Explore jobs
Find specific jobs
Explore careers
Explore professions
Best companies
Explore companies
March 10, 1801, was the date of the American's first issue, Matthias Day and Jacob Mann being the publishers.
Among his experiences was that of being cowhided, particulars of which appear in both the Federalist and True American of July and August 1803.
Dying suddenly in 1804, his estate was lost in an unfortunate business enterprise in which he had invested it, and his widow was left in very straitened circumstances.
It was the organ of the Jefferson Democrats. It was started in 1794, continued two years, and, by a change of name, was published by John Westcott, a brother of the proprietor of the Argus, until 1806.
Peter Hay, in 1815, started, at Bridgeton, the Washington Whig, the second paper in West Jersey.
In 1818 John A. Crane established, at Woodbury, the Gloucester Farmer.
Grey removed from Philadelphia in the summer of 1819 to Woodbury, N.J., where he established himself in the printing business as editor and publisher of the Columbian Herald, the first number of which was published September 23, 1819.
The files of this paper are in the possession of Samuel H. Grey, Esq., whose father, the veteran editor, in 1819, commenced, at Woodbury, the publication of the Village Record, and soon thereafter removed to Camden, and there purchased, of John A. Crane, the Gloucester Farmer.
The proximity of Camden to the city of Philadelphia, and the circulation of the journals of that city in Camden and vicinity, doubtless prevented the establishment of papers here before 1820.
He continued to publish at that place until 1820, when he removed presses and material to Camden, and thus it became the first paper ever issued in Camden County.
He was twice married, - first at Woodbury, in 1822, to Rachel, daughter of Jacob Glover, Esq., formerly surrogate of Gloucester County.
Samuel Ellis, a well-known school-teacher of his day, on December 29, 1824, began, in Camden, the publication of the American Star and Rural Record.
SINNICKSON CHEW was born January 27, 1830, in Mannington township, Salem County, N.J., where his parents then resided.
About 1830 Josiah Harrison, of Camden City, issued a small sheet called the Republican, which was continued by him for several years, after which time Franklin Ferguson became its proprietor.
Ham, and he, on April 2, 1834, sold it to Philip J. Grey, Esq.
HENRY L. BONSALL, of the Post, was born in Philadelphia December 24, 1834, of Quaker stock, whose ancestors came to the country with Penn.
After the death of his first wife he married, in 1834, Sarah Woolston, daughter of Isaac Stephen, Esq.
He was for forty years the local representative of the Associated Press and was the first reporter to have a seat as such in the New Jersey Legislature (1835). Mr.
FROM the day in 1839 when a local journalist aided in tearing down the town whipping-post in defiance of strong reactionary sentiment, the Trenton newspaper press has almost invariably been allied with progressive public policies.
On the political rostrum, his record was equally varied, for be appeared in 1840, as a Democratic speaker in the Harrison campaign and the following presidential year took the opposite side.
Before 1840 most immigrants came from northern Europe, especially Britain, and created a distinctive "native stock" that all subsequent immigrants had to blend into, coexist, or resist.
22 Doctor Charles Conrad Abbott was born in Trenton, June 6, 1843.
Equipped with such education as could be gathered there from the country schools and fancying the business of a printer, Sinnickson Chew, in 1845, entered the office of the Constitution, published at Woodbury, N.J., by A.S. Barber.
THE CAMDEN DEMOCRAT. - The first number of the Camden Democrat, under that name, was published Saturday, January 3, 1846, by Charles D. Hineline.
He settled in Trenton about the year 1846, being then sixty years of age, and he soon became prominent here.
In 1848 he entered the office of the Constitution at Woodbury, as an apprentice, to learn the art and mystery of printing.
At this southeast corner, C. W. Jay, F. S. Mills and Joseph Justice had commenced the publication of the Trentonian in 1848.
The Trenton Daily News (1849) had its office on Broad Street a few doors above the old City Hall, the same site as the early True American occupied.
