Frank
Stockton did not have an occupation listed in the 1900
Census. The 1901 City
Directory shows him working as a machinist, a trade he
followed through the
compilation of the 1906 Directory. Sometime between 1906
and 1908
Frank
Stockton joined his father as a member of the
Camden Fire
Department. He served with Engine Company 1 at 409 Pine
Street through at least
1912. Sadly, Frank Stockton passed on away on April 11,
1914. He was
buried at Evergreen Cemetery.
John A. Stockton was serving
as Deputy Chief of the Camden Fire Department in May of
1914 after
Chief
Charles
Worthington was killed in the line duty while
fighting a fire
at the the Camden Electroplating Company at
Delaware
Avenue and George Street, near the Pennsylvania Railroad
Ferry in the
center of Camden. In the wake of
Chief
Worthington's death, John A. Stockton was
appointed Chief of
the Camden Fire Department in May of 1914. While serving
in this
capacity, there was one major conflagration in the city
of
Camden.
On July 29th of 1915, after
a career that spanned four decades, Chief
John
A. Stockton
announced his retirement, effective October 1st. He was
succeeded as
Chief by
Peter B.
Carter.
John and Ruth Stockton were
both still living at 538
South
5th Street in January of 1920. Chief Stockton
died in
1927. His wife continued to reside at the home on
South
5th Street until her passing in February of
1938.
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