Refurbished German War Relic Finds a New Home

Gloucester City has moved the German ship anchor that had been located at the old Coast Guard Base on King Street for years. It is now positioned near the entrance of the City Marina at the intersection of King Street and Jersey Avenue.

The anchor was taken from a German freighter captured by the Coast Guard off of the Atlantic Coast during World War II. For 40 years or more the anchor sat at the entrance of the City Coast Guard Base. When the base was abandoned by the Coast Guard in 1986 they left the anchor. For the next 21 years the anchor remained on the property rusting away behind some high shrubs.

Thinking it would make a nice addition to the City Marina the mayor and council asked the members of Union Local 711 Painters and Allied Trades AFL-CIO if they would donate their time to scrape the rust off the anchor and paint it.

Photo: Two union apprentices, Krystal Carpenter and David Gregorio began the work on the project earlier this month.

The job was completed last week and the anchor was moved to its new location on Wednesday (August 22) by the Public Works Department.

No sooner was the anchor put in place someone wrote a complaint to the \”Notebook\” about the swastikas that are visible on the anchor.

The individual in part wrote, \”My suggestion would be to have a local welder come by and change those symbols to some sort of block or something that would mask the view of the swastika. Or get rid of it all together.

Until then I am afraid to say that my son will miss out on all the ships down by this harbor because I cannot subject him to such hatred, racism and death. We will seek other harbors outside the city that bring more comfort and heartfelt welcome to those who wish to enjoy.\” He signed the letter, Disappointed.

read the entire letter

 Gloucester City Mayor Bill James when asked about the negative remarks said, \”Because of it historic value the City decided it would be wrong to remove the symbols. In the near future a plaque will be placed at the foot of the anchor explaining the history of the anchor. Please tell your son that the swastika is a reminder of the evil that America defeated so that you and he and all of us could have the opportunity to enjoy a walk along the harbor.\”

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Mount Ephraim Residents Enjoy A Fun Night Out

 

 

 

CAPTIONS BY BILL BATES (PHOTOS BY JANET GREENWALD)

 

FUN NIGHT OUT – The Camden County Free Concert Series held an evening out at the Haddon Lake Park at the Mount Ephraim Little League Field Complex on Wednesday, August 15.

 

Many residents turned out for the event as the weather was as perfect as a summer night could get. (Above) The Ann Oswald Country Band entertains the crowd.

The Mount Ephraim Celebrations Committee was on hand to distribute soft pretzels that were provided and to give out bottled water that was donated by the American Water Company.

 

The M. E. Little League concession stand was open and the Cabana Water Ice Company was also on hand for the event.

 

Photo on the left, A few of the members from the Mount Ephraim Celebrations Committee pose for a quick picture as they were distributing pretzels, bottled water, and accepting donations for the committee

 

A special thank you goes out to all of the members from the Celebrations Committee and all of the Mount Ephraim Borough workers that made this event a successful one.

 

Mount Ephraim Celebrations Committee members…………………….

(from left) Janet Greenwald, Lil Eggers, and Karen Herman strike a pose as they enjoy the Camden County Concert Series on the perfect summer night.

 

 

 

 


Here is a view of some of the locals that turned out for the event.

 

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News About Our Men & Women in the Military

 

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD PVT. DAVID W. WALLACE has graduated from basic infantry training at Fort Benning, Columbus, Ga.

During the nine weeks of training, the soldier was schooled in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid and Army history, core values and traditions. Additional training included development of basic combat skills and battlefield operations and tactics and experiencing use of various weapons and weapons defenses available to the infantry crewman.

Son of Theodore and Linda Wallace of Swedesboro, Wallace is a 2003 graduate of Kingsway Regional High School.

NAVY LT. CMDR. ASHLEY C. ROSE, son of George J. Rose, III of Swedesboro, recently reported for duty aboard the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk, forward deployed to Yokosuka, Japan.

Rose is a 1988 graduate of Kingsway High School and joined the Navy in August 1992.

