Cooper while renting out the house next door. He improved the properties by adding wood front porches in 1913, in keeping with similar additions elsewhere on the block. He may have added the bay windows to the second and third floors, which are evident in an aerial photograph of Camden taken c. 1926 but not in a photograph of the block earlier in the twentieth century.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Franklin, born in 1861, moved from his family's farm in Burlington County to Camden during the city's fast-growing 1880s, when he was 21. He went to work for his uncle Joseph Franklin at the livery stable on Second Street between Cooper and Market and continued the business after his uncle's death. The Franklins became well known in Camden as they rented horses and carriages to the city's social and political elite. The business had a good location close to the Delaware River ferry crossings to Philadelphia and apparently yielded a good living, as Joshua Franklin purchased two other homes, at 224 Linden Street and 116 Cooper Street, before acquiring 415 and 417 Cooper. He joined fraternal organizations, including Lodge 15 of the Free and Accepted Masons.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When Franklin moved into 415 Cooper Street, his family consisted of his wife of 15 years, Mollie, and their 4-year-old daughter Edith. He was a notable enough in the community to cause his daughter's fifth birthday party to be reported in the &lt;em&gt;Camden Courier Post.&lt;/em&gt; His personal fortunes soon took a tragic turn, however. Little Edith contracted typhoid fever and died in February 1907 at the age of 8, news that "came as a painful shock to various sections of the city where the family is well known," the &lt;em&gt;Courier-Post &lt;/em&gt;lamented. By the end of the same year, Mollie Franklin also died, from the effects of a longstanding heart ailment. She was 38 years old.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the wake of these personal tragedies Joshua Franklin remained at 415 Cooper Street, and his community connections may explain the prominent tenants he attracted to his investment property next door: the dentist Elmer Bower, for example, and the medical inspector for Camden schools, Henry Davis. In 1909, Joshua Franklin was married for a second time, to Chellie Smith, a widow who had been working as a saleswoman for several years since her husband's death. Joshua and Chellie continued to live at 415 Cooper Street for the next 25 years, at times renting rooms to others.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;At the livery stable, Joshua Franklin suffered two serious injuries: in 1913, a severely broken arm that was treated by Dr. E.A.Y. Schellenger at &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/72" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fifth and Cooper Streets&lt;/a&gt;, and in 1914 a near-electrocution that occurred during a Nor'easter when a live wire fell onto a telephone before Franklin picked up the receiver. The burns required treatment at Cooper Hospital.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The appearance of &lt;a href="https://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/essays/automobiles/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;automobiles&lt;/a&gt; in Camden during the first two decades of the twentieth century brought change and eventually the end of Franklin's livery stable. As his customers preferred their new automobiles to carriages pulled by horses, Franklin's business dealt more often with commercial clients, such as the city newspapers who still used horses to pull their delivery trucks. Franklin himself entered the automobile business with partners between 1921 and 1923, but by then in his 60s he retired and closed the stables as well. He continued to live at 415 Cooper Street with his wife, Chellie, until he died at home in 1938. In reporting his death, the &lt;em&gt;Camden Morning Post&lt;/em&gt; recounted how his 78 years of life had spanned the age of liverymen to the age of the automobile.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Professionals and Entrepreneurs&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The sale of 415 Cooper Street from the Franklin family to Dr. Benjamin Gross in 1943 marked a transition of uses to rented offices and apartments. Gross, a proctologist who lived in Merchantville, based his practice at 425 Cooper Street for about ten years before relocating the office to Collingswood. Other office tenants through the second half of the twentieth century included an accountant, a lawyer, and a dental practice.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the early twenty-first century, 415 Cooper Street gained new life as a restaurant location, at first operated by Rutgers-Camden graduate Elizabeth Ashley, then living in Cinnaminson. In addition to opening Lizzie's Cooper Street Cafe in 2003, she bought and renovated 417 Cooper Street next door to offer rental apartments to Rutgers-Camden students. Two other restaurants subsequently operated at 415 Cooper Street: McCargo's Restaurant (2006), a project of Camden native Aaron McCargo Jr., later a winner of &lt;em&gt;Next Food Network Star,&lt;/em&gt;  and another cafe (2007) operated by Ramona Breggeta.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In 2007 Rutgers University purchased 415 Cooper Street from its most recent owner, Karen J. Giroux of Highland Park, N.J., for $500,000.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="503">
              <text>1. 415 Cooper Street, 2019. (Photograph by Jacob Lechner)&#13;
2. 415 Cooper Street, early twentieth century, prior to 1913. (Camden County Historical Society)&#13;
3. 415 and 415 Cooper Street with additions of front porches and bay windows on 415, detail from c. 1926 aerial photograph. (Library Company of Philadelphia)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="515">
              <text>415 Cooper Street is a contributing structure of the Cooper Street Historic District, listed on the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places. The district's nomination for the National Register identifies significance in part through architecture and transitions of use: "The buildings within the district include Camden's best remaining examples of Federal houses and its most intact examples of nineteenth-century houses as well as important office and bank buildings of more recent vintage. These buildings demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial." Together with the adjoining buildings 413-21 Cooper Street, 415 is one of the nineteenth-century homes that qualified Cooper Street for the National Register. Its notable history includes a connection to the prominent Browning family of South Jersey and to the architect Arthur Truscott, who lived in 415 Cooper Street as a boarder for at least twelve years.  Lives of residents at 415 Cooper Street also illustrate matters of illness and death and changes in technologies of transportation. The home also embodies the pattern of transition from residential and professional to commercial uses identified as justification for listing the Cooper Street Historic District on the National Register. Rutgers purchased 415 Cooper Street in 2007.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="516">
              <text>For details about occupants of 415 Cooper Street, link to the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Cooper Street Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 415.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="517">
              <text>Charlene Mires</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="518">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Second corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="519">
              <text>Camden City Directories, New Jersey and U.S. Census Records, 1860-1940 (Ancestry.com). Camden County Property Records.&lt;br /&gt; Camden and Philadelphia Newspapers, 1850-2007 (Newspapers.com and Genealogy Bank).&lt;br /&gt; Property Report, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Historic Preservation Office (2006).&lt;br /&gt; Structure Survey, New Jersey Office of Cultural and Environmental Services.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Note on sources:&lt;/strong&gt; Historic structures surveys identify this house as constructed c. 1846, consistent with the deed for purchase for the land. This research updates and corrects the date of construction for the home.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="69">
          <name>Questions / needs for additional research</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="520">
              <text> </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="498">
                <text>415 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="499">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="89">
        <name>1860s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="90">
        <name>1870s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="47">
        <name>1880s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="48">
        <name>1890s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="123">
        <name>2000s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="136">
        <name>415 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="143">
        <name>Accountants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="137">
        <name>Architects</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="101">
        <name>Attorneys</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="138">
        <name>Automobiles</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="39">
        <name>Boarding House</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="43">
        <name>Boarding House Operator</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="141">
        <name>Burlington County</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="6">
        <name>Childhood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="177">
        <name>Collingswood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="82">
        <name>Death</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="28">
        <name>Dentists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="84">
        <name>Extended Family</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="140">
        <name>Horses</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="142">
        <name>Illness</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="109">
        <name>Injuries</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="20">
        <name>Investment</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="23">
        <name>Livery Stable</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="99">
        <name>Merchantville</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="145">
        <name>Porches</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="81">
        <name>Renovations</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="144">
        <name>Restaurants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="27">
        <name>Rutgers-Camden</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="264">
        <name>Typhoid Fever</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="46">
        <name>Widowers</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="26">
        <name>Widows</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="48" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="64">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/09cd35ef0f9280cb684e371c56c009e2.jpg</src>
        <authentication>275f0ce37413d87ba9bd2a455e661118</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="65">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/a831a01502a6088c87ab18727d45bd01.jpg</src>
        <authentication>3fe2b67ee7bfa6870aa8e9d830ad511f</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="540">
              <text>417 Cooper Street is a contributing structure of the Cooper Street Historic District, listed on the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places. Together with others in the row 415-21 Cooper Street, 417 represents a significant transition in the evolution of Camden during the 1840s and 1850s as homes were built for the first time on land formerly owned by the Cooper family on the north side of the street. The building is are among the nineteenth-century structures that support the nomination of the Cooper Street Historic District for the National Register: "The buildings within the district include Camden's best remaining examples of Federal houses and its most intact examples of nineteenth-century houses as well as important office and bank buildings of more recent vintage. These buildings demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial." This transition is illustrated by 417 Cooper Street, where residents over time also reflect histories of public health, public safety, the experiences of widows as boarding house operators, and connections between Camden and Philadelphia. Rutgers purchased the building in 2010.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="541">
              <text>Greek Revival</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="542">
              <text>1853</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="543">
              <text>In March 1853 the Philadelphia &lt;em&gt;Public Ledger&lt;/em&gt; observed, "Mr. Atwood has nearly finished two exquisitely, ornamentally and conveniently arranged dwelling houses on Cooper Street. They are fine additions to the improvements of that part of the city." With this brief note, the newspaper documented the construction of 417 and &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/45" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;415&lt;/a&gt; Cooper Street. "Mr. Atwood" was Jesse Atwood, a Philadelphia-based artist whose wife, Hannah, had purchased property on the north side of Cooper Street from the Cooper family in 1845 and 1846. The frontage of the property accommodated three houses, initially a wood-frame house at &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/70" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;413&lt;/a&gt; Cooper Street followed by the two brick houses erected in 1853. The Atwoods also developed four smaller dwellings on the back of the property, facing Lawrence Street.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For most of the century following their construction, the houses at 417 and 415 Cooper Street were jointly owned with one or both treated as investment properties rented out to others. &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/54" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Hannah Atwood&lt;/a&gt; derived a steady rental income as her husband pursued his career as an itinerant artist, and she bequeathed the houses to her granddaughter for the same purpose in 1883. The family sold the houses to others, but they remained rental properties.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; It is possible that the Atwoods lived in either 413, 415, or 417 Cooper Street between 1853 and 1860, as they appear in city directories at "Cooper above Fourth." Starting in 1860, the house at 417 was rented to others, first to a bookkeeper, William Farr, his wife Adelaide, and their three young children. The household also included a domestic servant, Rachael Askins, identified in the 1860 Census as "mulatto."&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Little is known about the next tenant, a dealer in boots and shoes named James J. Morrison,  but in 1868 a public sale of contents of the home provided a glimpse of the Victorian-era ambiance at this address. As advertised in the &lt;em&gt;Philadelphia Inquirer&lt;/em&gt;, the sale revealed a home with rosewood and brocatelle drawing-room furniture made in Philadelphia, velvet carpets, a marble-topped center table, and a fireplace with a French-plate mantel and pier mirror. Music filled the home from a seven-octave pianoforte made by the Philadelphia firm Schomacker &amp;amp; Co., which had been founded by a Viennese craftsman. The contents of 417 Cooper Street included dining room and chamber furniture, beds and bedding, china, glassware, and kitchen utensils. The furnishings provide a glimpse of domestic life on Cooper Street in the second half of the nineteenth century.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Philadelphia Connections&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;By 1870 and continuing until at least 1874, 417 Cooper Street became home for the extended family of William Jenks, a produce dealer on the Philadelphia waterfront. In addition to his Irish-born wife, Kate, the household included Kate's sister Mary Cassidy, a music teacher; and her widowed mother, Catharine Cassidy. The household also included Henry Cooper, a bricklayer, who might have been a boarder. Domestic servants--Maggie Harrison in 1870 and Mary Mullene in 1873--worked and lived in the home. Another family with Philadelphia ties followed in the early 1880s: Robert E. Thompson, a Philadelphia insurance agent with his wife, Sarah, their adult son Charles (a clerk), and Sara's sister. They moved to this address from up the street, at &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/52" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;425 Cooper&lt;/a&gt;, and stayed at least four years, from 1881 to 1885.