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NICHOLAS TULINI was born in Italy. He came to America around 1905, and married his wife Tomasina around 1908. 10 children came of this marriage. When the census was taken in 1920 the family was renting a home at 518 South 3rd Street. Nicholas Tulini was then working in a paper factory. They later moved to 206 Benson Street, where they were living in April of 1930 when the census was again taken. By this time he had a full time job at the Public Service Company's gas plant at Locust and Cherry Streets in South Camden. On March 9, 1932 Nicholas Tulini was part of a crew cleaning the purifying box at the Public Service Company's gas plant. he was killed instantly with 13 other men by an explosion at the gas plant. Another coworker later. |
Camden Courier-Post - March 9, 1932 | |||||||
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Camden Courier-Post - March 9, 1932 |
RELATIVES’
CRIES NEARLY
START PANIC "They are in there- dead" That shrill scream from the chilled lips of a relative of two men trapped in the steel tomb of the purifying box at the Public Service gas plant at Locust and Cherry Streets today almost started a panic among l,000 persons, gathered at the scene a few minutes after a mysterious explosion snuffed out the lives of more than a dozen men. The cry of horror and grief was taken up by others as they pressed against the woven wire fence about the company s property. Panic was averted by the policemen and firemen who had reached the scene a few minutes after the blast. The excitement started when Frank Pizzatilla, of Walnut Street near Third, climbed up the narrow steel stairway that led to the top of the purifying box and looked upon a scene of horror within the square steel tomb. Pizzatilla, who had rushed to the plant with several hundred others when word of the tragedy spread, said he recognized the seared bodies of his father and father-in-law in the seething mass below. He started to walk down the narrow, steel stairway that formed the only means of reaching the lone entrance to the purifying box. Below the hundreds of relatives and friends of the doomed men watched him with anxiety. “In There Dead” "They
are in there- dead,” he screamed. He
fell in a faint and
but
for a fireman, Pizzatilla would have toppled to the ground, fully 20
feet below. Other firemen and policemen rushed up the narrow stairway
and carried Pizzatilla down. As his inert body was being carried toward an ambulance, cries of bitter hatred were heard. They came from a relative of another victim. He shouted vile curses upon the officials of the company, upon the firemen and upon the policemen. He called them murderers. He yelled for a revolver, shouting that he would avenge the death of the trapped men. About
him gathered a number of persons, most of them of foreign extraction, or
colored, for the majority of the victims were colored, The situation
became tense. Every policeman and fireman who could be spared from the gruesome work of trying to reach the entombed bodies rushed the crowd. Lieutenant George Ward and several policemen grabbed a heavy, long rope from one of the nearby fire wagons. Quickly
the rope was stretched across Locust Street at the intersection and a
tug of war started, with the crowd surging against the rope and
policemen and firemen pulling at both ends, sweeping them backward into
Locust Street. With
the crowd under control, the police began to search for the man, whose
cries for revenge had started the hundreds milling around in groups, but
he had disappeared in the crowd. Then Locust Street below Cherry was roped off with little difficulty and a line of policemen took their positions across Cherry Street between the two gas tanks that stand on the northeast and southeast corners. People who attempted to reach the plant were turned back. "No
use going any farther," the policemen would tell each person who
tried to get up closer. "All the men in
the
tank are dead and there is nothing anyone can do except remove the
bodies when the tank is cooled down. These words seemed to have a quieting effect upon the hundreds that had tried to rush the police lines. Gradually the people left for their homes An hour after the blast there was less than 100 spectators at the scene. |
Camden Courier-Post - March 10, 1932 |
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Bodies identified So badly were the bodies burned that identification was extremely difficult. It was early evening before identification was complete. The dead are: John Albert, 55, of 275 Walnut Street, father of eight children. Dominick
Puzzitiella, 53, of 1005
South 4th
Street, father of four sons. Pasquale Curiale, 48, of 338 Walnut Street, father of eight children. Frank DeLarge, 51, of 324 South 5th street, father of three children. Nicholas Tulini, 58, of 208 Benson Street, father of 10 children. Nunzio Ferraro, 51, of 1131 South 4th Street, single. Edward
Anderson; 30, colored,
northeast corner Second and Pine
Streets, no children George
Williams, 33, colored, of 277 Sycamore Street, father of
three
children. John Pollard, 32, colored, of 1065 Ivins Street, no children. Thomas
Watson, 65, colored, of 123 Chestnut
Street, single. Louis
Carcione, southwest corner
of Third
and Spruce
Street. Antonio
Bilanko, 43, who lived in a club room at Locust Street and Kaighn
Avenue and boarded at the home of Pedro Blair, 1225 Hyde
Park. F.
Kralich,
northeast corner of
Second
Street and Kaighn Avenue. Farrell Coleman, 44, colored, northeast corner of Second and Pine Streets, single. The first six were employed regularly by the company. The others were unemployed in the neighborhood, hired especially to clean out the purifier yesterday. List of Injured The other injured, all of whom were taken to Cooper
Hospital are: Hillman Bryant, 30, colored, 109 Chestnut Street, burns on face, head and hands. Harry Read, colored, of 111
Chestnut
Street, burns on the
head and face. Harry Hall, 27, colored, of 718 South Second Street, burns on the head and face. Read and Hall were taken to their
homes after receiving hospital treatment. Patrolman Walter Patton of the First District suffered a cut on his left arm while digging in the debris for bodies. He was treated at the hospital and returned to the station house. After working with the police and firemen for several
hours, James Bevan, 1447 Kaighn
Avenue, foreman at the plant, collapsed just as the last body was
removed. Physicians treated him for exhaustion and shock and he was taken
to his home. Another workman, Peter Alemi, 35, of 1010 South 4th Street, a volunteer who helped firemen in removing the last body, was overcome by fumes in the tank and was treated at the hospital. Red Cross aid to the stricken families of the victims was offered by William T. Read, chairman of the Camden County chapter. Public Service officials were informed that the national Red Cross headquarters had listed this tragedy as a “disaster” for which relief was available,. |
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Nicholas Tulini had many children. My Grandmother was Natalie Tulini who was a young teenager at the time of his death. She married James Viggiano of the Viggiano Brothers Inc., located at Ferry and Jackson Street in Camden. My Grandmother would often tell me about what she remembered of the incident and how great Camden City was during that time period. My Grandparents had several children and my mother is Esther Viggiano. She married my father, John Pike of Cherry Hill. I was born in 1971 at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Camden during the time period that Camden would fall and never fully recover. As a small child, my grandfather would take me to work with him at his business (junkyard and recycling plant ). I remember the surrounding streets looking totally different than they do now. I married young and bought a house on Minnesota Road in Fairview. I later became, as fate would have it, a Camden City Police Officer assigned to the Second District which included where I lived, where my Grandfather's business was, and where my Great-grandfather was killed. I still think of both men when I drive by Ferry Avenue, Jackson and Locust Streets. Camden
Police Sergeant Jason J. Pike 1167 |