MIDSHIPMAN CHRISTOPHER GEORGE VOSS of Monroeville recently graduated from the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point with the 213 members of the Class of 2007.

VOSS

At the Academy\’s 71st commencement, Voss received a Third Mate (deck) merchant marine license, presented by Vice Admiral Joseph D. Stewart, the Academy\’s superintendent.

Midshipman Voss was additionally commissioned as a U. S. Naval Reserve ensign and was awarded a Bachelor of Science in Logistics and Intermodal Transportation.

Son of George and Kelly Voss, he was nominated to the academy by Sen. Robert Torricelli.

NAVY LT. J. G. DAVID W. CAVANAUGH whose wife, Jill, is the daughter of Kathleen and Edward Crockett of Sicklerville, recently reported for duty aboard the Precommissioning Unit George H. W. Bush, based at Newport News, Va.

ARMY PVT. OPAL D. MADDRED has graduated from the Automated Logistical Specialist Advanced Individual Training (AIT) course at the U.S. Army Quartermaster Center and School, Fort Lee, Petersburg, Va.

The course is designed to train soldiers to establish and maintain stock records and other documents such as inventory, materiel control, accounting and support reports, automated and manual accounting records and perform prescribed loads and shop stock lists in manual and automated supply
applications.

Daughter of Robert L. Maddred of Williamstown and Diane R. Hall-Wilson of Lindenwold, the private graduated in 2000 from Sterling High School, Somerdale.

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD PFC. DIANA L. DIPALMA has graduated from the Automated Logistical Specialist Advanced Individual Training (AIT) course at the U.S. Army Quartermaster Center and School, Fort Lee, Petersburg, Va.

The course is designed to train soldiers to establish and maintain stock records and other documents such as inventory, materiel control, accounting and support reports, automated and manual accounting records and perform prescribed loads and shop stock lists in manual and automated supply applications.

Daughter of Diane DiPalma of Pitman, DiPalma is a 2003 graduate of Pitman High School.

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD PVT. GUY C. BECKETT JR. has graduated from Basic Combat training at Fort Sill, Lawton, Okla.

During the nine weeks of training, the soldier studied the Army mission and received instruction and training exercises in drill and ceremonies, Army history, core values and traditions, military courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid, rifle marksmanship, weapons use, map reading and land navigation, foot marches, armed and unarmed combat and field maneuvers and tactics.

Beckett is the son of Deborah Reed of Paulsboro.

NAVY AIRMAN MATTHEW C. LACOVARA, son of Diana L. LaCovara of Blackwood and Edward N. LaCovara of Erial and his fellow shipmates are currently on a four-month humanitarian assistance deployment while assigned to the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Comfort, homeported in Norfolk, Va.

After caring for nearly 25,000 patients in Belize and Guatemala, LaCovara\’s unit arrived in Panama to continue the mission for the Partnership for the Americas. The purpose of this mission is to provide the people of Latin America and the Caribbean with primary care, dental care, optometry and other no-cost health care services.

LaCovara\’s unit is also scheduled to visit Columbia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana, Haiti, Nicaragua, Peru, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago.

USNS Comfort has a joint forces crew which includes personnel from the U.S. Armed Forces, Canadian Forces and Project HOPE.

LaCovara is a 2005 graduate of Timber Creek Regional High School of Sicklerville and joined the Navy in June 2006.

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Moving Day for the Anchor (Wednesday, August 22, 2007)

PHOTOS BY KEN MAC


Bike Patrol Police Officer Bob Lee stops traffic as the big anchor is hauled down King Street…..watch out for the car behind you!

Spags is ready to do his part……\”This is my backhoe and you can\’t have it.\”

Someone said the guy in the checker shirt is Jack the Rat……he was overheard saying …….DO you have a permit? see more on Anchor

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Holt Family Not Liked by Longshoreman’s Assn.

\”That lease sickens me. I don\’t know how they got away with it, because we would like to use that land for other things,\” said Gloucester City Mayor William James, who describes a prickly relationship with the city\’s largest employer and taxpayer.