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Personal Losses, Property Losses&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the late 1880s, 417 Cooper Street became an owner-occupied home when Willard Hinchman, a fish merchant on the Philadelphia waterfront, purchased the house at this address as well as the house next door, 415 Cooper. While the Hinchman family lived in 417 Cooper, 415 continued to be a boarding house operated by a relative who had long lived at the address, Margaret Browning. The Hinchmans had other family connections in Camden as well, especially through Hinchman's wife, M. Ella Hinchman, one of six children of prominent local businessman John Stockham. He had made a fortune during the Civil War by importing Carolina pine from the South and then selling it to the U.S. government. By the 1880s, Stockham had retired to a Maryland farm, but he previously lived at 215 Cooper Street.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Hinchmans' early years at 417 Cooper were years of loss. First, John Stockham died in 1887 at the age of 70, and his funeral took place at the Hinchman home. Just three years later, the Hinchmans' infant son named for his grandfather, John Stockham Hinchman, also died at just eight months of age. His funeral, too, took place at 417 Cooper Street. Shortly thereafter, they rented out 417 Cooper to others; in 1896 both 417 and 415 Cooper Street went to sheriff's sale. The Hinchmans left New Jersey to farm on Stockham family land in Maryland, although they returned by 1905 to a rented home in Haddonfield.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Health&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;strong&gt;Professionals&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;At the turn of the twentieth century, 417 Cooper Street was an investment property that belonged to the new owner-occupant of the house next door at 415, &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/46" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Joshua B. Franklin&lt;/a&gt;. The owner of a livery stable near the Camden waterfront, Franklin had become well-known as he rented horses and carriages to the city's social and political elites. This may have helped him attract tenants for 417 Cooper. He also improved the properties with wood front porches (added in 1913 but later removed).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Cooper Street's evolution into a location for medical offices became evident at 417 Cooper Street with the tenants of the early twentieth century. For more than a decade, between 1908 and 1919, Franklin rented to the extended family of Dr. Elmer Bower, a dentist who previously had both home and office at two other Cooper Street addresses (&lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/76" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;405&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/40" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;419&lt;/a&gt;). When Bower arrived in Camden in the 1880s, he had been fresh out of dental school at the University of Pennsylvania. Now, at 417 Cooper Street, he continued his practice from age 46 until retirement and shared the home with his wife, Catherine; his newly married son, Chester, and Chester's wife, Mary; and an adult daughter, Sarah. Dr. Bower was active in the Camden Republican Club, then at 312 Cooper Street, and his accomplishments as a fisherman occasionally made the Camden papers. When Bower retired in 1919 for health reasons, he moved briefly to another address in Camden and then returned to his birthplace, Berks County, Pennsylvania. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Bower family's successor at 417 Cooper Street also was culminating a long career in health care, particularly public health and the treatment of infectious disease. &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/51" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Dr. Henry Hill Davis&lt;/a&gt;, 70 years old when he rented 417 Cooper, lived at this address with his wife, Harriett, for about five years while serving as medical inspector for Camden's public schools. He had been appointed to the position at the turn of the century--the first post of its kind in New Jersey and only the second in the nation, after New York City. Davis instituted annual physical examinations for Camden pupils and required vaccinations before any child could be admitted to school. While continuing in this work, he was among the leaders in founding a new Camden Municipal Hospital for Contagious Diseases, which opened in 1916, and he served for twenty years as president of the Camden Board of Health. Over his long career, he led Camden's responses to smallpox oubreaks and the influenza epidemic of 1918-19. When he retired from his Camden schools position in 1925, the city honored him not only with a pension but also by giving his name to a new public school--still operating in 2020 as the &lt;a href="http://camdencitydavis.ss12.sharpschool.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Dr. Henry H. Davis Family School&lt;/a&gt; in East Camden. A street near the former site of the Municipal Hospital &lt;a href="http://www.dvrbs.com/camden-streets/CamdenNJ-Streets-DavisStreet.htm" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;also bears his name&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;A Widow's Boarding House&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Emma Jarvis experienced two deep losses in the mid-1920s: the death by suicide of her brother, John Knott, who lived on Point Street, and the death of her husband, Edgar, who operated an auto repair shop in North Camden. Perhaps it was the automotive business connected her with 417 Cooper Street, whose owner next door also sold and serviced automobiles as they gained in popularity during the 1920s. By 1927, perhaps a year or two earlier, Emma Jarvis moved from her earlier home in the 700 block of Lawrence Street to operate a boarding house at 417 Cooper.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Unusual documentation of Jarvis's new address appeared in the &lt;em&gt;Camden Courier-Post&lt;/em&gt; of January 28, 1929: a &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/49" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;testimonial advertisement&lt;/a&gt; featuring her photograph. name, and address, with the headline "Woman Cries Aloud with Joy When Rheumatic Pain Goes." The advertisement purported to describe Jarvis's excruciating pain and the miraculous cure afforded by a powder called Nurito, available nearby at Weiser's Pharmacy, Fifth and Market Streets. This was, however, one of many such advertisements that appeared across the country to tout the Chicago-manufactured product. The ads soon attracted the attention of the Federal Trade Commission, which found the powder to be akin to aspirin and ordered the ads to be discontinued. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For her more sustained venture, the boarding house, Jarvis rented 417 Cooper Street for $60 a month from the owner next door, &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/46" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Joshua Franklin&lt;/a&gt;. The 1930 U.S. Census found her at this address at age 59 with two of her four adult children (David, 35, an auto repairman, and Marion, 26, a book keeper) and six boarders. The boarders included a cook, a laundry manager, a saleswoman and a salesman, and a newspaper reporter. Many of the home's occupants shared the experience of being children of immigrants to the United States. Jarvis had been born in Pennsylvania to a father who immigrated from Germany (her mother had been born in Delaware). Jarvis's late husband had been born England. Among her boarders in 1930, one had parents born in Germany and another had parents born in Ireland. Two others demonstrated the fluidity of movement within the country; one had been born in New York and another, while born in New Jersey, had a father born in Montana.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Jarvis operated the boarding house until at least 1931 (when she was listed in the last Camden city directory published during the 1930s) and likely longer, as advertisements offering furnished rooms or apartments at 417 Cooper Street continued to appear in Camden newspapers until 1938. In the late 1930s, she moved to Haddonfield to live with her daughter, Marion, who was employed there as a book keeper.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Physician's Office, Retirement Home&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;By 1939, 417 Cooper Street had a new owner and transitioned to a common pattern of use for Cooper Street houses during the remaining decades of the twentieth century. The new owner, Dr. Edmund Hessert, lived in Collingswood (and later Rancocas) while maintaining his office on the first floor of the building he had purchased in Camden. He rented out the two floors above as apartments.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The building remained in part a family home, however, because the most long-term occupants of the second-floor apartment were Hessert's in-laws, Thomas J. and Anna Murphy, both in their 70s, together with one and sometimes two of their adult sons. Thomas J. Murphy was retired from the Camden police force; his son Thomas P. Murphy had followed him onto the force and also retired in 1943. The other son living at 417 Cooper periodically, John, served in Europe during World War II and then returned to his office job with RCA (in Camden, later in Cherry Hill).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; Maintaining a home for the Murphys seems to have been a factor in Hessert's continued ownership of 417 Cooper Street through the 1950s. A year after the death of Anna Murphy in 1958, at the age of 86, the building was advertised "for quick sale." The listing promised the buyer professional offices on the first floor and two apartments, completely modernized, including Venetian blinds and carpeting.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Professional Services and Apartments&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the second half of the twentieth century, 417 Cooper Street transitioned to an office building for insurance and legal services, with rental apartments above. &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/43" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Richard C. Hardenbergh&lt;/a&gt; operated his insurance agency at this address beginning in 1961, and in 1963 he bought the building. Although living in Haddon Township, he remained active in Camden civic activities, for example collecting registration forms for the Spring Queen competition held in Johnson Park in 1961. His business grew to twelve employees in Camden, with an additional office in Willingboro by 1966. During Hardenbergh's ownership, the tenants in the building included a training school for data processing equipment operators.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A lawyer, Barry Weinberg, owned 417 Cooper in the 1970s and 1980s, when office tenants also included an accounting firm. Thereafter the building passed through a sequence of absentee and corporate owners and often appeared in notices for sheriff's sales to satisfy back taxes. In 2002, a Rutgers-Camden graduate, Elizabeth Ashley, bought the building and rehabilitated it into apartments for students while also opening a restaurant in the house next door (215). After one more change of ownership, to a Philadelphia entity Park Properties Unlimited, Rutgers University purchased the building in 2010 for $367,000.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="544">
              <text>For a list of individuals and businesses associated with this address, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Cooper Street Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 417.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="545">
              <text>1. 417 Cooper Street in 2019. (Photograph by Jacob Lechner)&#13;
2. 400 block of Cooper Street, early twentieth century prior to 1913, with arrow indicating 417. (Camden County Historical Society)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="667">
              <text>Camden City Directories (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Camden County Property Records.&lt;br /&gt; Camden and Philadelphia Newspapers (Newspapers.com and Geneaology Bank).&lt;br /&gt;National Register for Historic Places, Cooper Street Historic District Nomination, U.S. Department of Interior.&lt;br /&gt; New Jersey Office of Cultural and Environmental Services Structures Surveys (1985) and Office of Environmental Protection, Historic Preservation Office, Property Reports (2007).&lt;br /&gt; U.S. Census, 1850-1950; New Jersey State Census, 1885-1915.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Note on sources:&lt;/strong&gt; Historic structures surveys identify this house as constructed c. 1846, consistent with the deed for purchase for the land. This research updates and corrects the date of construction for the home.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="668">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
 </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="669">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="538">
                <text>417 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="539">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="87">
        <name>1840s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="88">
        <name>1850s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="89">
        <name>1860s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="90">
        <name>1870s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="47">
        <name>1880s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="123">
        <name>2000s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="124">
        <name>2010s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="129">
        <name>417 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="143">
        <name>Accountants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="117">
        <name>Aging</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="182">
        <name>Apartments</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="39">
        <name>Boarding House</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="43">
        <name>Boarding House Operator</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="6">
        <name>Childhood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="177">
        <name>Collingswood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="82">
        <name>Death</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="28">
        <name>Dentists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4">
        <name>Domestic Life</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="164">
        <name>England</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="111">
        <name>Germany</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="131">
        <name>Haddon Township</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="100">
        <name>Haddonfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="130">
        <name>Insurance</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="173">
        <name>Interiors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="20">
        <name>Investment</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="114">
        <name>Ireland</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="171">
        <name>Merchants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="176">
        <name>Montana</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="175">
        <name>New York</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="11">
        <name>Philadelphia</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="172">
        <name>Police</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="178">
        <name>Rancocas</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="179">
        <name>RCA</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="27">
        <name>Rutgers-Camden</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="174">
        <name>Toms River</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="26">
        <name>Widows</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="180">
        <name>World War II</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="51" public="1" featured="0">
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="316">
                  <text>People</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="339">
                  <text>Residents of Cooper Street</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="12">
      <name>Person</name>
      <description>An individual.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="35">
          <name>Biographical Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="560">
