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Robert edginton 14 e walnut ave, haddon township, nj
Robert edginton 14 e walnut ave, haddon township, nj








robert edginton 14 e walnut ave, haddon township, nj

A more detailed despciption of the Subject series is available through our online catalog,. The Subject series, which comprises about 20% of the collection, is described to the box level and is more general in scope, covering events both domestic and global. Photographs are arranged into two series, Subject and Alphabetical. Record staff photographers or by other agencies and published by permission. This collection consists of tens of thousands of black and white photographs published by the Record’s association as a Democratic party-aligned publication were all instrumental in leading to its final closure in 1947. The economic climate of the Great Depression, an ongoing and increasingly antagonistic competition with the Over the next decade, however, various factors arose which lead to the David Stern again raised readership to 315,000 by the early 1930s. Record had begun to decline, but its purchase by J. By the time of Rodman Wanamaker’s death in 1928 the readership of the Philadelphia Record as “one of the best and most widely circulated newspapers in the United States.” William Singerley died in 1898, and the paper then went into the hands of the Wanamaker family of Philadelphia. The paper proved so successful under Singerly that, in 1894, the Record in 1877, and then did so again in 1879, calling it the Singerly, who acquired the paper from Swain in 1877, first renamed it the Philadelphia Record newspaper was established as the Philadelphia Record Photograph Morgue (Collection V07), Historical Society of Pennsylvania.










Robert edginton 14 e walnut ave, haddon township, nj