By EILEEN STILWELL
Courier-Post Staff

News of the Holt family\’s proposal to Gov. Jon S. Corzine to control port operations in Camden, Salem and ultimately Paulsboro has stirred up bitter memories of the family\’s 40-year history on the waterfront.

\”Asinine\” is how union leader Martin Mascuilli described replacing the South Jersey Port Corp., a quasi-state agency, with a private company run by Thomas J. Holt Sr. and his three sons.

Photo Holt\’s Corporate headquarters is located in the former Coast Guard Base, King Street, Gloucester City

\”I don\’t know how anybody could entertain it. It would absolutely be a disaster for union labor. Jobs would be lost forever, wages and benefits would be cut,\” said Mascuilli, secretary/treasurer of the International Longshoreman\’s Association, Local 1291, the largest and most powerful union on the river.

Mascuilli says he will never forgive the Holts for replacing the ILA with their own union, Dockworkers No. 1, in 1993 at the Gloucester Terminal, a sprawling 124-acre site on King Street in Gloucester City.

\”They brought in scabs and put hundreds of people out of work. Besides that, I don\’t think it\’s good business to give somebody that much power. Revolutions have started for less concentration of power than that,\” said Mascuilli of Marlton.

The Holt family, which employs about 1,000 people on both sides of the river, owns and operates the Gloucester Terminal and operates the Packer Avenue Terminal in South Philadelphia.

The family plans to expand on either side of Packer Avenue as that terminal grows to meet increased demand for international trade.

The union leader questioned the wisdom of turning a \”jewel\” over to a private company that went bankrupt in 2001, leaving creditors with millions in unpaid debt.

\”If it has to be sold, at least sell it to somebody who has been fair and profitable. Given the interest in building marine terminals these days, there would be no shortage of suitors,\” Mascuilli said.

Leo Holt, president of Holt Logistics Corp., believes the timing is right for the governor to consider privatizing port operations to save taxpayers money.

Last year, the state pumped $9 million in tax revenue into the South Jersey Port Corp. to service debt on two Camden terminals, a tiny port in Salem, and to make its annual payment in lieu of taxes to the city of Camden for use of the tax-exempt land.

Land ownership would remain tax-exempt under Holt\’s plan, which includes a long lease to operate the ports.

The plan would save the state money and free it to focus on the more difficult job of revitalizing the city, Holt said.

\”Generally, we think subsidizing port operations isn\’t necessary in today\’s world,\” said Holt, falling short of a promise that his company would not require any state help.

\”It\’s too early in the process to say that for sure. The key is to get the dialogue moving. We think the timing is right because the governor is inventorying public assets. I trust that sharp minds are looking at ways to get the best return on these assets and I believe we can help.\”

Corzine spokesman Brendan Gilfillan said Holt\’s Aug. 17 letter is under review.

The South Jersey Port Corp. owns about 300 acres of prime real estate in Camden that is coveted for upscale waterfront housing, recreation and marine services.

The port corporation employs about 140 direct workers, though it generates thousands of jobs for shippers, longshoremen and truckers.

Thomas J. Holt Sr. staked his claim in Gloucester City in 1967 when he bought half the site of the former New York Shipbuilding Co. The state bought the rest, across the border in Camden, and turned it over to South Jersey Port Corp.

With a heavy infusion of public money, Holt expanded the half-mile waterfront property into the largest refrigerated and dry warehouse facility on the East Coast.

The family name became synonymous with hard work, shrewd and intensely private business dealings and expansive holdings in four states and Puerto Rico.

When the now-defunct Holt Group filed for bankruptcy in 2001, it reported annual revenues over $300 million and more than $350 million in debt.

The Holts lost ownership of the Gloucester Terminal in bankruptcy, along with holdings in Puerto Rico and Wilmington, Del., but bought the Gloucester Terminal back from bondholders last year. Also in Gloucester City is Holt\’s corporate headquarters, in a former Coast Guard building on the waterfront, under a 99-year lease.