              <text>During the 1920s, a leader in public health who helped Camden respond to epidemics and keep its children healthy, lived for five years at 417 Cooper Street. These were the culminating years of Dr. Henry Hill Davis's long service as medical inspector for Camden's public schools. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A native of Crosswicks, Burlington County, Davis came to Camden in the 1870s after graduating from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. While many physicians during the late nineteenth century gravitated toward Cooper Street and the vicinity of the recently opened Cooper Hospital, Davis opened both a pharmacy and medical practice in Kaighn Point. In 1899, he was appointed medical inspector for Camden's public schools--the first post of its kind in New Jersey and only the second in the nation, after New York City. Davis instituted annual physical examinations for Camden pupils and required vaccinations before any child could be admitted to school.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; While continuing in this work for the schools, Davis was among the leaders in founding a new Camden Municipal Hospital for Contagious Diseases, which opened in 1916, and he served for twenty years as president of the Camden Board of Health. Over his long career, he led Camden's responses to smallpox outbreaks and the influenza epidemic of 1918-19.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Davis and his wife, Harriett, rented the row house at 417 Cooper Street beginning in 1920; Davis was by this time 70 years old and his wife nine years younger. Their previous address had been 522 Linden Street, which was soon to be enveloped by construction activity for the Delaware River Bridge (later renamed the Benjamin Franklin Bridge). While at 417 Cooper, Davis continued in his post as medical inspector until retiring in 1925. The city honored him not only with a pension but also by giving his name to a new public school--still operating in 2020 as the &lt;a href="http://camdencitydavis.ss12.sharpschool.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Dr. Henry H. Davis Family School&lt;/a&gt; in East Camden. A street near the former site of the Municipal Hospital &lt;a href="http://www.dvrbs.com/camden-streets/CamdenNJ-Streets-DavisStreet.htm" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;also bears his name&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In retirement, the Davises moved to Toms River, New Jersey, where they owned a home. There, Henry Davis's life came to a tragic end at the age of 78 in April 1929 when he was hit and killed by an automobile. The &lt;em&gt;Camden Courier-Post&lt;/em&gt; took the opportunity when reporting his death to deliver a public health message: already during the first four months of the year, 55 people in South Jersey had been killed in crashes involving automobiles.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="55">
          <name>Time period on Cooper Street</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="563">
              <text>1920-25</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="53">
          <name>Location(s) - Cooper Street</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="564">
              <text>417 Cooper Street</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="34">
          <name>Occupation</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="565">
              <text>Physician, Medical Inspector for Camden Schools</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="31">
          <name>Birth Date</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="566">
              <text>c. 1851</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="32">
          <name>Birthplace</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="567">
              <text>Crosswicks, N.J.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="33">
          <name>Death Date</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="568">
              <text>April 10, 1929</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="569">
              <text>Harriet Davis, wife</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="570">
              <text>Camden City Directories and U.S. Census (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt;Camden&lt;em&gt; Courier-Post&lt;/em&gt; (Newspapers.com).</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="571">
              <text>Charlene Mires</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="572">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="54">
          <name>Location(s) - Other</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="573">
              <text>522 Linden Street (previous address)&#13;
563 Benson Street (previous address)&#13;
Third Street and Kaighn Avenue (pharmacy and practice, beginning 1870s)&#13;
Crosswicks, New Jersey&#13;
Toms River, New Jersey&#13;
Philadelphia</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="561">
                <text>Davis, Dr. Henry H.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="562">
                <text>A leader in public health, Dr. Henry Hill Davis lived at 417 Cooper Street for five years prior to his retirement in 1925.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="129">
        <name>417 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="226">
        <name>Activism</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="40">
        <name>Adult</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="117">
        <name>Aging</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="138">
        <name>Automobiles</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="141">
        <name>Burlington County</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="7">
        <name>Health and Medicine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="42">
        <name>Male</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="11">
        <name>Philadelphia</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="170">
        <name>Schools</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="174">
        <name>Toms River</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="52" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="68">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/274f82540cabe5cba90e18fbffa8b07f.jpg</src>
        <authentication>95466047631d0a1772284d16836fdbaf</authentication>
      </file>
      <file fileId="69">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/a8ead66e3e94647b1a8a54e7d03d82fc.jpg</src>
        <authentication>bd5e4bd3b06f33d6995ba09db2a9635b</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="576">
              <text>425 Cooper Street is a contributing structure of the Cooper Street Historic District, listed on the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places. Together with the row 415-21 Cooper Street, 425 represents a significant transition in the evolution of Camden during the 1840s as homes were built for the first time on land formerly owned by the Cooper family on the north side of the street. The nomination of the Cooper Street Historic District for the National Register identifies significance in part through architecture and transitions of use: "The buildings within the district include Camden's best remaining examples of Federal houses and its most intact examples of nineteenth-century houses as well as important office and bank buildings of more recent vintage. These buildings demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial."  The home at 425 Cooper Street represents these transitions through its use for dental and medical practices from the 1880s through the 1970s. Furthermore, the house was built for an early public official of Camden who also developed houses at the back of the property on Lawrence Street. This first owner, Isaac Porter, also served as treasurer of the West Jersey Ferry Company, reflecting the historic significance of Camden as a point of connection between South Jersey and Philadelphia. In 2020, 425 Cooper Street was privately owned and divided into rental apartments.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="577">
              <text>Greek Revival row house.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="578">
              <text>c. 1846 (dated by New Jersey Office of Historic Preservation Sites Inventory, based upon deed transferring land from Alexander Cooper et al to Isaac Porter, June 5, 1846).</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="579">
              <text>Three long-term owners of 425 Cooper Street reflect patterns of transition across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Town Builder&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In 1846, just two years after Camden became the governmental seat for newly-designated Camden County, Isaac Porter bought the land where 425 Cooper Street stands from a member of the region's most prominent founding family, Alexander Cooper. His purchase and subsequent building of a three-story brick row house was part of the first wave of home construction on the north side of Cooper Street. Porter (1807-1867) was in many ways a town builder and booster for Camden during the 1840s and 1850s as he developed his property, served in public office, and oversaw financial matters for the West Jersey Ferry Company between Camden and Philadelphia.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Porter family owned 425 Cooper Street for more than three decades. The U.S. Census in 1850 documents the Porter family during their early years at this address: Isaac, age 46; his wife, Esther (Ackley), age 40; and five children, a daughter and four sons ranging in age from 5 to 18. Isaac Porter served as Camden County Surrogate, an office responsible for recording wills and other matters related to settling estates.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In 1849 Porter also had been appointed treasurer of the newly incorporated West Jersey Ferry Company. One of Camden's important connections to Philadelphia, this ferry had been operating since 1800 under management of the family and descendants of Abraham Browning, and thus was better known to local residents as "the Browning ferry." It had a prime location, running between Market Street in Camden and Market Street in Philadelphia. As the ferry took on its new status as a corporation, its presence on the Camden waterfront grew with a wharf that further extended filled land into the Delaware River, a ferry house, and a new West Jersey Hotel.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Porter, meanwhile, developed his Cooper Street property by building two smaller houses at the rear of his lot, on Lawrence Street. The houses, numbered 432 and 434, were completed by 1855, when they served as models for an additional six two-story row houses contracted for construction by Benjamin H. Browning (a member of the ferry-operating family although not a participant in that venture). These rental properties attracted skilled tradesmen. The earliest that can be documented are in Camden city directories of the 1860s: at 434 Lawrence Street in 1865, a cabinet maker, Alexander Haines; and at 432 Lawrence Street in 1869, a carpenter, William Rotter.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;During the 1850s, Porter served twice as city treasurer for Camden (assisted by his oldest son, Joseph A. Porter, who lived down the street at 538 Cooper and later held the same office). By 1860, the Porters' older children had left the home, but the household also had gained two new female residents, likely extended family members (Eleanor Ackley, age 68, and Abigail Cooper, age 32). They also employed a domestic servant, Martha Butler, who was African American. To Census takers, she reported her age as 25, her birthplace as Delaware, and indicated that she had been married within the last year and could not read or write.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A generational transition took place at 425 Cooper Street during the 1860s with the deaths of the senior members of the family: Esther Porter in 1863, followed by both Isaac Porter and Eleanor Ackley in 1867. As customary for the time, funerals for all three took place in the family home. For Isaac Porter, the flags of the ferry boats of the West Jersey Ferry Company flew at half-mast to honor his memory.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Three of the Porters' sons remained at 425 Cooper Street through the 1870s, with the Census of 1870 recognizing the oldest of the three, 31-year-old Israel E. Porter, a store clerk, as head of the household. The family by that date included Israel's wife Ella and their infant son Harry; the other Porter brothers George, a coach maker, and Charles, a store clerk; and one or possibly two servants (in two separate listings for the family in 1870, two different servants were recorded: Margaret Brown, age 30 and described as mulatto, and Gattie Posley, age 20 and African American. This extended family remained until 1880, when they rented the property briefly to an insurance agent and his family. Financial difficulties may have contributed to the ultimate sale of the home, as it went to sheriff's sale in 1881 to satisfy back taxes.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;A Medical Family&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The next long-term family came to 425 Cooper with the street's transition during the 1880s, with the founding of nearby Cooper Hospital. Proximity to the hospital made Cooper Street an idea location for medical professionals who established both home and office in structures that previously served strictly residential purposes. Such was the case for 425 Cooper Street and the Irwin family, who lived and provided health care at this address for more than forty years starting in 1884 (and for several years previous, next door at 427 Cooper).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The owner of record for the Irwin home was Asbury Irwin, a stenographer for the Common Pleas Court in Philadelphia, but the head of the family was his father, a long-time physician, Samuel B. Irwin. The family had roots in the Brandywine region of Delaware and southeastern Pennsylvania, where the previous generation had operated iron furnaces. Samuel and his brother, the Philadelphia surgeon Hayes Agnew Irwin, inherited the iron business but also earned medical degrees at Jefferson Medical College.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The primary medical practice during the Irwins' ownership of 425 Cooper was the dental office of Alphonso Irwin, who was about 25 years old when his brother Asbury bought the home. A recent graduate of the Philadelphia Dental School (which later became part of Temple University), he founded a Camden Free Dental Clinic as well as a private practice that continued until his retirement in the 1920s. While living at 425 Cooper Street (which he purchased from his brother Asbury in 1896), Alphonso married and with his wife, Anna, raised two children. He wrote frequently about dental hygiene, particularly for children, and became a noted authority on dental law.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Alphonso Irwin became a leader in New Jersey dentistry, which for a time made 425 Cooper Street the headquarters for the New Jersey Dental Association. The association's need for a secretary brought into the Irwin household a boarder whose unusual background captured the attention of Camden residents between 1913 and 1915. The &lt;em&gt;Camden Courier-Post&lt;/em&gt; reported frequently on the social and professional activities of Winifred de Mercier-Panton, who had been born in Australia but somehow had come to be employed by Irwin as secretary of the New Jersey State Dental Board. When she had a birthday party, when she attended a social event in Philadelphia, and when she met the governor of New Jersey, the &lt;em&gt;Courier-Post &lt;/em&gt;noted the details. In November 1914, with the Great War underway in Europe, she announced her engagement to a captain in the British Colonial Force and soon thereafter departed Camden to serve with the &lt;a href="https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/4949680" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Voluntary Aid Attachment&lt;/a&gt; of the British Army. In 1915, for circumstances unknown, she was awarded a Royal Red Cross for distinguished service.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Office in Camden, Home Away&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The next owner of 425 Cooper Street, osteopathic physician George W. Tapper, lived in the home for about five years during the 1930s. By 1940, however, he and his wife, Dorothy, had a new home in Medford Lakes, Burlington County. Like a number of other medical professionals on Cooper Street during the later decades of the twentieth century, Tapper treated his property as an office/apartment building with residential tenants living in the upper floors. The frequent turnover of apartment dwellers  included Edgar J. Anzola (1937), a Venezuelan who worked in the international division of RCA; Eugene Gravener Jr. (1944), who earned the Air Medal for supplying materials to American and Chinese combat troops in north Burma during World War II; and Rosemary Tully (1958), an Irish woman joined by her new American husband after they married.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;George Tapper owned 425 Cooper Street until 1975, the first in a sequence of transfers of ownership to absentee landlords. Starting in 2007 and continuing in 2020, the property was owned by investors from the Bronx, New York, and served as rental apartments.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="580">
