Alfred
Leon
Sayers


ALFRED L. SAYERS was born in Blackwood NJ, June 9, 1869 to Thornton and Mary Emma Sayers. His family came to Camden when he was a small boy, and lived at 561 Pine Street at the time of the 1880 Census. The Sayers family was living at 745 Walnut in the middle 1880s, and are listed at 806 Walnut in the 1888-1889 and 1890-1891 Camden City Directories.

Alfred L. Sayers was educated in the E.A. Stevens School at 430 South 4th Street, Camden, and Abrahamson's Business College, in that city. He entered the Camden Police department April 14, 1894, and while in that department became a steam and hot water contractor, in which he was very successful. He married Clara V. DeBarth around 1896. The first appear in Camden City Directories in 1897, at 821 Spruce Street. By 1898 they had moved to 820 South 8th Street. The Sayers stayed at that address through 1924.

In 1904 Alfred Sayers resigned from the Police Department to become a member of the Board of Freeholders, and in 1906 he was made a director and president of that body, and served until 1910, when he resigned to become street commissioner of Camden.  Up to this time he had been carrying on his heating and hot water contracting work, but now he sold out and devoted all his time to his position as street commissioner, this service running from 1910 to 1923, under Mayors Charles H. Ellis and Frank S. Van Hart. The city was in the midst of its great expansion both in overall geography, population, and the sheer number of streets and roads that had to be dealt with during his tenure bears recognition.

Alfred L. Sayers was a committee clerk in the New Jersey Legislature, associated with William J. Bradley in the Senate 1904-05. 

On November 6, 1917 the Parkside Trust received its charter. Alfred L. Sayers was among the founders of the new bank. On January 12, 1918 he was made a director of the Parkside Trust. He was active in its organization, which was consummated January 12, 1918, the date of his election, and served as its president from its inception through its May 1927 merger with the West Jersey Trust Company. The new bank was known as the West Jersey-Parkside Trust Company, its first president being newspaper publisher and congressman Francis Ford Patterson Jr. Alfred L. Sayers remained Camden' Streets Commissioner through at least January of 1922. 

Alfred L. Sayers was living at 1188 Everett Street in Camden when the 1929 Camden City Directory was compiled.

Both the 1930 and 1940 Census shows Alfred L. Sayers and his wife, the former Clara DeBarth, living at 815 White Horse Pike in Haddon Township, New Jersey.


E. A. Stevens School
430 South 4th Street

Click on Image to Enlarge


Philadelphia Inquirer - July 6,1897
...continued... 
Elbridge B. McClong - Alfred L. Sayers - George W. Anderson - William H. Butts - Josiah Sage
Edward S. Hyde - Henry C. Peters - Henry Peters - Howard Ever - Thomas Glenn - James Carter
Henry Cooper - John McDonald - Frank Whitaker 
South 7th Street - Walnut Street - Joint Alley - Pine Street 

Camden Daily Telegram
December 20, 1897

New York Flats - Kaighn Avenue
Rosie Woolford -
John L. Westcott
John Brothers - Josiah Sage
William Butts -
Alfred L. Sayers
Mamie Firie - Bertha Bastian
Susie Quinn - Charles Brunner

Philadelphia Inquirer - June 16, 1901

John Reader - Arthur Stanley
Edward S. Hyde - John Foster
Alfred L. Sayers - Thomas F. Waters
Gilbert Massey - Isaac G. Johnson
O. Glenn Stackhouse
Sycamore Street t - Line Street
Division Street
- Locust Stree


Philadelphia Inquirer - January 16, 1906

Philadelphia Inquirer - January 26, 1910
Alfred L. Sayers - Charles H. Ellis

Philadelphia Inquirer - March 19, 1910

Philadelphia Inquirer - August 10, 1910

Philadelphia Inquirer - August 24, 1910
Engine Company 7 - Seventh Ward Republican Club

Philadelphia Inquirer - October 17, 1910

Philadelphia Inquirer - November 24, 1910

Philadelphia Inquirer

June 9, 1911

 


CAMDEN COURIER

December 28, 1913

 


Philadelphia Inquirer
November 24, 1914

Alfred L. Sayers
Jacob Sayers
Emma Sayers
Charles P. Sayers
William Sayers
Walnut Street

