RAND STREET is in East Camden, and runs parallel to Marlton Avenue and the Admiral Wilson Boulevard, from Watson Street across Westminster Avenue, Baird Boulevard and Thorndyke Street to the city limits, between Boyd and Pfeiffer Streets, and continues for a short distance into Pennsauken. Rand Street dates back prior to 1899, when Stockton Township was joined to Camden. The street was originally called George Street, but by 1906 had been renamed Rand Street. As late as 1924 there were no homes standing on Rand Street. Around 1927 twenty houses were built by the firm of Markeim, Coles, and MacEwan in the 200 and 300 block of Rand Street. By the time the 1929 City Directory had been compiled 18 homes had been built and occupied. Thirteen other homes were occupied east of Baird Boulevard, in the 400 block. Many more houses on Rand Street were built by 1947, including a number of duplexes. Construction was still going on for a time thereafter, as another series of duplexes were built in the 500 and 600 blocks. In 1954 the Peter J. McGuire Gardens public housing project was built on the land between Watson Street and Westminster Avenue. By the 1980s the project had become a notorious haven for drug dealing and other criminal activity. This soon spread along Rand Street all the way across Thorndyke Street. Although McGuire Gardens was literally razed and rebuilt beginning in the late 1990s, the area remains a hotbed of criminality and has been the site of several murders, the last two taking place in June and July of 2007. |
Do you have an Rand Street memory or picture? Let me know by e-mail so it can be included here. |
Intersection
of Rand Street & Watson Street February 26, 2009 |
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February
26, 2009
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200 Block of Rand Street | |
249
Rand Street
1934 |
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278
Rand Street
1947 |
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288
Rand Street
1929 |
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291
Rand Street
1929 |
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Rand Street
1929 |
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293
Rand Street
1932 Camden
Courier-Post |
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294
Rand Street
1938 Camden
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294
Rand Street
1947-1956 Carl
Auerbach |
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295
Rand Street
1929 |
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1929 |
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1929 |
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299
Rand Street
1930s-1960 Gertrude and Harry Bass, lived at 299 Rand Street. We’re not sure of the years, but they probably lived there from the 1930’s to 1960. Harry was a clothing cutter. They had 2 children, Albert Bass (future coach and Dean of Students at Woodrow Wilson High School) and Edith Bass Mackler (married to Edward Mackler). Harry died in 1967; Gertrude died in 1980. Al Bass died in 2008; Edith Bass Mackler died in 2006. Ilene
Mackler |
300 Block of Rand Street | |||
300
Block of Rand Street Camden
Courier-Post |
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300
Rand Street
1929 |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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Employment |
305
Rand Street
1938 Camden
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305
Rand Street 1947 Adolph Goodman |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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Rand Street 1929 |
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308
Rand Street 1929-1933 Isadore Waronker |
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BANDITS
TAKE CAR, USE IT IN HOLDUP Three
masked men, one with a nickel-plated revolver, held up Edward Rosenfeld,
wholesale grocer, as he was backing his car into the garage in the rear of
his home, 308 Rand street,
last night. They took $12 from his pockets, forced him out of his new
machine and drove it away. Rosenfeld
told police the bandits had handkerchief-type masks, but
appeared youthful, of medium height. A
short time before two men similarly masked, one also brandishing a
nickel-plated revolver, approached Sidney Bauman, of 272 Boyd
street, a block distant from the Rosenfeld house as he was putting his
car into his garage. "They told me it was a stickup," Bauman reported to police, "but I gave them an argument and they turned away and beat it. One was wearing a cap and one a hat. It was hard to get an accurate description in the dark, but they seemed youngish and about five feet five or six." At
1:00 AM today a car answering the description of the one stolen from
Rosenfeld was used by masked men who held up Edward Heaton, 824 Woodland
Avenue, a bus driver, as he was turning in his receipts at the Newton
avenue car barn of Public Service. There
were four men in the machine, Heaton told police. Two jumped out, each
handkerchief masked and with a revolver, and stood on either side of him.