In 1851 he left his master’s employ and went to Philadelphia, in the composing department of the type foundry of L. Johnson & Co., but the same year he became connected with the National Standard, of Salem, N.J., Charles P. Smith, editor.
The True American's rise as an influential newspaper of state-wide reputation began with its purchase by David Naar in 1853.
J. Madison Drake who started the Mercer Standard (a weekly) in 1854 enlisted in the Civil War and later organized Drake's Zouaves.
With Jesse M. Clark and Randolph H. Moore he issued in 1854 the first City Directory of Trenton, and he compiled a history of Trenton Lodge No.
The second directory published in 1857 by William H. Boyd contained two hundred and seventy-eight pages, a business directory, a history of Trenton, and State, County and city matters.
The name of this sprightly little journal was the Camden Daily, and the name was soon changed to the Camden Evening Daily. It was started January 4, 1858, and continued until March 6th of time same year.
Twelve months later James M. Cassady became possessed of an interest, and, under his aggressive direction, would have soon retrieved its declining fortunes, but other arrangements interfered, and he, in turn, made way for John Hood, who became, in 1858, the sole proprietor of the paper.
The third directory, published in 1859 by William H. Boyd, contained two hundred and fifty-five pages and a business directory of Burlington and Mercer Counties.
He died April 22, 1860, and was buried in Ewing Cemetery.
The first number under the present ownership was issued May 7, 1862.
The New Republic, a weekly journal, Republican in politics, was started in 1866 by Henry L. Bonsall and James M. Scovel.
Judge Naar had withdrawn from the publication and job departments in 1866.
Coincident with the development of the Gazette and True American as two-cent morning papers, the Emporium, a smaller sheet at one cent a copy, was started August 5, 1867, by John Briest, who had been foreman of the True American composing room during the Civil War.
In 1867 Colonel Alexander Donelson, formerly of the Somerset Messenger, took editorial charge, but he died a few months afterwards, and the veteran Zane again found himself dependent for editorial matter upon volunteers, whose offerings were in too many cases worth no more than they cost.
He came to the United States in 1867 and served for twenty-two years under F. W. Putnam of the Peabody Museum, amassing an almost incredible number of specimens of man's antiquity in the vicinity of Trenton.
THE NEW JERSEY TEMPERANCE GAZETTE was established in 1869 at Vineland, as a monthly publication, under the name of the New Jersey Good Templar, N.P. Potter, editor.
Beecher's Magazine, an ambitious periodical, appeared as an illustrated and literary monthly in January 1870, its publisher being Joseph A. Beecher, who later became a member of the Bar.
In 1870 the building, fifty by ninety, was erected, the entire third floor being used for newspaper, book and job printing, while the corner room on the first floor is used as a stationery store and business department.
In 1870 a company was formed as the "Camden Democratic Co-Operative Association," the incorporators being Thomas McKeen, Isaiah Woolston, James M. Cassady, Chalkley Albertson, Cooper P. Browning, John Clement, William Sexton, Richard S. Jenkins, Henry Fredericks and James S. Henry.
John O. Raum (1871) published a History o f the City of Trenton, containing general and statistical information of value.
The paper was published weekly, and the first number was issued November 15, 1874.
THE TRIBUNE was a daily paper started in September, 1875.
THE POST, the first daily of Camden that succeeded and became a permanently established journal, was founded on October 2, 1875, by Henry L. Bonsall, Bartram L. Bonsall and Jacob C. Mayhew.
With varied success and failure, the paper continued to be published under the above name until 1875, when it was purchased by J.B. Graw, and its name changed to the New Jersey Good Templar and Temperance Gazette; its place of publication was changed from Vineland to Toms River.
The Trenton Times came naturally by the same characteristics, its founder, Lawrence S. Mott, having after his graduation from Princeton in 1877 joined the Philadelphia Times desk staff and having proved an apt student under Colonel McClure.
THE ATCO ARGUS was founded October 1, 1878, by W.D. Siegfried, and published by him as a seven-column folio.
