Sunday 31 July 2022

Dr. Martin Luther King in Newark in 1968

 

Dr. Martin Luther King at South Side Hight School on 27 March 1968, only 8 days before being shot and murdered in Memphis, Tennessee on 4 April 1968. 
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. walks through South Ward on 27 March 1968.

Saturday 30 July 2022

Sacred Heart Cathedral

 

Sacred Heart Cathedral in 1941
Clifton Avenue pool in 1941. 
Sacred Heart in 1920.
1915.


Broad Street train station

 

Broad Street train station in 1970.
Lackawanna Place on Broad Street in 1959

Wednesday 27 July 2022

City Hall on Broad Street

 

City Hall on Broad Street in 1959.
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy speaks in front of Newark City Hall on 12 October 1962.
JFK rides in a motorcade at Broad St. and William St. on 12 October 1962.
same picture with a better resolution.

Monday 25 July 2022

McCarter Highway through the years...

 

Route 21 aka McCarter Highway looking east - 1957.
1950.
McCarter Highway & Cherry Street in 1959.
McCarter Hwy in 1961
McCarter Highway dedication in 1943

Hayes Park East Pool on Waydell Street, Ironbound

 

Hayes Park East Pool 

- Persons dressed only in bathingsuits permitted in pool area
- Do not dress or undress on pool deck 
- No running, diving, pushing, ball playing, dunking, eating or drinking in pool area
- No food, drinks, face masks, baby carriages, floats. 
Hayes Park East Pool in 1983
Carlos Hugo enjoys a dip at Hayes Park East pool in 1977.
1947.
Clifton Ave Pool (here in the early 1960s) changed its name to Rotunda Pool in the 1940s. Joseph Ralph Rotunda was the first soldier from Newark’s Italian-American community to die in World War II. He had a city pool named after him.
Clifton Avenue Pool in 1941.
Angela DeGennaro Lucas wrote: Originally called Clifton Pool when it opened. Later it became Rotunda pool named for, I believe, the first serviceman from the neighborhood to lose his life in WWII.
Boylan Street Pool in 1951.
Boylan Street pool in 1960

Karen Pellow wrote: Wasn't this at one time called the 'Polio Pool' and shut down?
Jacqueline Janson Burge answered: Actually, some called it "The Polio Pit".
Gene O'Mullan added: In the early 1950s every place children frequented was considered a 'polio pit'.
Debra Evans said: My mom wouldn’t let my older siblings go there because of the polio scare.
Rosemarie Michele:  I went there almost every day;  free to get in the morning, ten cents in the afternoon! Loved it.

Hayes Park East Pool was situated on Waydell Street between Ferry St. & Raymond Boulevard.
The green lot seen from the satellite - between Ferry Street & Raymond Boulevard - is where the Hayes Park East Pool was located with a public entrance from Waydell Street.

Wednesday 6 July 2022

Greenwich Village


Bleecker Street looking west toward Winston Churchill Square in 1968