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FRANCIS
S. "FRANK" TURNER was appointed to the Camden Fire Department
in
May of 1874 to replace Edward
S. Andrews an extra man with the
Hook
and Ladder Company. He served until April of
1876, when he was not re-appointed due to a change in politics
in the leadership of the Fire Department. He was re-appointed on
April 1, 1879 and served for three years before being let go due
to another regime change. Frank Turner was recalled to service
on September 7, 1885 as Stoker with
Engine
Company 2. Frank Turner was still active as a firefighter when
the Census
was taken in 1910, well past his 60th birthday. |
Frank
Turner was born in Pennsylvania in August of 1846. He came to
Camden as a small boy, living with his mother Louisa in Camden's
South Ward. His father was not with the family at the time of the
1850 Census. Frank Turner married
Elizabeth Park Dermitt in 1864. Elizabeth was from Greenwich
Township in Gloucester County where her father was a waterman, and after he
died their mother moved the family to Camden where she supported
the family as a seamstress. When the Census was taken in June of 1880 the Francis Turner family had relocated to 208 Washington Street. Frank Turner was working as a stone cutter. Oldest sun Charles Francis Turner was working in a shoe factory. He would go on and make a career in shoe making, as did younger brothers George D. Turner and Francis S. Turner Jr. The Turners were still at 208 Washington Street as late as 1883. City Directories for 1884-1885 and 1885-1886 have the Turners at 320 South 2nd Street. Another move had taken the family to 139 South 4th Street. The Turners had moved to 211 Benson Street when the 1888-1889 Directory was being put together. On June 1, 1890 Frank Turner was promoted to Engineer and transferred to Engine Company 4 as it first went into service at 320 Vine Street in north camden. the foreman was Amedee Middleton, the driver, Edward Hartman. barney harvey was the stoker and the hosemen were Walter Browning and Charles Berry. City Directories show that during the next ten years the Turners remained in the 200 Block of Benson Street. They had moved to 219 Benson Street by 1891 and stayed at that address as late as 1894. By 1896 the family was at 221 Benson Street. The 1898 City Directory and the 1900 Census both list the family at 223 Benson Street. The Directory for 1906 has Frank Turner at 618 South 3rd Street. When the Census was taken in 1910 Frank Turner was still working for the Fire Department and was living at 424 South 3rd Street.
By
1913, Frank and Elizabeth
Turner had moved to Atlantic City to live with their daughter Florence
and her husband Alvin
Schultz, who was a machinist for the railroad and later worked for the
local electric utility.
The 1913 Atlantic City Directory shows him living at 2405 Arctic
Avenue, occupation, detective. By 1915 the Turners had moved to 21
North Georgia Avenue. His occupation was given for a couple of
years as superintendent, i.e., one in charge of an apartment
building's maintenance. Directories through 1930 give his
occupation as doorman. Frank
Turner is listed in the 1920 census as working for wages as a
detective. He may well have functioned as a hotel house detective
as part of his duties as a doorman. By April of 1930, when the next
Census was taken, he was completely retired. Frank Turner's granddaughter, Mrs. Evelyn M. Turner Stewart, taught at the Broadway Elementary School at Broadway and Clinton Streets in Camden for 37 years, retiring in June of 1956. Another granddaughter, Louise C. Turner, served in the United States NAvy during and immediately after World War I. |
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Francis S. Late 1860s
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Frank Turne Photograph dates from the 1870s, around the time he was a fireman. The other gent in the photo is possibly a fellow fireman.
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Philadelphia Inquirer - December 24, 1873 |
George
A. Tenner - James
S. Foy - James
H. Carey
Frank S.
Turner
Philadelphia Inquirer * March 26, 1877 |
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Philadelphia Inquirer - August 26, 1884 | |
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Thomas
Dudley
- Frank
Turner - William Parker
- Charles
Wolverton J. Willard Morgan - Frederick A. Rex - Daniel Johntra - richard h. lee George Doughten - Charles Henry Peters - Joseph B. Green Amos Richard Dease - Robert Gilmore - Jesse Pratt |
Philadelphia Inquirer - September 8, 1885 |
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frank
turner
- amadee
middleton
- John
Gray William McKinley - Engine Company 2 |
Philadelphia
Inquirer - February 13, 1890 |
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frank
turner
- Jacob
Kellum
-
Frederick
Voight
- Henry
Grosscup Ladder Company 1 - Engine Company 2 - North 4th Street - Cooper Street Front Street - Erie Street |
Camden Post - March 23, 1893 |
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First Ward Republican Club -
John
L. Westcott - Robert Smith - George Barrett - Rev. A.G.
Lawson North Baptist Church - Engine Company 4 - Jesse Conley - James Dunn - Joseph Love Samuel Elfreth - Amedee Middleton - Frank Turner - Edward Hartman - Walter Browning Robert Steer - William Bogia - Charles Jefferson Kay - George Martin |
Charles Turner Frank Turner's son Charles, who with all his brothers worked in a shoe factories in Camden. Which one or ones has not been determined to date, as there were several.
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Yeoman First Class 1918 The daughter of Charles F. Turner and granddaughter of Frank and Elizabeth Turner, She served at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. Prior to he discharge in 1919,Louisa C. Turner had been promoted to the rank of Chief Yeoman. Sadly, she fell victim to the Spanish Influenza pandemic. She died in 1920.
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