The paper was then conducted for a time by Doctor Thomas Westcott and Charles G. Dickinson, stock-owners in the company, and, in 1878, was sold to Messrs.
The Colonel had served as the historian of the Schwatka expedition to the Arctic (1878‑8o), and his stories of strange adventures and peoples encountered in his travels made a delightful setting for many social gatherings at the Trenton Press Club.
In May, 1880, Smith sold out his interest to M.J. Skinner and removed his press to Berlin, where he published, for a short time, a paper devoted to the interests of Sabbath-schools.
Doctor John Hall, author of The Presbyterian Church, Trenton, N.J. (see above), also wrote Memoirs of Matthew Clarkson of Philadelphia, 1735-1880, who was the author's great-grandfather.
The Argus and Advocate was continued until February 4, 1881, when M.J. Skinner changed the name of the paper to the Herald and Times, and has since continued its publication.
His Primitive Industries (1881) was accompanied by five hundred illustrations.
SOUTH JERSEY NEWS, of Haddonfield, first saw light on February 2, 1882.
The first number was issued in April, 1882.
One of the leading newspapers of New Jersey today, the Trenton Times, came into existence almost unheralded one October afternoon (October 12) in 1882.
The NEW JERSEY COAST PILOT was first issued in 1882, T.F. Rose as editor and manager.
The CAMDEN COUNTY JOURNAL is a weekly, printed in German, and was established by Alexander Schlesinger, in March, 1883, as the first newspaper published in that language in Southwestern New Jersey.
The paper gained popularity when it encouraged the Germans in America to celebrate the 6th day of October, 1883, the bicentennial of the foundation of Germantown, and advocated German emigration to this country.
In 1883 it began to advocate the principles of the Prohibition party and supported Rev.
The Genealogy of Early Settlers in Trenton and Ewing (1883) was written by the Rev.
Semple assumed editorial control, and continued to direct the fortunes of the paper until June, 1884, when Mr.
In 1884 A.C. Graw was admitted as a partner, and the Gazette is now published by J.B. Graw & Son, at 131 Federal Street, Camden.
THE CHESILHURST TRIBUNE was founded in August, 1885, by the "Chesilhurst Tribune Company," of which W.G. Taylor became the manager and editor of the paper, and so continues.
When the City District Court was established in the '8o's, he was made the court clerk and so served through a serene old age to a serene death in his Mill Hill home, November 25, 1885, seventy‑one years of age.
The office was over the bank building at the corner of Monmouth and King Streets, afterwards removed to King Street, above Hudson, and in 1885 to Camden.
The METHODIST HERALD, published in the interest of the Methodist Episcopal Church in New Jersey, was established January 1, 1886, by the present editor and publisher, Rev.
Improvements were added, and upon the occasion of the eleventh anniversary, October 2, 1886, the paper appeared enlarged from twenty-four to thirty-two columns, in a very handsome new dress.
Clarke, on February 19, 1888, sold out to Thomas F. Fitzgerald, Charles H. Levy and John J. Cleary, all seasoned reporters', who devoted themselves earnestly and enthusiastically to the work of developing a prosperous property.
Frank A. Munsey, newspaper and magazine publisher of national reputation, attempted to establish a chain of weekly journals devoted to social, political, theatrical, and literary news and gossip, and interested Francis B. Lee to the extent of launching Trenton Town Topics, February 2, 1889.
25 On March 16, 1889, a fierce typhoon found six American, English, and German warships in Apia Harbor.
He died May 10, 1894, universally regretted by the citizens of Trenton because of his nobility of character, great scholarship and many services to the community no less than to his church.
Francis B. Lee (1895) edited a History of Trenton, N.J. under the auspices of the State Gazette.
Murphy's death, the State Gazette Publishing Company was formed with Henry W. Comfort president, Charles B. Case secretary and Charles H. Baker treasurer, and they assumed control December 26, 1900.
