Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Benjamin Franklin Bridge (U.S. Route 30 is the north side of Camden. The North-South Freeway, which carries Interstate 676 north to downtown Camden. [44] Route 76C connector runs east to U.S. Route 130 and Route 168. County Routes 537, 543, 551 and 561 all travel through the center of the city.
Interstate 676 (I-676) is an Interstate Highway that serves as a major thoroughfare through Center City Philadelphia, where it is known as the Vine Street Expressway, and Camden, New Jersey, where it is known as the northern segment of the North–South Freeway, as well as the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Highway in honor of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
The Camden and Amboy was the first railroad to use wooden railroad ties and T-section rails. [2] The company completed a line between Bordentown, on the Delaware River, and South Amboy, in December 1832. The line was further extended south from Bordentown to Camden, across the Delaware from Philadelphia, in September 1834. [3]
In July 2014, the New Jersey Economic Development Authority awarded the Holtec International a $260 million tax incentive to expand operations at the site in the Port of Camden. [7] [8] The proposed Glassboro–Camden Line light rail system would stop in the neighbourhood at Ferry Avenue parallel and west of the North-South Freeway. [9]
Fairview, originally named Yorkship Village, is a neighborhood located in southern Camden, in Camden County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. According to the 2000 United States census, Fairview Village has a population of 5,947. [4] Much of the neighborhood is part of a historic district listed on the state and federal registers of historic ...
From 1895 to 1907, the store continued to expand, with the company taking over the remaining buildings on the North side of the block on Market between 7th and 8th Streets – including the J. M. Maris Dry Goods Store, the Bailey Store, and the J. B. Lippincott publishing house – and adding new buildings on the corners at either end of the ...
Camden Central Airport (sometimes called Central Airport, Camden) was an airport in Pennsauken Township, Camden County, New Jersey, United States. It had its peak of activity in the 1930s, serving as the main airport for the neighboring city of Philadelphia , Pennsylvania .
In 2008, Corinne's Place was featured in a Gannett New Jersey article, which called it "a treasured part of Camden's community", noting that regulars often called on Bradley-Powers for catering weddings and other events.