              <text>For all known residents and businesses at 425 Cooper Street, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Cooper Street Database&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="581">
              <text>1. 425 Cooper Street in 2019. (Photograph by Jacob Lechner)&#13;
2. 425 Cooper Street indicated by arrow in photograph taken early in the twentieth century, prior to 1913. (Camden County Historical Society)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="582">
              <text>Charlene Mires, Kaya Durkee, and Lucy Davis</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="583">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="584">
              <text>&lt;em&gt;Biographical Review Containing Life Sketches of Leading Citizens of Camden and Burlington Counties, N.J.&lt;/em&gt; (Boston: Biographical Review Publishing, 1897).&lt;br /&gt;Building Permits, Camden County Historical Society.&lt;br /&gt;Charles Boyer, &lt;em&gt;Annals of Camden No. 3: Old Ferries &lt;/em&gt;(Privately Printed, 1921).&lt;br /&gt;Camden and Philadelphia Newspapers (Newspapers.com).&lt;br /&gt;Camden City Directories and U.S. Census, 1850-1940 (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt;Camden County Property Records.&lt;br /&gt;George R. Prowell, &lt;em&gt;History of Camden County, New Jersey &lt;/em&gt;(Philadelphia: L.J. Richards &amp;amp; Co., 1886).&lt;br /&gt;Structures Survey, New Jersey Office of Historic Preservation Sites Inventory.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="574">
                <text>425 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="575">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="87">
        <name>1840s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="88">
        <name>1850s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="89">
        <name>1860s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="90">
        <name>1870s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="47">
        <name>1880s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="48">
        <name>1890s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="123">
        <name>2000s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="124">
        <name>2010s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="181">
        <name>425 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>432 Lawrence Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="189">
        <name>434 Lawrence Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>African Americans</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="117">
        <name>Aging</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="182">
        <name>Apartments</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="185">
        <name>Australia</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="6">
        <name>Childhood</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="82">
        <name>Death</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="194">
        <name>Delaware</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="28">
        <name>Dentists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="190">
        <name>Economic Development</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="164">
        <name>England</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="84">
        <name>Extended Family</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="186">
        <name>Ferries</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="85">
        <name>Greek Revival</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="7">
        <name>Health and Medicine</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="20">
        <name>Investment</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="114">
        <name>Ireland</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="32">
        <name>Lawrence Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="183">
        <name>Medford Lakes</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="193">
        <name>Pennsylvania</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="11">
        <name>Philadelphia</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="192">
        <name>Public Health</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="187">
        <name>Public Officials</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="115">
        <name>Servants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="184">
        <name>Venezuela</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="122">
        <name>World War I</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="69" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="93">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/4ee3e4a23b0c23ad01e1d2906ab02d19.jpg</src>
        <authentication>34eac2d7d9580edcc831dcd7e1765e66</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="750">
              <text>Built c. 1910, 411 Cooper Street was the last single-family home built in the blocks that later became the Cooper Street Historic District. The district is defined as representing broad patterns of American history: "The buildings within the district include Camden's best remaining examples of Federal houses and its most intact examples of nineteenth-century houses as well as important office and bank buildings of more recent vintage. These buildings demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial." The latter transition is exemplified by 411 Cooper Street, which began as a family home then turned to professional and commercial uses in the twentieth century. Its early occupants included families headed by medical professionals and business leaders; after brief service as a funeral home during the 1930s, 411 Cooper Street became an office building for real estate-related firms. Acquired by Rutgers University in the 1990s, the building became home to the Walter Rand Institute for Public Affairs. Architecturally, according to the Camden Division of Planning survey of Cooper Street structures, the house “is representative of the twentieth century extension of the urban rowhouse inspired by classical details, if not forms; and thus, is an important link in the stylistic chain displayed by the houses of Cooper Street.”</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="751">
              <text>Georgian Revival/Neo-Classical (as defined in historic structure survey by City of Camden Division of Planning, 1980).</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="752">
              <text>c. 1910</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="753">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;On January 17, 1910, the &lt;em&gt;Philadelphia Inquirer &lt;/em&gt;noted that “Dr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Slack are now settled in their handsome new home at 411 Cooper Street.” On a street dominated by nineteenth-century rowhouses, the Slacks’ new residence stood apart with a distinctly more modern and grand appearance created by yellow-orange Roman-style bricks and a substantial front porch with sandstone balustrades. Unknown at the time, 411 Cooper Street was the last single-family home that would be built in the area that later became the Cooper Street Historic District.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Slack family continued the trend of Cooper Street as a home for medical professionals. Frederick Slack, 35, was a dentist whose office was in Philadelphia; in 1910 he and his wife Lorell, 28, had a two-year-old son, Frederick Jr. The lot on Cooper Street, and perhaps the house as well, appears from deeds to have been a gift to Lorell from her uncle, Camden funeral director Fithian S. Simmons, who bought several properties on Cooper Street during the first decade of the twentieth century. He conveyed 411 Cooper Street to his niece on April 22, 1909, for the token sum of $1.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Slacks occupied the home for its first decade as their family grew to include a second son, Thomas, born in 1912. They also employed domestic servants, showing a preference for Black help in the classified ads they placed in local newspapers. The domestic workers connect 411 Cooper Street with the history of Black migration from the South: in 1910 the U.S. Census recorded the household as including Estelle C. Williams, 18, who was born in Virginia, and in 1915 the New Jersey Census recorded Jessie Ryan, 20, also born in Virginia. In addition to live-in help, the Slacks employed laundresses up to two days a week.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;While living in Camden, the Slack family spent summers at a cottage in Ocean City and visited Lorell Slack’s family in Millville, Cumberland County, on holidays. Around 1920, however, they moved to Philadelphia’s more fashionable western suburbs. By 1930 they lived in Lower Merion, Montgomery County. Their oldest son, Frederick Jr., in later life &lt;a href="https://www.nailsmag.com/encyclopedia/nsi-nail-systems-international"&gt;invented a method of repairing fingernails with acrylics&lt;/a&gt; and founded the company that became &lt;a href="https://nsinails.com/about-nsi/"&gt;Nail Systems International&lt;/a&gt; (NSI).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Manufacturing and Business Leaders&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The next two occupants of 411 Cooper Street connect the house with key manufacturing and business interests in Camden. Morris E. Noecker, president of the Noecker &amp;amp; Ake Ship Building Company, previously lived near his shipyard at Twenty-Seventh Street opposite Petty Island. His experiences illustrate Camden’s history as a place of business opportunity during the early twentieth century. Noecker, who was born in Leesport (Berks County), Pennsylvania, had come to Camden in 1902 and started the shipyard in 1905, specializing in building barges and other wood watercraft. On Cooper Street, the Noecker household included Morris, age 51; his wife Lizzie, age 49; and three grown children in their 20s, a daughter and two sons, all born in Pennsylvania.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The Noeckers occupied 411 Cooper Street for just three years before moving out of Camden to Collingswood. Starting in 1923 and for the rest of the 1920s, 411 Cooper Street became home to a member of the Taylor family, which had operated the Taylor Bros. flour and feed business in Camden since 1865. G. Wilbur Taylor and his family had been displaced from their earlier home in the 500 block of Linden Street by construction for the first bridge between Camden and Philadelphia, the Delaware River Bridge (later named the Benjamin Franklin Bridge), completed in 1926. At the Linden Street address, their household in 1920 consisted of G. Wilbur, 55; his wife Emilie, 50; daughter Gwendolyn, 27; and two servants, Emma Clare, a 61-year-old widow who had been born in Maryland to parents from France and Germany; and Bella Chambers, a 52-year-old Irish immigrant. Cooper Street proved to be the last home for the elder Coopers. Emilie Taylor, a lifelong Camden resident active in the Daughters of the American Revolution, died in 1928 after an illness of three weeks. G. Wilbur Taylor died in 1930. Shortly before his death, Taylor initiated construction of an elevator in the home, suggesting either infirmity or plans to join other properties on Cooper Street in converting to commercial use.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Mixed Use during the Great Depression&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The house at 411 Cooper Street stood vacant in 1931 as the Great Depression deepened.  Its uses throughout the 1930s were temporary and commercial, in keeping with a movement by Camden real estate interests to establish Cooper Street as a business thoroughfare. In 1932, the funeral home Joseph H. Murray and Son temporarily moved into 411 Cooper Street after a water heater explosion damaged its usual location across the street at 408 Cooper. A restaurant called Four-Eleven opened in the building in 1934 but closed in 1935 after neighbors objected to its application for a liquor license. A gas explosion during renovations in 1936 ended a planned purchase of the building by Paul Slaughter, the president of Hunting Park Motors in Philadelphia By 1937 an undertaker, Bertha Kephart, operated her business on the first floor, and the upper floors became business and professional offices, most connected with construction and real estate activity.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;During the 1940s, 411 Cooper Street gained a new family in residence, although some office uses remained in the building. Francesco D’Imperio, a physician and World War II veteran, acquired the building to use as both his office and home for his family, which included his wife Antoinette and two young sons. While Francesco advanced in his career as a gastroenterologist, Antoinette became known for her work on behalf of postwar orphans in Italy, which earned the Star of Solidarity award from the Italian government. In the 1950s, the D’Imperio family joined the trend of professionals moving from Camden to the suburbs; by 1954 they lived in Haddonfield and by 1960 they moved to Cherry Hill, where Dr. D’Imperio also located his practice.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Apartments and Redevelopment&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;From the 1950s through the 1970s, 411 Cooper Street housed offices and rental apartments; among the tenants in 1973, Cedric Wiggins was a student at the Rutgers School of Law and became chairman of the Black Law Student Union on the Camden campus.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the early 1990s, following the introduction of historic preservation tax credits, Rutgers University entered into a partnership with a redevelopment firm, Vintage Living, to rehabilitate both 411 and 321 Cooper Street into modernized offices. The location of 411 Cooper, directly across the street from a new federal courthouse then under construction, positioned the building well for legal offices. The Camden County Bar Association moved in, as did several attorney’s offices offering bankruptcy and immigration services. By 1998, however, back taxes owed on the property forced a sheriff’s sale and led to title transferring entirely to Rutgers.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Under Rutgers ownership, 411 Cooper Street became home to various university offices, including the &lt;a href="https://rand.camden.rutgers.edu/"&gt;Walter Rand Institute for Public Affairs&lt;/a&gt;, which continued to occupy the building in 2022.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="754">
              <text>For a list of all known occupants of 411 Cooper Street, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing"&gt;Cooper Street Residents Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 411.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="755">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;Camden and Philadelphia Newspapers (Newspapers.com).&lt;br /&gt; Camden City Directories (Camden County Historical Society and Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Camden County Property Records.&lt;br /&gt; Cooper Street Historic District, National Register Nomination, U.S. Department of Interior.&lt;br /&gt; Digital Photographs Collection, Library Company of Philadelphia.&lt;br /&gt; New Jersey State Census, 1915, U.S. Census, 1910-1950 (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Property Report, 411 Cooper Street, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;strong&gt;Note on sources: &lt;/strong&gt;Earlier documentation stated this house was constructed in 1924 by G. Wilbur Taylor, based on hearsay. This research updates and corrects the record.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="756">
              <text>Charlene Mires</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="757">
              <text>Charlene Mires&lt;br /&gt;Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="758">
              <text>Photograph by Jacob Lechner</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="748">
                <text>411 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="749">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="123">
        <name>2000s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="124">
        <name>2010s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="237">
        <name>411 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="101">
        <name>Attorneys</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="266">
        <name>Cherry Hill</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="28">