He was carrying a tin box, in which were his change carrier and other At
about the same time two Negro men wearing masks, one with a gun, entered a
taproom at 673
Ferry Avenue. Philip
Knast, the proprietor, was behind the counter and
there were four customers in the place. The masked He
dodged behind the bar and escaped into a room in the rear. One of the
bandits then went behind the
bar and rifled the cash register, getting between $5 and $6, Knast told
police. They fled, apparently on foot. |
308
Rand Street 1936
Mrs. R. Rosenfeld |
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310
Rand Street 1929 |
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372
Rand Street
1947
Dr. Leopold S. David 1980s |
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374
Rand Street
1940s-1970s |
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375
Rand Street
1978-1997 My daddy, Alexander Wildes of Patti and the Emblems, purchased our home at 375 Rand Street around 1977 or 1978. We lived there until 1995. My most memorable moment, and probably the saddest occasion, was when two little boys who lived across the street (about 480's) were playing with matches in an abandoned van that was parked in the lot adjacent to 372. The Martin family lived there at the time. The van caught on fire and the oldest brother was able to get out, however the youngest brother - he had to be less than 5 years old - was trapped under a seat and EVERYONE watched and listened in absolute horror as he succumbed to the fire. His brother did everything he could to try to get him out, but it didn't work. This had to take place in the very early 80's and made the news on Channel 6. Monica M. Wildes, MHS |
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396
Rand Street
1947 |
400 Block of Rand Street | |
400
Rand Street
1929
Louis A Wright |
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401
Rand Street
1929
Vacant |
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402
Rand Street
1947 Alfred Corsi |
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404
Rand Street
1947 Harry Denny |
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406
Rand Street
1947 Anthony Pietrafesa |
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408
Rand Street
1947 Nick Ordille |
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410
Rand Street
1932-1933 |
410
Rand Street
1940s-1969 |
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412
Rand Street
1947 Morria Albert |
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414
Rand Street
1947 Albert Kroskove |
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415
Rand Street
1947
Not Built Camden
Courier-Post
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416
Rand Street
1947 Louis Birrer |
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418
Rand Street
1947 Charles Drourr |
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420
Rand Street
1929 |
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Rand Street
1929 |
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Rand Street
1929 |
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425
Rand Street
1947
Edwin Hampton |
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425
Rand Street
1963-1967 Camden
Courier-Post |
426
Rand Street
1929 |
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427
Rand Street
1947
Dr. Saul Artis |
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428
Rand Street
1929 |
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430
Rand Street
1929 Vacant |
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CLERK
USES FISTS TO ROUT BANDITS Victim Continues Fight Despite Blow on Head From Pistol Two
armed bandits and an accomplice took on a tough job last night when they
attempted to hold up Walter J, Brown, 38, of 430 Rand
Street. Brown.
a sturdy clerk employed by the T&B Tobacco Company, of Kaighn
Avenue near Broadway,
slugged one of the holdup men, suffered a gash when slugged by a second,
and caused the three thugs to
retreat. In
a report to detectives, Brown said he drove his automobile into the
garage at the rear of his home and was about to close the doors when he
was confronted by a masked man
who ordered
him to "stick 'em up."
Instead,
Brown let both fists fly. Thereupon, a second thug appeared and struck
Brown with a pistol. He
battled with the pair with his fists and observed a third man appear
from behind the garage. So furious was Brown's attack that the three
bandits took to their heels running in the direction of Baird
Boulevard. After
summoning Detectives John
Trout and John
Kaighn, Brown received treatment from a nearby physician. He
described the masked man as five feet six inches in height, weighing
about 150 pounds. He wore a tan overcoat, Brown said. The second bandit who wielded the pistol was described as five feet eight inches tall, weighing 140 pounds and wearing a gray overcoat. Brown was unable to give a description of the third man. |
430
Rand Street
1936 Walter J. Brown Camden
Courier-Post |
430
Rand Street
1947 No Listing |
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432
Rand Street
929 |
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434
Rand Street
1929 |
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436
Rand Street
1929 |
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438
Rand Street
1929 |
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438
Rand Street
1947-1960s Hyman & Adele Leon |
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445
Rand Street
1947 |
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442
Rand Street
1947 |
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444
Rand Street
1947 |
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My family moved to 237 Morse Street from Philadelphia in the year 1936. My older sister Shirley and I went through the Camden school system. Dudley School, Cramer Elementary and Junior High and then to high school, Shirley going to Woodrow Wilson and I going to Camden High. I graduated in 1952. My father Louis worked for his brother Charlie at Camden Storage Battery Company on Haddon Avenue. Moved from Morse Street to 445 Rand Street in 1944 and then to Boyd Street in 1949. Camden was a wonderful city to grow up in. Jay
Goldberg |
445
Rand Street
1944-1949
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445
Rand Street
1969 |
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447
Rand Street
1947 |
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449
Rand Street
1947 |
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451
Rand Street
1947 |
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453
Rand Street
1947 |
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455
Rand Street
1947 |
500
Block of Rand Street
No Homes Built Prior to 1947 |
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Intersection of Thorndyke Street & Rand Street | |
600
Block of Rand Street
No Homes Built Prior to 1947 |
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