John
J.
Welsh


JOHN J. WELSH, the builder known in Camden as "The Man Who Built Broadway", was born in Philadelphia around 1857 to Anthony and Ellen Welsh. The 1880 census shows the family living in the 4000 block of Mason Street in Philadelphia. John J. Welsh was then working as a laborer. He married in the early 1880s.

John J. Welsh came to Camden with his wife Martha and son Edward in 1889. He is shown in the 1890-1891 city directory as living at 1064 Francis Street, a small street that lay between Front and South 2nd Streets and between Chestnut and Mount Vernon Streets. Another son, Frank Welsh, was born around 1892. There was a third son, John M. Welsh.

John J. Welsh soon established himself as a builder in Camden, and his firm erected many of the stores and commercial buildings on Broadway. He also erected the Union Methodist Episcopal Church at Fifth and Mount Vernon Streets in 1899. Other projects 

included the State Street Bridge, over the Cooper River east of 10th Street, the Grand Theater at 207 Broadway, and an addition to the old Courier Post Building at 3rd and Arch Streets. Early in his career as an independent contractor, John Welsh employed James H. Reeve as a foreman. Reeve would eventually strike out on his own and also played a major role in construction on Broadway and elsewhere in Camden.

A member of the Church of the Immaculate Conception at Broadway and Market streets, John J. Welsh, was also active in the political and civil life of Camden in the first three decades of the 20th century. For twenty years he was the treasurer of the Camden County Democrat Party committee, was a candidate at one time for County Treasurer, and served as Camden's police and fire  commissioner in the mid-1920s under Mayor Victor King. He also was charter member of the Camden Lodge of the Loyal Order of Moose

By 1920 John J. Welsh was a widower. He was then living at 583 Line Street with his sons Edward, 38, and Frank, 26; Frank's wife Bessie, and grandchildren John and Robert. His sons both were working as carpenters in his construction business.  He and Edward later moved to 433 Chambers Avenue, the home of his younger brother Michael Welsh, where the two resided at the time of the 1930 Census. This address had previously been the residence of Alfred White, Camden City Clerk from 1923 to 1927. He had established his business by then at 529 Washington Street.

John Welsh stayed active in his business into the 1930s, when illness finally confined him to his bed. He passed away on August 29, 1936 and was buried at Calvary Cemetery. His son, Frank J. Welsh, remained in business at 529 Washington Street as late as 1947, and lived in Audubon NJ for many years, before passing in 1978.

John Welsh and Crew
Construction Photo
Union Methodist Episcopal Church
1899 

Union Methodist Episcopal Church - September 3, 2003

Philadelphia Inquirer - October 6, 1884

Elmer Barr - John W. Wescott - Richard F. Smith - John J. Welsh

Camden Daily Courier - October 29, 1886
...continued...
Alexander Schlesinger - John Heilemann
Eli Bacharach - John Pfeiffer
Dr. Conrad G. Hoell - Jacob Vissell
Anthony J. Oberst - Dr. B.J. Weyle
Francis D. Pastorius - John Scharnagl
Wilhelm Hage - Christian Killinger
David Goldenberg - Christian Eckert
John Hausbeck - Charles E. Wentz
Ernest C. Wentz - Solomon Seybold
Wilhelm Myers - J. Henry Sauers
Gus Weber - George Bristle
Joseph Meyer Sr. - George Hill
Theodore G. Mayer - Emmanuel Schneider
Conrad Spalt - Charles Bankert
Peter Dankelmann - John F. Riegen
George Horneff Sr. - Theodore Krug
Anthony Kobus - George Pfeiffer Sr. 
John Welsh Sr. - Dennis Lutenbacher
Frederick Lutz - Fred George Brum
A. Tegtmaier - Michael N. Voll
George Kleinheinz - Lewis Schiemer
Edward N. Cohn - Charles Helm
Anthony Voll - Dr. H.W. Miller
Edward Schuster Sr. - Dr. John W. Donges
John Heim - John Schanz
Martin J. Ewe - Frank Berberick
David Hess
Jacob Meyer - Fred Spuhler
Jacob Moeck - Gottlieb C. Moeck
Fred Geissel - John Bender
Peter Mucker - Christian Ebensperger
Louis Clipper - John Schnitzius
John W. Wescott
Harry B. Paul
Albert Hoffman
...continued...
 
 

Philadelphia Inquirer
July 15, 1902

Broadway - Spruce Street
Louisa Traubel -
Gately & Hurley Company
George Fields -
John Welsh - Levi Farnham
Joseph Nowrey -   Arthur Stanley

Click on Images for PDF File of Complete Article

Philadelphia Inquirer
September 30, 1905

George Aultemus
Frank Devereaux
John R. Wolf
Wilfred M. Kaighn
A.J. Vansant
Frank W. Tressey
John Vanderslice
Dr. William I. Kelchner
Robert Garrison
George H. Watt
John E. Smith
Ludwig Winters
Martin J. Ewe
William S. Wilkins
Levi Sharp
Dr. William H. Kensinger
Walter Hubbs
George Martin
Thomas S. Armstrong
Huelings Mulvey
Josiah Kirkbride
Lewis Schimer
George H. Jones
Thomas Pooley
John J. Welsh
Alfred R. Taylor
Bernard Funfer
John Carver

Penrose W. Hirst - Charles H. Mills - James S. Pratt
Thomas B. Hall - William H. Jennings - Frank H. Burdsall - Clarence B. Groff
Dr. Dowling Benjamon - Joseph Nowrey

Philadelphia Inquirer * August 30, 1910



Charles H. Ellis - Dr. William H. Kensinger - O. Glen Stackhouse - John S. Roberts - George A. Frey
William J. Fox - Edmund E. Read Jr. - Harry C. Dole - Charles H. Greer - David Jester - Edmund H. Way
Harry R. Read - Robert W. Gordon - Joshua C. Haines - Frank C. Van Hart - J. William Mills
Raymond Warren - C.K. Deacon -  Daniel Smith - Henry S. Gordon  - Frederick A. Finkeldey
Frederick Von Neida - Henry D. Longacre - J. Morton Pennock - John B. Irwin - Dr. Silas H. Quint
John J. Welsh - Alfred R. White - William H. Deets - Harry R. Barrett - John Miller - D.W. Poland
Frank Shaw - Edward J. Kelleher - Harry Richmond - William C. King - William Wynn
George Clark - George N. Stokes - John F. Hurley - George W. Evans
Frederick A. Finkeldey - Jonas Shaw 

Camden Post-Telegram * December 16, 1912

...continued...
...continued...
George Boone  - Roy A. Smith
Daniel M. Stevens - George Leathwhite
George Pine - John Barnett
William C. Davis - John J. Welsh
Adam Urbin -
Zion Church
Berkley Street - William Street

 

 

Camden City Directory - 1917 Advertisement

Trenton Times
October 3, 1922

William D. Brown
W. Penn Corson
Harry C. Sharp
Charles S. Straw
John J. Welsh
Emma Hyland

Mortimer Richmond

GRAND THEATER -1945

GRAND THEATER -1945

The Courier-Post Building on 3rd Street between Federal and Arch Streets, 1939
John J  Welsh built the two story addition shown here

Camden Courier-Post - August 31, 1936

Camden Courier-Post - January 2, 1940


Camden Courier-Post - January 2, 1940

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