John Briest of the Emporium published also the Trenton Sunday Courier for a few months in 1900.
In June 1908 the Gazette transferred its newspaper and job printing plant from its old stand, at the northwest corner of State and Broad Streets, to a handsome and commodious new structure on East Hanover Street, specially built for the purpose.
The Trenton Times desiring a Sunday edition, made a favorable offer for the consolidation of the Advertiser with the Times plant in December 1912, and it was accepted.
Thomas F. Waldron was taken into partnership in 1912.
On August 8, 1913, the property was disposed of at receiver's sale for $47,000, including the real estate, and the Trenton Times, with which the True American had latterly competed for the local afternoon field, acquired control and suspended publication of the century-old sheet.
James A. McFaul, Bishop of Trenton, and Sermons, Doctrinal and Moral (1915), by the Right Rev.
His later years were spent at Upper Montclair, NJ., where he died June 21, 1916, at the age of seventy-six.
After years of political negotiation, a compact between the two states was signed in 1921 and created The Port of New York Authority.
The Trenton Sunday Times-Advertiser of November 11, 1923, has a lengthy sketch of Mr.
Doctor John Hall's Presbyterian history is A History o f St Michael's Church, Trenton, 1703-1926, by the Rev.
The Trenton Courier, with offices at Clinton and Hamilton Avenues, began business early in 1928, first as a weekly and later as a semi-weekly, Rudolph J. Hiller managing editor and publisher.
© 1929, TRENTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY
By 1951, Port Newark had become a modern terminal with 21 berths and a deepened 35-foot channel able to accommodate the largest ships.
The New Jersey Historical Commission www.newjerseyhistory.org An agency of the Department of State, the Commission was created by law in 1967 to advance public knowledge of the history of New Jersey.
The Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts (CCAHA) www.ccaha.org Established in 1977 as a not-for-profit organization, the CCAHA, specializes in the treatment of art and historic artifacts on paper.
1982 - 259 pp. cloth. illus. biblio. index.
1986 - 72 pp. paper. illus. bibliog.
1987 - 82 pp. paper. illus. bibliog.
1988 - 100 pp. paper. illus, bibliog.
1990 - 295 pp. paper. illus. bibliog.
1991 - 131 pp. paper. illus. notes. bibliog.
1992 - 108 pp. paper. illus. notes. bibliog. charts.
1994 - 88 pp. paper. illus. notes. bibliog.
1995 - 100 pp. paper. illus. glossary. notes. bibliog.
After significant redevelopment, including $4 million for dredging, the Port Authority reopened Howland Hook in 1996.
1997 - 122pp. paper. illus. notes. bibliog.
1998 - 106 pp. paper. illus. notes. bibliog.
In 2010, the Port of New York and New Jersey purchased the terminal and announced that the iconic Bayonne Bridge adjacent to the facility would be raised—a world's first.
In 2020 the Port of New York and New Jersey handled cargo containers valued at nearly $200 billion.
Rate how well Greater Jersey Press Inc lives up to its initial vision.
Do you work at Greater Jersey Press Inc?
Is Greater Jersey Press Inc's vision a big part of strategic planning?
Zippia gives an in-depth look into the details of Greater Jersey Press Inc, including salaries, political affiliations, employee data, and more, in order to inform job seekers about Greater Jersey Press Inc. The employee data is based on information from people who have self-reported their past or current employments at Greater Jersey Press Inc. The data on this page is also based on data sources collected from public and open data sources on the Internet and other locations, as well as proprietary data we licensed from other companies. Sources of data may include, but are not limited to, the BLS, company filings, estimates based on those filings, H1B filings, and other public and private datasets. While we have made attempts to ensure that the information displayed are correct, Zippia is not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of this information. None of the information on this page has been provided or approved by Greater Jersey Press Inc. The data presented on this page does not represent the view of Greater Jersey Press Inc and its employees or that of Zippia.
Greater Jersey Press Inc may also be known as or be related to Greater Jersey Press Inc.