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From: Brian Walden <tuhs@cuzuco.com>
To: tuhs@tuhs.org
Subject: [TUHS] Re: Fred Grampp
Date: Sat, 6 Jan 2024 18:15:59 -0500 (EST)	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <202401062316.406NFxKA000795@cuzuco.com> (raw)

This isn't directly UNIX related, and yes, the thread is 3 years old.  But since it made national news last night, probably due to its proximity to Newark Airport.  The enormous fire in Elizabeth, NJ, I recognized in the local news as the old Singer factory.  That factory was the catalyst that linked me into finding out more on Fred Grampp, and his ancestry.

Here's a non-paywalled link that also mentions it is indeed the old Singer factory:  https://newjersey.news12.com/elizabeth-nj-fire-industrial-building


On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 11:12 AM M Douglas McIlroy <m.douglas.mcilroy at dartmouth.edu> wrote:
>
> Serendipitous find! I hadn't realized that Fred had been the third
> generation in the hardware store.
> His father ("Pops") retired to Drayton Island in the St Johns River
> about 60 miles south of Jacksonville.
> Fred often visited him, driving the 19-hour trip in one stint.
>
> Doug
>
> On Mon, Mar 15, 2021 at 6:47 PM Brian Walden <tuhs at cuzuco.com> wrote:
> >
> > Amazing coincidences. A week prior I was researching Topper Toys
> > looking for their old factory ("largest toy factory in the world")
> > As there was litte on it's location and it lead me to find out
> > in 1961 it took over the old Singer Factory in Elizabeth, NJ.
> > So looking up the Singer factory led me to "Elizabeth,
> > New Jersey, Then and Now" by Robert J. Baptista
> >
> > https://ia801304.us.archive.org/11/items/ElizabethNewJerseyThenAndNowSecondEdition2015/ElizabethNewJerseyThenNowThirdEditionApril102018607Pages.pdf
> >
> > Which had no information on Topper, but had had this paragraph in it's Singer
> > section on page 28 --
> >
> >     Boys earned money "rushing the growler" at lunchtime at the Singer plant.
> >     German workers lowered their covered beer pails, called growlers, on ropes
> >     to the boys waiting below. They earned a nickel by filling them with beer
> >     at Grampp's saloon on Trumbull St. One of these boys was Thomas Dunn who
> >     later became a long term Mayor. In the early 1920s Frederick Grampp went
> >     into the hardware business at the corner of Elizabeth Ave. and Reid St.
> >
> >
> > When I read it I thought funny, as I know the name Fred Grampp. But beleived
> > just a coincidenental same name. After reading the biography post, I went back
> > to the book as it turns out that Fred Grampp is your Fred Grampps's
> > grandfather.  You can find more his family and the hardware store and
> > Grampp himself on pages 163-164, and 212.
> >
> > -Brian
> >
>

             reply	other threads:[~2024-01-06 23:17 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 2+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2024-01-06 23:15 Brian Walden [this message]
2024-01-07 21:40 ` [TUHS] Fwd: " Aaron

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