\”That lease sickens me. I don\’t know how they got away with it, because we would like to use that land for other things,\” said Gloucester City Mayor William James, who describes a prickly relationship with the city\’s largest employer and taxpayer.

The Holts pay about $1.1 million a year in taxes and payment in lieu of taxes to the city, or nearly 11 percent of its tax base.

But Gloucester Terminal consumes much of what could be a picturesque waterfront. It also is noisy, gritty, non-stop and located across the street from private homes.

\”The industry is an eyesore and Holt is a necessary evil,\” said former Mayor Bob Bevan.

\”We\’re trying to get him to put up buffers and to move his headquarters elsewhere. But they\’re an amazing group. According to his lease, if we move \’em, we have to build \’em another building. We\’re just no match,\” said Bevan.

Source http://www.courierpostonline.com

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Frank Klemowitz, 47, of Gloucester City

KLEMOWITZ, FRANK A.
Of Gloucester City; on August 21, 2007 after a courageous battle with cancer; age 47 years.
Beloved husband of Sheryl L. (nee Duffield); Devoted father of Shawn W., Sara V., and Frank A. Jr.; Loving son of Harry J. and the late Loretta Klemowitz; Dear brother of Harry, Michael, Cheryl Knecht, and David Klemowitz.
Frank was a devoted and loving person who deeply cared for everyone he came into contact with.
Relatives and friends are invited to the Visitation and Funeral on Friday from 8:30 AM at the FALCO/CARUSO & LEONARD PENNS-AUKEN FUNERAL HOME, 6600 North Browning Road, where a Funeral Service will be held at 10:30 AM. Interment will follow at Locustwood Memorial Park in Cherry Hill. Info, condolences and guestbook at
www.carusocare.com

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Geo Boulton, 71, of West Deptford, Active in Many Veteran Organizations

BOULTON, GEORGE H.
Age 71, of West Deptford, died Sunday August 19, 2007 at home.
George served in both the US Army & Navy, and member of the honor guard of Army-Navy Garrison Union #52 of National Park. He served on the Gloucester County Veterans Advisory Committee, and helped establish the Gloucester County Veterans Cemetery. George also helped the Mantua VFW in many ways. He was retiredafter working 47 years for Woodbury Appliance, he belonged to the Deptford Elks and was an avid Eagles Fan.
Husband of Beverly M. (nee Lacy), he is also survived by his children, two sons: George F. (Wendy) of Pitman, David J. (Beth) of West Deptford, a daughter Cheryl Lynn Boulton (Mike) of Thorofare, stepson, William J. Aldridge (Denise) of Gloucester City, step daughter, Donna Barton (Craig) of Gloucester City, step daughter, Dawn Gannon (Chuck) of Woodbury, 16 grandchildren, and 16 great grandchildren.
Relatives and friends may visit with the family 9 to 11 AM Thursday, at SMITH FUNERAL HOME, 47 Main St., Mantua where funeral services will be held at 11 AM. Interment in Gloucester County Veterans Cemetery, Monroe Township, NJ.
Memories and condolences may be shared at www.smithfhmantua. com. Contributions in George\’s memory may be made to Army-Navy Garrison Union #52, 26 Riverview Rd., National Park, NJ 08063.

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Letters: The City Should Fine CSX for Not Maintaining the RR Property


Photo: the weeds along the railroad track in front of the Gloucester City Library.

Bill,

 

I would like to start by saying that I think the Highway Department has done an outstanding job this summer maintaining all the landscaping of the city properties. I don\’t remember the city looking so good. They have really stayed on top of it this year and they deserve a pat on the back.

 

My concern is the condition of the railroad property running from Essex Street to Market Street. This property is owned by CSX Transportation Inc., a privately owned corporation. They make no attempt to maintain this property and the grass is over two feet high. This is nothing new because this happens every summer. The only section of the railroad property that is maintained is the portion adjacent to Mayor James\’ house, because he cuts it himself. I applaud him for that and he sets a good example in doing so.