        <name>Dentists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="238">
        <name>Funeral Homes</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="265">
        <name>Mongtomery County</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="193">
        <name>Pennsylvania</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="25">
        <name>Real Estate</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="17">
        <name>Redevelopment</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="27">
        <name>Rutgers-Camden</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="115">
        <name>Servants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="70">
        <name>Southern Migration</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="71" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="90">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/14325b38d22c59fa4f7e22527ac57b32.jpg</src>
        <authentication>038f6edbc57a8ae88f35d922f1c0422a</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="772">
              <text>Photograph by Jacob Lechner</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="773">
              <text>Near the intersection of Fifth Street, 427 Cooper Street is among the large residences of the 1880s and 1890s that represent the height of Camden’s nineteenth-century prosperity and the subsequent transitions of a fashionable neighborhood following the 1926 completion of the first bridge across the Delaware River to Philadelphia. The residence, designed by the Moses &amp; King architectural firm of Philadelphia, contributes to the National Register of Historic Places’ recognition of Cooper Street’s significance in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, “when industry, commerce, and agriculture combined to make this city the economic and urban center of Southern New Jersey.”  In its uses over time, the house demonstrates transitions from nineteenth-century trades to real estate development and the practice of medicine in the houses on Cooper Street. In this way it supports the statement of significance for the National Register: “These buildings [in the district] demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial."  </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="774">
              <text>Richardsonian Romanesque/Queen Anne</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="775">
              <text>c. 1890</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="776">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;The distinctive stone house at 427 Cooper Street replaced an earlier brick house that stood at the same location from at least the 1850s. The north side of Cooper Street filled with rowhouses during the late 1840s and early 1850s as members of the Cooper family sold their inherited land.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Earlier Brick House&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; Early owners of the lot at this address included Thomas W. Dyott Jr., a Philadelphia wholesaler of patent medicines who bought the property in 1852 (in addition to the &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/72" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;adjacent corner lot&lt;/a&gt; at Fifth and Cooper, which he had acquired in 1846). In business with his father, also named Thomas, Dyott sold remedies such as &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/exhibits/show/excavation/item/2"&gt;Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup&lt;/a&gt; for quieting babies and cures for rheumatism, liver ailments, and other maladies. &lt;a href="https://blog.phillyhistory.org/index.php/2012/01/thomas-w-dyott-snake-oil-soda-water-and-the-perennially-seductive-philadelphia-bottle/"&gt;His father&lt;/a&gt; had immigrated England in 1805 opened a drug store, claimed to be a doctor, and became one of the nation's leading purveyors of patent medicines. Seeking bottles for his remedies, the elder Dyott also went into the bottle manufacturing business and by the 1820s had a thriving complex of factories in the Kensington section of Philadelphia. That venture grew into a company town called Dyottville but collapsed in bankruptcy after a run on its bank during the panic of 1837. The patent medicine business remained active during the 1850s as T.W. Dyott &amp;amp; Sons.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;City directories document Thomas Dyott Jr. as a Camden resident at "Cooper above Fourth" from 1855 to 1857, and his lot at 427 Cooper Street included a brick house by the time he sold it in 1860. Documented that year in their next home in Philadelphia, the Dyott family included Thomas, his wife Sarah, four children ranging in age from 8 to 16, two Irish immigrant domestic servants, and two boarders. Dyott also sold his adjacent corner lot at Fifth and Cooper Streets to a new owner in 1860. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The next owner of 427 Cooper Street, builder Thomas Atkinson (later a mayor of Camden), resold it just two years later. This transaction in 1862 opened a long period of ownership by William T. Doughten, a pioneer in Camden’s riverfront lumber industry. Doughten had moved to Camden from Gloucester City in the 1850s to establish a lumber business at Kaighn’s Point. Before acquiring 427 Cooper Street, Doughten and his wife, Abigail, had rented another home in the same block, a less substantial wood-frame house at 413 Cooper Street. At the new address, by 1870 their household included two sons and two daughters, two unrelated women seamstresses, and a domestic servant, Phebe Oney, described in the 1870 Census as “mulatto,” born in Delaware and illiterate. Although the family moved elsewhere in Camden in the 1870s and 1880s, Doughten retained ownership of the house as an investment property. Among the tenants was a dentist, Alphonso Irwin, who had his home and office at 427 from 1881 until 1885, when he purchased the house next door, 425 Cooper Street, which still stands.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;New Streetscape, New House&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The property changed ownership in 1889 during the greatest takeoff of Camden’s population, which nearly tripled between 1880 and 1920, from about 41,000 to more than 116,000 people. Cooper Street also changed in the early 1880s after residents persuaded the City Council to move curb lines toward the center to create twelve-foot front yards for the length of the street. The more pastoral setting touched off a trend of new houses that stood in contrast to earlier rowhouses as much larger, fashionable statements of their owners’ success and ambition in business.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In place of the earlier house owned by Doughten, real estate broker James White built a new house designed to serve as both his office and residence for himself, his wife, and two daughters. The Whites engaged the Philadelphia architectural firm &lt;a href="The%20distinctive%20stone%20house%20at%20427%20Cooper%20Street%20replaced%20an%20earlier%20brick%20rowhouse%20that%20stood%20at%20the%20same%20location%20from%20at%20least%20the%201850s.%20During%20the%201840s%20and%201850s,%20the%20north%20side%20of%20Cooper%20Street%20filled%20with%20rowhouses%20as%20members%20of%20the%20Cooper%20family%20sold%20their%20inherited%20land.%20Early%20owners%20and%20occupants%20at%20this%20address%20included%20Thomas%20W.%20Dyott,%20a%20druggist%20(1852-57);%20Thomas%20Atkinson,%20a%20builder%20and%20later%20mayor%20of%20Camden%20(1860-62);%20and%20William%20T.%20Doughten,%20a%20pioneer%20in%20Camden%E2%80%99s%20riverfront%20lumber%20industry%20who%20purchased%20the%20house%20in%201862.%20William%20Doughten%20came%20to%20Camden%20from%20Gloucester%20City%20in%20the%201850s%20to%20establish%20a%20lumber%20business%20at%20Kaighn%E2%80%99s%20Point.%20He%20and%20his%20wife,%20Abigail,%20rented%20another%20home%20in%20the%20same%20block,%20a%20wood-frame%20house%20at%20413%20Cooper%20Street,%20for%20two%20years%20before%20purchasing%20the%20more%20substantial%20brick%20house%20at%20427.%20At%20the%20new%20address,%20by%201870%20their%20household%20included%20two%20sons%20and%20two%20daughters,%20two%20unrelated%20women%20seamstresses,%20and%20a%20domestic%20servant,%20Phebe%20Oney,%20described%20in%20the%201870%20Census%20as%20%E2%80%9Cmulatto,%E2%80%9D%20born%20in%20Delaware%20and%20illiterate.%20Although%20the%20family%20moved%20elsewhere%20in%20Camden%20in%20the%201870s%20and%201880s,%20Doughten%20retained%20ownership%20of%20the%20house%20as%20an%20investment%20property.%20Among%20the%20tenants%20was%20a%20dentist,%20Alphonso%20Irwin,%20who%20had%20his%20home%20and%20office%20at%20427%20from%201881%20until%201885,%20when%20he%20purchased%20the%20house%20next%20door,%20425%20Cooper%20Street,%20which%20still%20stands.%20New%20Streetscape,%20New%20House%20The%20property%20changed%20ownership%20in%201889%20during%20the%20greatest%20takeoff%20of%20Camden%E2%80%99s%20population,%20which%20nearly%20tripled%20between%201880%20and%201920,%20from%20about%2041,000%20to%20more%20than%20116,000%20people.%20Cooper%20Street%20also%20changed%20in%20the%20early%201880s%20after%20residents%20persuaded%20the%20City%20Council%20to%20move%20curb%20lines%20toward%20the%20center%20to%20create%20twelve-foot%20front%20yards%20for%20the%20length%20of%20the%20street.%20The%20more%20pastoral%20setting%20touched%20off%20a%20trend%20of%20new%20houses%20that%20stood%20in%20contrast%20to%20earlier%20rowhouses%20as%20much%20larger,%20fashionable%20statements%20of%20their%20owners%E2%80%99%20success%20and%20ambition%20in%20business.%20In%20place%20of%20the%20earlier%20house%20owned%20by%20Doughten,%20real%20estate%20broker%20James%20White%20built%20a%20new%20house%20designed%20to%20serve%20as%20both%20his%20office%20and%20residence%20for%20himself,%20his%20wife,%20and%20two%20daughters.%20%20The%20Whites%20engaged%20the%20Philadelphia%20architectural%20firm%20Moses%20&amp;amp;%20King%20to%20design%20a%20distinctive%20home%20that%20incorporated%20a%20strong%20statement%20of%20Richardsonian%20Romanesque%20style%20with%20a%20stone%20arched%20window%20on%20the%20first%20floor%20but%20also%20ornamental%20touches%20that%20could%20be%20described%20as%20Queen%20Anne,%20a%20style%20that%20gained%20in%20popularity%20in%20the%20United%20States%20following%20its%20appearance%20at%20the%201876%20Centennial%20Exhibition%20in%20Philadelphia.%20The%20residence%20thus%20combined%20two%20architectural%20statements%20in%20one%20building,%20speaking%20to%20two%20purposes%20as%20home%20and%20office.%20Moses%20&amp;amp;%20King%20were%20known%20for%20designing%20churches%20as%20well%20as%20residences,%20which%20may%20help%20to%20explain%20the%20stained%20glass%20installed%20over%20the%20front%20door.%20The%20White%20family%20remained%20at%20427%20Cooper%20Street%20until%20the%201920s.%20After%20the%20death%20of%20James%20White%20in%201902,%20his%20wife%20Margaret%20became%20one%20of%20several%20widows%20heading%20households%20in%20the%20400%20block%20of%20Cooper%20Street.%20Her%20family%20in%20the%20first%20decade%20of%20the%20twentieth%20century%20included%20a%20married%20daughter,%20the%20daughter%E2%80%99s%20husband,%20and%20a%20grandchild.%20A%20Commercial%20Future%20By%20the%201920s,%20suburbanization%20and%20the%20construction%20of%20the%20Delaware%20River%20Bridge%E2%80%94later%20the%20renamed%20the%20Benjamin%20Franklin%20Bridge%E2%80%94were%20changing%20Camden,%20and%20so%20too%20the%20occupants%20and%20fates%20of%20houses%20on%20Cooper%20Street.%20By%20the%20middle%201920s,%20as%20demolition%20made%20way%20for%20the%20bridge%20and%20the%20new%20Plaza%20Hotel%20signaled%20a%20more%20commercial%20future%20for%20Cooper%20Street,%20an%20evolution%20pursued%20intensely%20by%20Camden%20boosters%20and%20real%20estate%20interests.%20The%20house%20at%20427%20Cooper%20Street%20became%20a%20medical%20office%20as%20well%20as%20a%20home%20in%201922%20when%20Mary%20Whites%20sold%20it%20to%20a%20doctor,%20Oscar%20Grumbrecht,%20and%20his%20wife,%20Mary%20(who%20held%20title%20to%20the%20property).%20The%20Grumbrechts%20moved%20again%20to%20another%20house%20on%20Cooper%20Street%20in%20the%20mid-1920s,%20and%20thereafter%20427%20was%20divided%20and%20rented%20to%20tenants.%20As%20Camden%20became%20a%20recorded-music%20mecca%20with%20the%20rise%20of%20RCA-Victor,%20the%20tenants%20included%20a%20World%20War%20I%20veteran%20named%20Edwin%20Wartman%20who%20lived%20at%20427%20Cooper%20from%201929%20to%201931%20while%20working%20as%20a%20Vitaphone%20recording%20system%20operator%20(and%20later%20a%20movie%20projectionist).%20During%20the%20Great%20Depression,%20427%20became%20a%20boarding%20house%20with%20boarders%20and%20lodgers%20including%20factory%20workers,%20waitresses,%20and%20a%20draftsman%20employed%20by%20the%20Works%20Progress%20Administration%20(WPA).%20By%20the%201940s,%20the%20building%20also%20housed%20businesses%20that%20included%20a%20dealer%20in%20hearing%20aids%20and%20a%20real%20estate%20agent,%20and%20in%20the%201950s%20its%20tenants%20include%20a%20lawyer%E2%80%99s%20office.%20By%20the%201970s,%20427%20Cooper%20Street%20reflected%20the%20overall%20decline%20of%20Cooper%20Street%20properties%20and%20appeared%20frequently%20in%20legal%20notices%20for%20sheriff%E2%80%99s%20sales%20to%20recover%20back%20taxes.%20In%202008,%20absentee%20owners%20with%20a%20Florida%20address%20sold%20the%20property%20to%20Rutgers%20University.%20%20A%20renovation%20project%20completed%20in%202011%20joined%20427%20Cooper%20Street%20with%20the%20house%20next%20door%20(429)%20to%20create%20offices%20for%20the%20Rutgers-Camden%20Department%20of%20History%20and%20the%20Department%20of%20Religion%20and%20Philosophy."&gt;Moses &amp;amp; King&lt;/a&gt; to design a distinctive home that incorporated a strong statement of Richardsonian Romanesque style with a stone arched window on the first floor but also ornamental touches that could be described as Queen Anne, a style that gained in popularity in the United States following its appearance at the 1876 Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia. The residence thus combined two architectural statements in one building, speaking to two purposes as home and office. Moses &amp;amp; King were known for designing churches as well as residences, which may help to explain the stained glass installed over the front door.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The White family remained at 427 Cooper Street until the 1920s. After the death of James White in 1902, his wife Margaret became one of several widows heading households in the 400 block of Cooper Street. Her family in the first decade of the twentieth century included a married daughter, the daughter’s husband, and a grandchild. The house they occupied changed in appearance with the addition of an ornamental front porch that obscured the heavy Romanesque arched window of the first floor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;A Commercial Future&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;By the 1920s, suburbanization and the construction of the Delaware River Bridge—later the renamed the Benjamin Franklin Bridge—were changing Camden, and so too the occupants and fates of houses on Cooper Street. By the middle 1920s, demolition made way for the bridge and construction of the new Plaza Hotel at Fifth and Cooper Streets signaled a more commercial future for the area around the White family home, an evolution pursued intensely by Camden boosters and real estate interests.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The house at 427 Cooper Street became a medical office as well as a home in 1922 when Mary White sold it to a doctor, Oscar Grumbrecht, and his wife, Mary (who held title to the property). After the Grumbrechts moved again to another house on Cooper Street in the mid-1920s, 427 was divided and rented to tenants. As Camden became a recorded-music mecca with the rise of &lt;a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20131119042100/https:/sites.google.com/site/cchsrcaorg/home/Research-Library"&gt;RCA-Victor&lt;/a&gt;, the tenants included a World War I veteran named Edwin Wartman who lived at 427 Cooper from 1929 to 1931 while working as a &lt;a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20131119042100/http:/www.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/belknap/exhibit2002/vitaphone.htm"&gt;Vitaphone&lt;/a&gt; recording system operator (and later a movie projectionist). During the Great Depression, 427 became a boarding house with boarders and lodgers including factory workers, waitresses, and a draftsman employed by the Works Progress Administration (WPA). By the 1940s, the building housed businesses that included a dealer in hearing aids and a real estate agent, and in the 1950s its tenants include a lawyer’s office.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;By the 1970s, 427 Cooper Street reflected the overall decline of Cooper Street properties and appeared frequently in legal notices for sheriff’s sales to recover back taxes. Finally, in 2008 absentee owners with a Florida address sold the property to Rutgers University. A renovation project completed in 2011 joined 427 Cooper Street with the house next door (&lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/72" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;429&lt;/a&gt;) to create offices for the Rutgers-Camden &lt;a href="https://history.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Department of History&lt;/a&gt; and the &lt;a href="https://philosophyandreligion.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Department of Philosophy and Religion&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="777">
