William
C. Aitken


 

WILLIAM C. AITKEN was born around 1846. He first came to America in 1869. He moved to Camden in the early 1880s. He was active as a builder in the latter part of the 19th and early 20th centuries. He built rows of homes on Cooper Street between 9th and 11th Streets. Many of these homes were destroyed in the 1940 Hollingshead fire. He also built a row of homes on Seventh street at Woodland Avenue. At the time of the 1920 Census he made his home with wife Elizabeth at 205 Pearl Street. This home was taken in late 1923 or early 1924 to make way for the  Delaware River (Ben Franklin) Bridge. 

William C. Aitken later made his home at 421 Penn Street in Camden, which is now part of the Rutgers University campus. He lived very near to advertising magnate F. Wayland Ayer.  

William C. Aitken died on February 14, 1933. He was survived by four sons and two daughters, nine children, and two great grandchildren. His grandson, Richard Knight Aitken,  died while serving with the United States Army in Louisiana on February 17, 1943.

Camden Daily Courier
November 15, 1890

Charles W. Cox
Willard Street
North 8th Street
Vine Street
William C. Aitken
North 10th Street
Carpenter Street

Adolph Segal
Segal Street
William T. Bailey
North 6th Street
York Street

Howland Croft
George M. Holl
Chambers Avenue

 


CAMDEN COURIER-POST - OCTOBER 16, 1933

Penn Street - Cooper Street - South 7th Street - North 9th Street - North 11th Street
Woodland Avenue - First Presbyterian Church - West Jersey Title & Guaranty Company 
Edwad Aitken -
Richard K. Aitken - William Aitken
Elizabeth Aitken Shedaker - Lydie Aitken Brooks -
Rev. Augustus D. Whitney Jr.

CAMDEN COURIER-POST - OCTOBER 16, 1933


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