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CHARLES
H. HART was appointed to the Camden Fire Department to replace
James Sutton as an extra man with Engine Company 1,
who resigned April 2, 1870. He had previously worked as a
brickmaker, and was making his home at 409 Walnut
Street when
appointed to the Fire Department. Charles
Hart was born in Delaware in November of 1846 to David and Mary
Hart. His father was a brickmaker, and Charles would eventually
learn that trade. The family had moved to Camden's South Ward by
the spring of 1850, and remained there for many years
thereafter.
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When the
1870 census
was taken in July of 1870, Charles Hart, his wife, the former
Anna Harvey, and two month-old son Harry M. were living with
Charles Hart's widowed mother Mary A. Hart at 409 Walnut
Street. Also at home were
Charles Hart's siblings, George
B. Hart, Elizabeth, Ida, and Maggie
Hart.
Charles
Hart's older brother, George
B. Hart, was appointed to the Camden Fire Department on
April 19, 1871 to take the place of Cornelius M. Brown, who had
resigned. George B. Hart
served along side brother with Engine Company 1
until he was removed
from service on June 7, 1872.
Politically
active, in March of 1876 Charles Hart was nominated for the post
of janitor at City Hall. He lost the vote, which was held in
City Council. On
March 20, 1877 Charles
Hart was appointed to serve as a policeman in Camden by
Mayor James Ayers, to begin serving on April 1, 1877. Charles
Daubman as appointed Chief of Police. The other men who were
appointed were Jonathan Watson, Andrew Baird, John T. Miller,
Daniel Johntra, Robert
Pine, William Smith from the Third Ward, William Hawkins,
Isaac Ellis, John W. Campbell, John E. Anderson, John Brown,
Mark Sheldon, Thomas Conway, John
Furey and William Smith from the Eighth Ward. Charles
Daubman and Robert Pine
had previously served as members of the Camden Fire
Department.. The
1878 City Directory shows Charles Hart living at 926 South 5th
Street working as a policeman. The 1880 Census shows Charles and
Anna Hart and their son Harry at the same address. he was then
working as a coremaker. They were still at this address as late
as 1888
In
the early 1880s Charles
Hart began working as a fireman and later as engineer. By 1894
he was working as marine engineer, working aboard one of the
ferry boats that crossed the Delaware back and forth in the years
before the Delaware River Bridge (know today as the Benjamin
Franklin Bridge) was built.
By
1890 the Hart family was living at 406 North
Front Street. When the 1900 census was taken. Harry M. Hart, then
30, was still at home. He worked as a stationary engineer. The
Harts were still at the Front Street address as late as January
of 1920.
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