              <text>For a list of all known residents of 427 Cooper Street, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing"&gt;Cooper Street Residents Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 427.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="67">
          <name>Associated architects/builders</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="778">
              <text>&lt;a href="https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/ar_display.cfm/26260"&gt;Moses &amp;amp; King&lt;/a&gt;, Philadelphia</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="779">
              <text>Camden City Directories, 1840-1940, Camden County Historical Society.&lt;br /&gt; Camden County Property Records (FamilySearch.org). Camden and Philadelphia newspapers (Newspapers.com).&lt;br /&gt; Dorwart, Jeffery M. &lt;em&gt;Camden County, New Jersey: The Making of a Metropolitan Community, 1926-2000.&lt;/em&gt; New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2001.&lt;br /&gt;Jones, Carmita De Solms. "Thomas W. Dyott Boot-Black, Glass Maker and FInancier." &lt;em&gt;Bulletin of the Pennsylvania Museum &lt;/em&gt;(October 1926): 226-34.&lt;br /&gt;Lockhart, Bill, et al., &lt;a href="https://sha.org/bottle/pdffiles/Dyottville.pdf"&gt;&lt;em&gt;Dyottville Glass Works&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (pdf).&lt;br /&gt; New Jersey Census, 1885-1915, and U.S. Census, 1870-1950 (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; &lt;strong&gt;Note on sources:&lt;/strong&gt; Previous documentation dated the construction of this house as c. 1882 and labeled it the “Isaac Doughten House.” This research updates and corrects the record.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="780">
              <text>Charlene Mires</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="781">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="770">
                <text>427 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="771">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="48">
        <name>1890s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="123">
        <name>2000s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="124">
        <name>2010s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="18">
        <name>427 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="137">
        <name>Architects</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="101">
        <name>Attorneys</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="39">
        <name>Boarding House</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="28">
        <name>Dentists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="84">
        <name>Extended Family</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="20">
        <name>Investment</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="24">
        <name>Lumber</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="11">
        <name>Philadelphia</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>Queen Anne</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="25">
        <name>Real Estate</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>Richardsonian Romanesque</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="115">
        <name>Servants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="26">
        <name>Widows</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="72" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="89">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/2d498dfb78c6f4708ed8fb1be0a67b81.jpg</src>
        <authentication>6dfb2c8a871b4e2a67041d28eb27e498</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="784">
              <text>Photograph by Jacob Lechner</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="785">
              <text>On the northwest corner of Fifth and Cooper Streets, 429 Cooper Street is among the residences of the late nineteenth century that represent the evolution of the street into one of Camden’s most fashionable addresses and its subsequent transitions following the 1926 completion of the first bridge across the Delaware River to Philadelphia. In its uses over time, the house demonstrates transitions from nineteenth-century trades to real estate development and the practice of medicine in the houses on Cooper Street. In this way it supports the statement of significance of the Cooper Street Historic District for the National Register of Historic Places: “These buildings [in the district] demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial." Documentation by the City of Camden Division of Planning in 1980 described 429 Cooper Street as “an excellent vernacular working of the Second Empire style [that] contributes to the late nineteenth century quality of Cooper Street with its variety of residential structures.”</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="786">
              <text>Second Empire vernacular</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="787">
              <text>c. 1850s-1885</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="788">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;The northwest corner of Fifth and Cooper Streets has been occupied by a residence since at least 1857, when it was represented on a map of Camden County as part of a row of structures spanning most of the 400 block of Cooper Street. Houses rose rapidly on the north side of Cooper Street for the first time during the late 1840s and early 1850s as heirs of the Cooper family sold their land for development.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Among the early owners of the lot at this address was Thomas W. Dyott Jr., a Philadelphia wholesaler of patent medicines who bought the property in 1846 and then the lot next door (&lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/71" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;427 Cooper Street&lt;/a&gt;) in 1852. In business with his father, also named Thomas, Dyott sold remedies such as &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/exhibits/show/excavation/item/2"&gt;Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup&lt;/a&gt; for quieting babies and cures for rheumatism, liver ailments, and other maladies. The business had grown to one of the nation's leading purveyors of patent medicine under &lt;a href="https://blog.phillyhistory.org/index.php/2012/01/thomas-w-dyott-snake-oil-soda-water-and-the-perennially-seductive-philadelphia-bottle/"&gt;his father&lt;/a&gt;, who had immigrated England in 1805, claimed without foundation to be a doctor, and started selling miracle cures. Seeking bottles for his remedies, the elder Dyott also went into the bottle manufacturing business and by the 1820s had a thriving complex of factories in the Kensington section of Philadelphia. That venture grew into a company town called Dyottville but collapsed in bankruptcy after a run on its bank during the panic of 1837. The patent medicine business remained active during the 1850s as T.W. Dyott &amp;amp; Sons.&lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; City directories list Thomas Dyott Jr. as a Camden resident from 1855 to 1857 at "Cooper above Fourth" (not "Fifth and Cooper"), suggesting that he and his family lived next door at 427 Cooper Street, not on the corner. When he sold both properties in 1860, the 429 Cooper Street lot included a frame house next occupied by Lewis Wilkins, a livery stable operator. Wilkins, who had moved into Camden from Burlington County in the 1850s, had a good location for a stable in the growing city, near the ferries that crossed to Philadelphia. At 51 years old in 1860, his household at 429 Cooper included his wife, Rebecca; their 20-year-old daughter Katura (Kate); Rebecca’s mother, Katura Moore, and her sister, Emeline Dobbins, a nurse. In a later U.S. Census, Kate was noted as having a “spine disease,” which could explain the presence of a nurse in the family.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Wilkins, his immediate family, and various other relatives lived at 429 Cooper Street for twenty years, and during that time Wilkins improved the house in keeping with architectural fashion. In 1869, he added a &lt;a href="https://www.oldhouseonline.com/house-tours/the-mania-for-mansard-roofs/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;mansard roof&lt;/a&gt;, a hallmark feature of the French-inspired Second Empire architectural style very popular in the United States during the 1860s and 1870s. In the same year, Second Empire mansards were adopted for a new mansion built nearby by a member of the Cooper family (406 Cooper Street, still standing in the twenty-first century) and for other less grand houses rapidly filling Penn and Linden Streets. Across the river, Philadelphia officials chose the same style for the new &lt;a href="https://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/essays/city-hall-philadelphia/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;City Hall&lt;/a&gt; then under construction.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Renovation Mystery&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;After Rebecca Wilkins died in 1880, Lewis Wilkins at age 70 sold his property to a real estate broker, Joseph J. Read. The experiences of the real estate man had spanned the changing worlds of work and opportunity in the nineteenth century. Born in Camden in 1815, in his youth in South Philadelphia Read learned the craft of coopering—barrel-making—and he practiced this trade in Camden as late as the 1860s. But in the 1860s and 1870s Read also began to buy and renovate houses and at least one office building in Camden, and he amassed enough wealth to also invest in property in Philadelphia and Atlantic City. Established in the real estate business, the former cooper moved to Cooper Street.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Read’s purchase of 429 Cooper Street occurred at the start of the greatest takeoff of Camden’s population, which nearly tripled between 1880 and 1920, from about 41,000 to more than 116,000 people. In the early 1880s, residents of Cooper Street sought to distinguish their thoroughfare in this growing city by narrowing the street to create front yard spaces that allowed for gardens, small yards, or front porches. The change in the streetscape prompted a wave of construction of grander, architect-designed houses. For his part, Joseph Read gained approval from the Camden City Council “to alter and change the frame dwelling house at the northwest corner of Fifth and Cooper streets by extending the same to the house line on the north side of said Cooper Street.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Read’s proposed renovation in 1882 raises a question of when – and how – the original frame house at 429 Cooper Street became the brick house that remained standing at 429 Cooper Street in the twenty-first century. The historic building survey conducted in 1980 prior to National Register listing dated the house as c. 1880, consistent with Read’s purchase of the property. But the sources for this report did not include two key pieces of evidence: local newspaper reports that Lewis Wilkins added a mansard roof in 1869 and that Read in 1882 requested to renovate a house that was frame (wood), not brick. The still-standing brick house has both a mansard and a front bay consistent with Read’s 1882 proposal – could it be the same house, further renovated with brick facing by Read, or did he rebuild entirely? There is no answer in the known public record, but by 1885 the Sanborn Insurance Company map for Camden lists only brick houses in the 400 block, and the 1891 map depicts a brick house on this corner of Fifth and Cooper Streets.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;For Read, a recent widower, 429 Cooper Street became the home of his second marriage, in 1881 to Elizabeth Schellenger (in public records of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century also spelled Schellinger), the widow of a sea captain. Their extended household included Elizabeth’s son William Schellenger, a clerk, and Edward A.Y. Schellenger (known as Ned), who during the 1890s completed medical school at the University of Pennsylvania and returned to Camden to practice. While William moved to the Philadelphia suburbs after his marriage in 1891, Ned remained in the household at Fifth and Cooper. After Joseph Read died in 1898, Ned headed the extended family including his mother, his wife Lillian, their son also named Edward, and their daughter Elizabeth. The family also employed domestic servants and a driver for the doctor; those that can be documented were African Americans: Julia Burse, a 36-year-old widow at the time of the 1900 Census, was born in Maryland. Mary Taylor, who worked in the household in 1910, was also a widow, 61 years old and born in New Jersey. She cooked for the Schellengers for at least a decade.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Medical Treatments and Tragedies&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The house at 429 Cooper Street also served as a medical office for Edward A.Y. Schellenger, adding to Cooper Street’s reputation as a location for medical professionals. Front parlors on the first floors of nineteenth-century homes served well as offices, and the physicians were within walking distance of Camden’s Cooper Hospital. Schellenger specialized in surgery, and in addition to a growing practice served on the Board of Managers of the County Tuberculosis Hospital.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;While occupying 429 Cooper Street, the Schellenger family confronted medical challenges of their own: their daughter, named Elizabeth after her grandmother, contracted polio in 1913. She lived six years longer, until age 18, when a cold developed into pneumonia and caused her death. The &lt;em&gt;Camden Morning Post&lt;/em&gt; noted that “although handicapped by deformities,” Elizabeth took an active part in combatting the &lt;a href="https://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/essays/influenza-spanish-flu-pandemic-1918-19/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;influenza epidemic&lt;/a&gt; of 1918-19. “She was an accomplished automobile driver, despite her tender years and day after day … she was busy conveying nurses, attendants, patients, and Red Cross workers to and from hospitals.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;By the time of Elizabeth’s early death, her father also had succumbed to complications from an illness that was publicly described only as a “serious ailment” that he had treated in others as a surgeon. In 1917, he cited ill health when he resigned his position with the Tuberculosis Hospital. While hospitalized shortly thereafter, he experienced burns from an x-ray that were blamed for a subsequent burst artery that ended his life. He was 47 years old.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Office Building&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The house at Fifth and Cooper Streets remained home for Schellenger’s widow, Lillian, and son Edward until the mid-1920s, but then they joined other prominent Camden families in relocating to suburban Merchantville. Cooper Street was by that time taking on a distinctly more commercial atmosphere as the opening of the Delaware River Bridge (later renamed the Benjamin Franklin Bridge) prompted changes such as the construction of the Plaza Hotel diagonally across the street from the Schellenger home. The Schellengers retained ownership of 429 Cooper Street, but a real estate firm renovated the building into offices and at least one apartment. In 1930, the apartment was rented by a church organist and his family. By 1940, the residential tenants included a German-born Naval draftsman and his family and a second household consisting of a widowed artist and her adult daughter, a secretary.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;In the 1940s, 429 Cooper Street once again became a location for medical offices, this time for doctors who practiced in Camden but chose to live in the suburbs. Among them was the son of the original Dr. Schellenger, also named Edward. The younger Schellenger, a gynecologist, opened his practice after graduating from Thomas Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. World War II interrupted his career in Camden as he served with the U.S. Army Medical Corps in Africa and the Middle East. While overseas, he met the Army nurse who became his wife, Margaret Clayton; they raised their family of two daughters and a son in Merchantville.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The younger Edward Schellenger donated 429 Cooper Street to Rutgers University in 1977. After housing student health services for Rutgers-Camden during the 1990s, the building gained a new purpose in 2011 through a renovation that joined it with adjacent &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/71" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;427 Cooper Street&lt;/a&gt; to create office spaces for the Rutgers-Camden &lt;a href="https://history.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Department of History&lt;/a&gt; and the &lt;a href="https://philosophyandreligion.camden.rutgers.edu/"&gt;Department of Philosophy and Religion&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="789">
