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You won't want to miss
reading Naoma Welk's bestselling and informative picture history books
about South Orange!
Images
of America: South Orange
and
Images
of America: South Orange Revisited
Images of America: South
Orange Revisited (Published
by Arcadia 2006)
From
the mid-1800s through the late 1900s, life in South
Orange
was a mirror of events taking place on a national and global
level. Evolutions in population, transportation, education,
and
culture played an important part in South
Orange's
growth from a small farming village to the bustling community it is
today. For more than 150 years, the village's excellent road
and
rail infrastructure, salubrious climate, and close proximity to Manhattan
has drawn residents from a wide range of backgrounds, interests, and
talents. Today, many South
Orange
residents enjoy the convenience of working in a bustling city and at
the same time, living in the late 19th-and 20th-century homes on
streets illuminated by Victorian gaslights. These are just
some
of the factors that make South Orange a unique community.
Naoma
Welk lives in an 1885 Queen Anne-Victorian home in Montrose Park,
the historic district of South Orange, and is vice president of the
Montrose Park Historic District Association. The author of South
Orange, Welk is pleased to present South Orange
Revisited, which draws from the collections of the South Orange Public
Library, Seton Hall University
archives, the New Jersey Historical Society and many private
collections.
The
Images of America series celebrates he history of neighborhoods, towns
and cities across the country. Using archival photographs,
each
title presents the distinctive stories from the past that shape the
character of the community today. Arcadia
is proud to play a part in the preservation of local heritage, making
history available to all.
Images
of America: South Orange (Published
by Arcadia 2002)
With
more than two hundred vintage photographs, South Orange presents a
distinctive view of a village that has evolved from a rural to
sophisticated landscape. Situated next to a 2500 acre forest preserve
filled with wildlife, South Orange is just a half-hour drive from
Manhattan.
In the early 1880s South Orange was
popular for its reputation as a healthy, relaxing destination -- an
escape from the increasingly industrial big-city landscapes of the
region. Today, this bedroom community presents a unique mix of
cosmopolitan and suburban environments.
South Orange follows the village through
growth and development, illustrating how it has maintained much of its
original character. The many extant homes in a wide variety of
late-architectural styles hint at the summer afternoon tea parties of
the 19th-century.
The gas-service lamps lining the streets
were once fueled by whale oil. The home of the Orange Lawn Tennis Club
and Seton Hall University, South Orange was also the dwelling place of
W.F. Havemeyer, real-estate tycoon, and Louis Bamberger, founder of
Bamberger's Department Store, now known as Macy's.
Another South Orange notable was William
Frederick Allen, editor of the Official Railway Guide, who promoted the
use of standard time in the United States.
How to purchase these two great books:
Both
books can be purchased through MPHDA. Purchase prise is $20 per book.
Sales through Rocket Ship & Print (formerly known as Mail
Boxes,
Etc.), and the South Orange Public Library also benefit Montrose Park
Historic District Assoc.
The book is also at
various retailers in South Orange, Maplewood, Barnes and Noble,
Borders, amazon.com, and barnesand noble.com.
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