 

 


Philadelphia Inquirer - June 17, 1915


Philadelphia Inquirer - July 1, 1915



Philadelphia Inquirer - April 3, 1918

 

Camden Courier-Post * January 18, 1922

POLICE TO PROBE $200,000 KAIGHN AVE. FIRE
FIRE CAPTAIN MAY DIE, FOUR OTHERS INJURED;
DAMAGE IS $200,000
Economy Store and Other Buildings Near Broadway 
wept by Flames Early This Morning
Falling Debris Carries Men Through Roof And Into Cellar
Sleeping Inmates of Apartments Roused and Invalid Carried to Safety- Mayor Sees Rescues

 Mayor Ellis has ordered an investigation to determine the cause of the $2000,000 fire which swept the properties at 427 and 429 Kaighn Avenue and caused injury to five firemen, one of whom may be fatally hurt.

 The fire centered about the property occupied by the Economy Store, formerly Handle’s, and quickly spread to four adjoining buildings.

 The fireman whose recovery is despaired of is Captain Martin B. Carrigan, of Engine Company No. 2, Fifth and Arch Streets. Carrigan, who lives at 618 West Street, is suffering from a fractured skull and severe burns and cuts of the face, legs, and body. He is unconscious at Cooper Hospital.

 The firemen were injured when a wall, weakened by the intense heat, crumbled and crashed through a roof upon which they were standing, dragging them through the floor below, and into a cellar. Sensational rescues followed as police, firemen, and citizens with bare hands tore at the hot debris. The men were quickly extricated and carried to the street.

 “We certainly shall investigate this fire,” the Mayor declared today. “Just what was the cause and who is to blame has not been determined but there will be a thorough investigation.”

 “There have been too many of these fires during the past few weeks” continued the mayor. “Surely all of them did not just happen and I am sure there has been someone responsible in one or two of the fires.”

 The conflagration was one of the most spectacular of a series of large fires that have visited the city in the past six weeks. The block in which it occurred- Kaighn Avenue between Broadway and Fourth Street is one of the most prominent business squares in Camden.

 Flames shot 200 feet in the air, giving the sky a fiery hue and attracted attention for miles before the firemen brought it under control. The flame-lit sky was clearly seen in Philadelphia, Merchantville, East Camden, Gloucester and other communities.

 More than a score of families living in the vicinity were forced to flee from their homes in scant attire when the fire threatened them. They were cared for by neighbors.

 Fireman George Boone, 46 years old, of Engine Company No. 2, also is in a serious condition. He is suffering from burns of the right hand, right thigh and foot and probable internal injuries. Boone lives at 607 Mount Vernon Street.

The other injured foremen are:

John Voll, 22 years old, 509 Royden Street: both hands badly burned.

C.J. Andrus, aged 31 years, 570 Mount Vernon Street: burns of hands and legs.

Harold Lorang, 29 years old, 19 Hudson Street: burns of right hand and legs and sprained ankle.

 Firemen Prove Heroes

 Carrigan and Boone are in the hospital. The other firemen were discharged after their wounds were dressed. After being released from the hospital they returned to the scene of the fire and insisted upon continuing their duties. Chief Peter B. Carter, however, ordered them home.

 Most of the loss was suffered by the Economy Store. A few charred walls remain of the large building. The interior was completely gutted. It was estimated today that the damage to that property will total $60,000 At least $50,000 damage, it was said, was done to the stock.

 Morris Handle, local theatrical man, who owns the building, declared today that the property was insured for $30,000. “My loss will be quite heavy,” said Mr. Handle. “The insurance will not pay one-half the property damage.”

 The adjoining building at 431 Kaighn Avenue is occupied by Dr. S.I. Yubas, optometrist, and L.R. Yubas, his father, a jeweler.

 Invalid is Rescued

 The rear and upper floors of the Yubas property were gutted and the stock sustained a heavy loss, due to water and smoke. The damage will total $40,000, Mr. Yubas estimated today. 

Five persons who were asleep on the upper floors of the Yubas dwelling had narrow escapes. They were awakened by Samuel Goldstein, haberdasher, 417 Kaighn Avenue, who discovered the fire in the Economy Store and turned in the alarm. Mrs. L.R. Yubas, an invalid, was rescued with difficulty. 