              <text>For a list of all known occupants of 429 Cooper Street, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Cooper Street Residents Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 429.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="790">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;Camden City Directories, 1840-1940, Camden County Historical Society and Ancestry.com.&lt;br /&gt; Camden County Property Records (FamilySearch.org).&lt;br /&gt;Camden and Philadelphia newspapers (Newspapers.com and Genealogy Bank).&lt;br /&gt;Dorwart, Jeffery M. &lt;em&gt;Camden County, New Jersey: The Making of a Metropolitan Community, 1926-2000.&lt;/em&gt; New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2001.&lt;br /&gt;Jones, Carmita De Solms. "Thomas W. Dyott Boot-Black, Glass Maker and FInancier." &lt;em&gt;Bulletin of the Pennsylvania Museum &lt;/em&gt;(October 1926): 226-34.&lt;br /&gt; New Jersey Census, 1885-1915, and U.S. Census, 1870-1950 (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; &lt;strong&gt;Note on sources:&lt;/strong&gt; Previous documentation dated the construction of this house as c. 1880 and labeled it the “Joseph J. Read House.” This research updates the record and raises questions about the date of construction.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="782">
                <text>429 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="783">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="88">
        <name>1850s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="89">
        <name>1860s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="90">
        <name>1870s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="47">
        <name>1880s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="48">
        <name>1890s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="241">
        <name>200s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="124">
        <name>2010s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="19">
        <name>429 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>African Americans</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="182">
        <name>Apartments</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="82">
        <name>Death</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="243">
        <name>Druggists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="23">
        <name>Livery Stable</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="244">
        <name>Mansard</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="99">
        <name>Merchantville</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="242">
        <name>Polio</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="25">
        <name>Real Estate</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="81">
        <name>Renovations</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="27">
        <name>Rutgers-Camden</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="115">
        <name>Servants</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="74" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="88">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/b10abf82678c25d65658b12871051317.jpg</src>
        <authentication>a1f973f83b5728f4de6caf2dca4e53cd</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="802">
              <text>Photograph by Jacob Lechner</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="803">
              <text>401-03 Cooper Street is a contributing structure of the Cooper Street Historic District, listed on the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places. Documentation prepared by the Camden Division of Planning in 1980 noted, “In spite of stuccoing and alterations to the door, it remains one of the important visual links between Cooper Street’s pre- and post- Civil War development.” The scale of the house reflects the wealth and status of pioneers in Camden’s lumber industry during the nineteenth century; occupants over time included a prominent banker, a leader of the New Century Club of Philadelphia and the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, a female physician who founded a clinic for underprivileged women and children in West Philadelphia, and a future dean of Rutgers-Camden. In the 1920s the building transitioned to office and apartment use, thus exemplifying one of the Cooper Street Historic District’s stated qualities of significance, “the street's change from residential and professional to commercial." Owned by Rutgers University since the 1970s, the building became home to the Departments of &lt;a href="https://polisci.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Political Science&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a href="https://dppa.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Public Policy and Public Administration&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="58">
          <name>Architectural style</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="804">
              <text>Greek Revival</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="805">
              <text>1849-50</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="806">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;The double-lot residence at Fourth and Cooper Streets, originally the home of a lumber dealer’s family, is a testament to the prominence and prosperity of the lumber industry in nineteenth-century Camden. Lumber yards and sawmills began to populate the Camden riverfront in the 1830s and thrived for decades as the city’s dominant industry. Unlike Philadelphia across the river, Camden had an advantage of undeveloped river flats where rafts of cut timber could be accumulated. Timber came down the Delaware River from northern Pennsylvania and southern New York and filled Camden’s riverfront from Cooper Street north to Cooper’s Point. Lumber entrepreneurs also obtained Pennsylvania white pine after it traveled down the Susquehanna River to Marietta, Pennsylvania, in Lancaster County and to Port Deposit, Maryland. Once in Camden, the timber became the lumber and building products that railroads carried across South Jersey to build newly developing towns.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;A Business Pioneer&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The financial success of one of Camden’s lumber dealers, George W. Carpenter, can be seen in his home at 401-03 Cooper Street – a residence double the size of any other built in this block of Cooper Street during its first generation of development. Carpenter bought the adjoining lots in 1849 from an heir of the Cooper family, which had begun to sell land on the north side of Cooper Street for development. The purchase was among sixteen real estate purchases by Carpenter during the period from 1846 to 1859, a pace of investment enabled by his success as a lumber dealer. Carpenter, who was born in Massachusetts, had migrated to New Jersey sometime before 1830, the year he married Susan Heigh in Cumberland County. By 1841, together with a partner he was operating a lumber mill on Front Street near the riverfront.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;As it rose during late 1849 and early 1850, the new house attracted attention from the Philadelphia &lt;em&gt;Inquirer&lt;/em&gt;, which called it "one of the handsomest mansions any where near Philadelphia," and from the Philadelphia &lt;em&gt;Public Ledger,&lt;/em&gt; which noted its front facade constructed of Connecticut brownstone. When they moved into their new home in 1850, the Carpenter household consisted of George and Susan Carpenter, their three sons ages 11, 13, and 14, and a sister or other female relative of Susan. The Carpenters added to their holdings in 1854 by purchasing the adjacent lot at &lt;a href="https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/items/show/76" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;405 Cooper Street&lt;/a&gt;, which remained undeveloped until its sale to one of their grown sons in 1868. George Carpenter’s business endeavors meanwhile extended from lumber into manufacturing, and he became regarded as “one of the business pioneers of our city,” in the words of the &lt;em&gt;Camden Democrat.&lt;/em&gt; By the time of his death in 1870, he was taking an interest in the development of &lt;a href="https://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/essays/atlantic-city/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Atlantic City&lt;/a&gt; as a member of the Board of Directors of the Camden and Atlantic Railroad Company. His widow, Susan, remained in the Cooper Street house until 1887.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Wealth and Activism&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A family that united two of Camden’s economic foundations – lumber and banking – became the next owners of 401-03 Cooper Street. Wilbur F. Rose, a banker, and Mary Whitlock Rose, the daughter of a lumber merchant, moved into the grandest house on the block from a smaller house across the street (406 Cooper Street) that had been in her family since before their marriage in 1869. By the time of the move in 1888, Wilbur Rose had advanced from clerk to cashier of National State Bank of Camden. The family included two young daughters, 13-year-old Elsie and 10-year-old Mary Caroline, and Mary’s widowed mother, Ann Whitlock. (A son had died in infancy.) At various times the Rose household included other extended family members and Black domestic servants.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;With the benefits of substantial income and help to run the household, Wilbur and Mary Rose both became active in civic and charitable causes. As Wilbur Rose continued to advance to the position of vice president of the bank, he invested energy in a vast array of Camden business and charitable activities, from directorships with railroads and insurance firms to service on behalf libraries, poverty relief, and child welfare. Mary Rose, known for her interest in literature and the arts, expanded her public activities after two personal losses in 1891: the death of her mother as well as her younger daughter, who succumbed from scarlet fever at the age of 13. In keeping with the usual custom of the time, their funerals were held in the home.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;During the 1890s, Mary Whitlock Rose became especially prominent in &lt;a href="https://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/essays/womens-clubs/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;women’s club circles&lt;/a&gt; in Philadelphia and nationally. She ascended to the presidency of the New Century Club in Philadelphia, a group that had formed after the nation’s Centennial in 1876, and she became a vice president of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs. The New Century Club, originally devoted to literature and other cultural pursuits, had become active in progressive reform work by the time of Rose’s leadership. In speeches, Rose promoted the idea that clubs should become increasingly democratic and less defined by social class. She spoke on contemporary issues, including immigration and “The Possibilities of &lt;a href="https://dp.la/primary-source-sets/the-new-woman" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;the New Woman&lt;/a&gt;.” During this era, the New Century Club’s guests at its clubhouse on Twelfth Street included Susan B. Anthony and Jane Addams, the Chicago reformer who addressed the group on the subject of child labor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Mary Rose’s surviving daughter, Elsie (known in adulthood as Elise Whitlock-Rose), accompanied her on trips to General Federation of Women’s Clubs meetings, and together they toured in Europe. Elise, who was educated at the Springside boarding school in Philadelphia’s Chestnut Hill section, acquired fluency in French and a passion for French culture and history. After her school days she channeled this interest into a series of books about cathedrals and cloisters of France, researched in Europe and published between 1906 and 1914.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The death of Mary Whitlock Rose from “a lingering illness” in 1907 left a $50,000 estate to Elise and her father, Wilbur, who remained at 401-03 Cooper Street together. They employed two domestic servants, recorded in the 1910 Census as Black women born in Delaware: Mary Harris, 19, and Rosa Johnson, 64. It was around this time that Elise Whitlock-Rose embarked on her own path of community service. In her late 20s she enrolled in the &lt;a href="https://philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/essays/womans-medical-college-of-pennsylvania/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania&lt;/a&gt;, where she completed her M.D. degree in 1914. With another Woman’s Medical College graduate, Elizabeth F.C. Clark, she opened a clinic in West Philadelphia to serve underprivileged women and children, the Clinic of Notre Dame des Malades (Our Lady of the Sick). The clinic served patients for more than 30 years. Following the outbreak of World War I, which occurred while she was traveling in Europe with her father, Elise also sought to aid France by starting a war relief agency, which she called the Little House of Saint Pantaleon. She revived it in 1939 to help France at the start of World War II.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Elise Rose’s career as a physician entailed a move to Philadelphia, where she was joined by her father, who retired from business in 1912, in a home on Twenty-Second Street near Rittenhouse Square. The Rose family’s occupation of 403 Cooper Street came to an end in 1916.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Offices and Apartments&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;During the 1920s, 401-03 Cooper Street converted from a family home into physicians’ offices and apartments, a common pattern on Cooper Street during the period of construction of the nearby Delaware River Bridge (later renamed the Benjamin Franklin Bridge), which opened in 1926. Expecting a business boom in Camden, real estate interests promoted Cooper Street as a potential New York-style Fifth Avenue lined with offices and apartment buildings. They bought, renovated, and sold or managed numerous former residences in pursuit of this vision. (It is perhaps during this period of renovations that 401-03 Cooper Street gained its coating of stucco.) The physicians who subsequently owned 403 Cooper Street from the 1920s through the 1960s maintained practices in Camden but primarily lived in suburban Haddonfield. In addition to other doctors’ offices, tenants in the building included a dressmaker, Eva Smith, who lived in one of the apartments from 1929 until at least 1945. Her neighbors over that span of time included schoolteachers, a secretary, a boiler fireman, and a returning World War II veteran.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;By the 1960s, students at Rutgers University were among the apartment tenants at 401-03 Cooper Street as the university expanded its campus north of Cooper Street through urban renewal demolitions in 1962-64. During this period of significant growth for Rutgers-Camden, one of 401-03 Cooper’s apartment dwellers was student &lt;a href="https://mmarsh.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Margaret Marsh&lt;/a&gt;, Class of 1967. Later earning graduate degrees at Rutgers and becoming a renowned scholar of the histories of women, gender, and medicine, Marsh returned to Rutgers-Camden in 1998 as Dean and later Executive Dean of the Rutgers-Camden Faculty of Arts and Sciences. She also served as Chancellor - twice, from 2007 to 2009 and from 2020 to 2021 - on an interim basis.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;By the late 1970s Rutgers University owned 401-03 Cooper Street, which became home to the Departments of &lt;a href="https://polisci.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Political Science&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a href="https://dppa.camden.rutgers.edu/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Public Policy and Administration&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="807">
              <text>For list of known occupants of 401-03 Cooper Street, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Cooper Street Residents Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 403.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="808">