 

However, he or any other resident should not have to do this.

 

Could the Highway Department maintain the property and then the city bill the corporation for the work? Could the Housing Authority issue a summons to the corporation for failing to maintain their property? Housing does this to our residents so it only seems fair.

 

I think it\’s wrong that people entering the city from Collings Ave. get their initial impression of Gloucester City by looking at this blight. It screams out that we don\’t care and that is not the case. It takes away from the outstanding job our Highway Department does.

 

I think our Highway Department should maintain the property if CSX doesn\’t and then bill the hell out of them. What do you think?

 

Henry Hill

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Breakfast Club Meets Saturday, August 25th

CATEGORY AROUND TOWN 

The Gloucester City Breakfast Club will meet Saturday, August 25th at 9 PM at the Dining Car Depot, Monmouth Street and the Railroad, Gloucester City. To be a member you must be a male, cross dressers are okay, and you must eat breakfast. The final requirement is being able to laugh.

Those who attended the July meeting included: John Hindsley, Bill (Wimby) Yeager, Bob Sliwa, Bob Bevan, Harry Blymer, Earl Kaighn, Bill Cleary, Gary Marcucci, Len Lacovara, Chalie Tourtual, Bob Bevan, Walt Hall, Bob Cline, Joe DiGiacomo, Tom Choo Choo Murphy and Ron Raube.

Also, Jim Coppola, Ed Simila, Joe Boulden, Frank (aka Reds) Grandizio, Butch Shaffer, Chalie Pitzo, Frank DeFelice, Mike Greene, Joe Miller and Ron Villanova. Treasurer report: B. Cleary and Pitzo opened a bank account recently at the The Bank in Bellmawr. August statement shows there is a total of $153 in the account.

PS :Someone remind Raube and DeFelice the meeting starts at 9 AM not noon. view photo album

View photo album of Breakfast Club 

View photo album of Breakfast Club

view photo album


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Francis I Kain WWII Navy Veteran, Member of Steamfitters Union Local #420, Lifelong Resident of Gloucester City

Francis I. Kain, of Gloucester City, passed away on August 21, 2007 at the age of 84. Loved and cared for by his wife of 55 years Claire T. (nee McKiernan).

Devoted father of Joseph F. Kain and wife Margaret, Mary Margaret Campbell and husband Mark, Claire Marie Devereaux and husband James, Brian Kain and wife Barbara, Bernadette Gruff and husband George, Charles P. Kain and wife Denise, Stephen K. Kain and wife Debbie and Colleen Piechowski and husband Joseph, Jr.

Dear Brother of Robert Kain and wife Ruth and John Kain and wife Eleanor. Loving grandfather of 17. Beloved Brother-In-Law of Mary McKiernan. Survived by many nieces and nephews.

Francis was born, raised and lived his entire life in Gloucester City. He was a graduate of Gloucester Catholic High School in 1940. Francis proudly served our country during World War II in the U.S. Navy. He worked as a steamfitter and was a 59 year member of Steamfitter\’s Local Union #420 in Philadelphia, PA. Francis was a devoted lifelong parishioner of Saint Mary\’s R.C. Church in Gloucester City and was a proud member of the Gloucester City Knights of Columbus #674 since 1948. He was a member of the Townsend C. Young V.F.W. Post # 3620 in Gloucester City.

Relatives, friends and members of all Francis\’ organizations are kindly invited to attend his viewing on Friday evening from 6 to 9 pm and Saturday morning from 9 to 10 am at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, (at Brown Street) Gloucester City.

Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated 11 am at Saint Mary\’s R.C. Church: 426 Monmouth Street, Gloucester City, NJ 08030. Interment with U.S. Navy Military Honors in New Saint Mary\’s Cemetery, Bellmawr.

Family requests that memorial donations be made in Francis\’ memory to Our Lady of Lourdes Health Foundation: 1600 Haddon Avenue, Camden, NJ 08103 or Saint Mary\’s Special Fund: at the above address.

Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com under online obituaries of Francis I. Kain.

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