              <text>Camden and Philadelphia Newspapers (Newspapers.com and Genealogy Bank).&lt;br /&gt; Camden City Directories (Camden County Historical Society and Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Camden County Property Records. New Jersey State Census, 1885-1915, U.S. Census, 1850-1950 (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Prowell, George R. &lt;em&gt;The History of Camden County, New Jersey.&lt;/em&gt; Philadelphia: L.J. Richards &amp;amp; Co., 1886.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Note on sources:&lt;/strong&gt; Previous documentation estimated the construction date of this house as 1850. The revised date 1849-50 is based on the following account published in the Philadelphia &lt;em&gt;Inquirer &lt;/em&gt;on September 28, 1849: "We observe with pleasure that within the last few months a very active spirit of improvement has been evident in Camden. On Cooper street, one of the handsomest mansions any where near Philadelphia, has been erected by Mr. George Alexander Carpenter, of the Flour and Saw Mills, Camden. It is now nearly completed, under the superintendence of Mr. [illegible] Hall, contractor -- Mr. J.W. Brister, bricklayer, Mr. Simpson, stone mason, and Mr. S. Sexton, cementer and plaster. The rooms of the different stories vary from 10 to 15 in height. Mr. Hoxie, we learn, was the architect." A subsequent article in the Philadelphia &lt;em&gt;Public Ledger, &lt;/em&gt;January 26, 1850, noted the house was "nearly finished." This article also described the materials: "Its front, door and window frames are constructed of Connecticut borwn stone of a superior quality and dimensions."</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="809">
              <text>Charlene Mires</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="810">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="67">
          <name>Associated architects/builders</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="845">
              <text>Attributed to &lt;a href="https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/ar_display.cfm/51793" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Joseph C. Hoxie&lt;/a&gt; (Philadelphia Inquirer, September 28, 1849)</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="800">
                <text>401-03 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="801">
                <text>Contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="88">
        <name>1850s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="89">
        <name>1860s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="90">
        <name>1870s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="47">
        <name>1880s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="48">
        <name>1890s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="241">
        <name>200s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="124">
        <name>2010s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="226">
        <name>Activism</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="167">
        <name>Banking</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="82">
        <name>Death</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="247">
        <name>Dressmakers</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="85">
        <name>Greek Revival</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="100">
        <name>Haddonfield</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="24">
        <name>Lumber</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="81">
        <name>Renovations</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="27">
        <name>Rutgers-Camden</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="267">
        <name>Scarlet Fever</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="115">
        <name>Servants</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="121">
        <name>Teachers</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="248">
        <name>Women's Clubs</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="75" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="94">
        <src>https://omeka.camden.rutgers.edu/files/original/1a58545206a4032c8a0b31422adb830d.jpg</src>
        <authentication>b4d8fa46048454ef5ab9b406158ecd92</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="4">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="138">
                  <text>Buildings</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="139">
                  <text>Houses and other structures on Cooper Street in Camden, N.J.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="18">
      <name>Place</name>
      <description>Residence, business, or other entity.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="68">
          <name>Illustrations</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="813">
              <text>Early twentieth-century photograph, Camden County Historical Society.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="64">
          <name>Significance</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="814">
              <text>423 Cooper Street was the site of a contributing structure of the Cooper Street Historic District, which is listed on the New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places. The district is defined as representing broad patterns of American history, including: "The buildings within the district include Camden's best remaining examples of Federal houses and its most intact examples of nineteenth-century houses as well as important office and bank buildings of more recent vintage. These buildings demonstrate the street's change from residential and professional to commercial." The latter transition was well illustrated by 423 Cooper Street, which began as a family home then became a funeral home from the 1920s through the 1960s. The house was demolished in the early 1990s.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="56">
          <name>Date of construction</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="815">
              <text>c. 1847, renovated 1875.&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="65">
          <name>History</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="816">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;The house that stood at 423 Cooper Street for nearly 150 years was among the first houses built on the north side of Cooper Street as Cooper family heirs sold their land for development. When they began to divide their land into building lots in the 1840s, Camden was seeking new status as the seat of government for newly designated Camden County, formed from Gloucester County in 1844.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Building Lives in Camden&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            Jesse Townsend and his wife, Elizabeth, came to Camden in 1847, two years after they were married at the Byberry Friends Meeting in the rural northern reaches of Philadelphia. They had one infant daughter when Jesse took a job as a clerk at the State Bank of Camden, one of the institutions that marked the emergence of Camden as a city in its own right, not merely a satellite of Philadelphia across the river. The Townsends purchased the 423 Cooper Street lot and in their new house, likely a Greek Revival brick rowhouse like others in the 400 block, their family grew during the 1850s to include five children – four girls and a boy – in addition to Elizabeth Townsend’s mother, Mary Wilson.  Jesse Townsend ascended to cashier of the bank. When he also entered into partnership in a flour and grain business, his business partner Caleb Parry also lived with the family for a time.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            In 1862, the Townsend family sold the house and moved to 215 Cooper Street, closer to the bank at Second and Market Streets. New owners who lived in Woodbury rented out the house for the rest of that decade. Notably, in 1870 the tenants of the house included Richard and Mary Esterbrook, immigrants from England. Richard Esterbrook was the founder of the Esterbrook Steel Pen Company, founded in Camden in 1858 and on its way to becoming one of the world’s leading producers of steel pen nibs.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            The house underwent a major renovation by its next owner, Frederick Rex, a bank clerk in his 20s who later became a prominent attorney. When advertised for sale by its previous owners from Woodbury, the house was described as having “six chambers, and bath room, parlor, dining room and kitchen; water and gas in the house which is in good order.” Rex apparently saw room for improvement and contracted with a builder in 1875 to “tear down, build up, and repair” the 30-year-old rowhouse. The result was a home that stood out from others on the block with Italianate details. Rex then sold the house to the family who also lived there with him, feed and flour dealer Charles C. Reeves, his wife Elizabeth, and their two children.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Hardware and Prosperity&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            A sheriff’s sale of 423 Cooper Street in 1886 opened more than three decades of occupancy by members of a prominent Camden retail family, William and Clara Fredericks and their daughter, Edna, born the same year they moved into the house. William Fredericks, born in Camden in 1854, managed the hardware store that his father, Harry, had founded in the 1850s. The store carried the goods that helped to build the growing city – window sashes, doors, and building supplies. While the business prospered, the elder Fredericks also organized the Camden Merritts baseball team, which lasted just a year (1883) but started the career of pitcher William (Kid) Gleason, who later played for the Baltimore Orioles, the Detroit Tigers, and Philadelphia Nationals.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            When the Fredericks family moved into 423 Cooper Street, the &lt;em&gt;Camden Daily Telegram &lt;/em&gt;noted that their “handsome new residence” was being “fitted up in an elegant manner.” The Fredericks family displayed other signs of affluence while living at this address, including the employment of domestic servants even though they remained a small family of three. When Edna Fredericks reached adulthood, at age 20 in 1906 she sailed with relatives to Europe for a summer tour. The family also spent summers at the Jersey Shore, favoring Atlantic City.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            In 1916, approaching retirement from business, Fredericks put the house up for sale, advertising it as a “three-story brick house in one of the finest residential sections of Camden.” It offered “twelve rooms and handsome tiled bathroom; hardwood floors; pier and mantle mirrors; crystal chandelier; gas and coal ranges, cemented cellars; large yard and side entrance; front and side porches.” After a lifetime in Camden, in 1918 Fredericks retired and the family moved to an apartment in West Philadelphia.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Funeral Home&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            The next long-term occupant of 423 Cooper Street reflected the transition of the thoroughfare to commercial uses during the 1920s. The transition, promoted by Camden real estate interests, included conversion of many former residences into offices or apartment buildings. The redevelopment activity accompanied construction of the Delaware River Bridge, later renamed the Benjamin Franklin Bridge, which opened in 1926.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;            Beginning in 1923, 423 Cooper Street became the residence and funeral home of Charles W. Hiskey, who was assisted in the business by his wife, Matilda. Previously on Sixth Street, the Hiskeys described their new location as a “modern funeral home.” Charles Hiskey developed an extensive network of acquaintances that could be expected to aid the business as he joined various lodges, the Masons, the Kiwanis Club, and other organizations. Matilda Hiskey was a lifelong member of the First Methodist Church. The funeral home remained in operation until 1961, when Charles Hiskey died, five years after his wife.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Offices and Demolition&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A real estate firm next acquired the building and leased to office tenants, including physicians.  As an office building, 423 Cooper Street changed hands several times during the 1960s and 1970s, then became the property of Rutgers University in 1984. When surveyed for inclusion in the Cooper Street Historic District in 1985, the building was described as “a highly intact example of one of the most prevalent styles of architecture on Cooper Street” and “a significant contributor to the heritage of the streetscape.” The building was demolished in the early 1990s, creating a vacant lot that remained three decades later.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="61">
          <name>Associated Individuals</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="817">
              <text>For a list of known residents of 423 Cooper Street, visit the &lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15gz3_mGk3FcNl0TPaOZAq6B1CHvOpqRcY7a99xkp_l4/edit?usp=sharing" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Cooper Street Residents Database&lt;/a&gt; and scroll down to 423.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="62">
          <name>Sources</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="818">
              <text>&lt;p&gt;Camden and Philadelphia Newspapers (Newspapers.com and Genealogy Bank).&lt;br /&gt; Camden City Directories (Camden County Historical Society and Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Camden County Property Records.&lt;br /&gt; Cooper Street Historic District, National Register Nomination, U.S. Department of Interior.&lt;br /&gt; New Jersey State Census, 1855-1915, and U.S. Census, 1850-1950 (Ancestry.com).&lt;br /&gt; Prowell, George R. &lt;em&gt;The History of Camden County, New Jersey.&lt;/em&gt; Philadelphia: L.J. Richards &amp;amp; Co., 1886.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="60">
          <name>Research by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="819">
              <text>Charlene Mires</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="63">
          <name>Posted by</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="820">
              <text>Charlene Mires&#13;
Send corrections to cmires@camden.rutgers.edu</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="811">
                <text>423 Cooper Street</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="812">
                <text>Vacant lot, site of demolished contributing structure, Cooper Street Historic District.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="87">
        <name>1840s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="88">
        <name>1850s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="89">
        <name>1860s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="90">
        <name>1870s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="47">
        <name>1880s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="48">
        <name>1890s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="49">
        <name>1900s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="74">
        <name>1910s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="91">
        <name>1920s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="92">
        <name>1930s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="93">
        <name>1940s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="94">
        <name>1950s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="95">
        <name>1960s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>1970s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="97">
        <name>1980s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="98">
        <name>1990s</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="13">
        <name>400 Block</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="268">
        <name>423 Cooper Street</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="167">
        <name>Banking</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="252">
        <name>Baseball</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="168">
        <name>Demolition</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="29">
        <name>Doctors</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="250">
        <name>Esterbrook Steel Pen Company</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="238">
        <name>Funeral Homes</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="85">
        <name>Greek Revival</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="251">
        <name>Hardware Dealers</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="11">
        <name>Philadelphia</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="246">
        <name>Quakers</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="81">
        <name>Renovations</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="27">
        <name>Rutgers-Camden</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="249">
        <name>Woodbury</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