The property occupied by Mrs. Sadie Bodner, a widow, at 433 Kaighn Avenue, as a house furnishings store, was scorched and also damaged by water and smoke. 

Adjoining the Economy Store on the west at 425 Kaighn Avenue is a vacant one-story structure, formerly occupy by the United Beef Company. Firemen were on the roof of that building when the west wall of the Economy Store collapsed. The wall tumbled down on the small roof and hurled the firemen through a hole in the roof, through the floor and then into the cellar.

Several Stores Damaged

Three policemen, Joseph Sparks, Thomas Cheeseman, and George Hill- and several spectators braved the fire and smoke to rescue the trapped firemen.

The property at 423 Kaighn Avenue, occupied by the Charles Jamison Department Store, was damaged in the rear and the stock ruined by water and smoke. The Kresge Five-and-Ten-Cent Store, at 519-531 Kaighn Avenue, was also damaged by water.

Louis Richelson, who owns the properties from 519 to 525 Kaighn Avenue, was unable to estimate his loss today. 

Collapse of Wall 

Hundreds of spectators, who were watching the fire from the opposite side of the street, shuddered as they saw a brick wall, weakened by the intense heat, totter and sway. Before the firemen on the smaller roof below could scurry to safety, it collapsed. 

A groan escaped the crowd as they heard the cries of the entrapped firemen and the deafening thud of the brocks as they landed on the roof where the firemen were at work. 

As the full weight of the brocks struck the roof, it caved in forming a gaping hole. The firemen were literally swept into the opening. 

The bricks tumbled down, causing another hole in the floor between the firs story and the cellar and dragging the imperiled firemen into the cellar with them. 

Mayor Charles H. Ellis was among the spectators who witnessed the collapse of the wall. Other officials were Chief James H. Long, of the Water Department; Fire Chief Carter, Assistant Police Chief Edward S. Hyde, Captain Lewis Stehr of the Second Police District, and Street Commissioner Alfred L. Sayers.

 Firemen Under Debris

 Observing the peril of the trapped firemen, Policemen Sparks, Cheeseman and Hill, together with a dozen other spectators, rushed across the street to the vacant store. They rushed through the smoke and fire, leaped into the cellar and 5reached the struggling firemen. 

Sparks, the first to leap into the cellar, reached Voll, who had been pinned beneath a pile of debris and was pleading to be rescued. The policeman feverishly extricated Voll from his precarious position and carried him out into the street to safety. 

Policeman Cheeseman had accidentally fallen into the cellar and, though himself injured, groped about in the dark until he found Boone, whom he dragged outside. 

Policeman Hill carried Carrigan out of the cellar in his arms. 

The five firemen were carried to a waiting police ambulance and rushed to Cooper Hospital. Carrigan was unconscious. He haws a slim fighting chance to recover. 

Carrigan was promoted to a captaincy the first of the year. He is popular among his comrades and has the reputation of being a fearless fireman.

Mayor Praises Firemen

 Mayor Ellis praised the work of the firemen and the bravery of the policemen who had risked their lives to effect the rescue.

 “Never did I see such remarkable work” said the Mayor. “When I arrived at the scene, it looked as if the whole block was doomed. The flames were shooting upward and the whole sky seemed lit up. The firemen tackled their job with dispatch and courage. I was proud of them. They knew their business and showed it by confining it to a comparatively small area. The work of the police also was commendable.

 Mr. Goldstein discovered the fire shortly before midnight.

 “I had just left my home at 417 Kaighn Avenue,” explained Mr. Goldstein, “intending to get a soda. As I passed the Economy Store I noticed strong odor of smoke. I peered into the glass doorway of the store. I immediately saw the place was afire.”

Rescues Sleeping Family

“Then I ran back to my store” continued Mr. Goldstein, “and I telephoned police headquarters. I went out again and returned to the scene. I remembered that the Yubas family were asleep on the second and third floors and rapped on the doors. Mr. Yubas came down in a bathrobe. He was not aware of the fire.”

 The six persons asleep in the Yubas home were Dr. Yubas, Mr. And Mrs. L.R. Yubas, Bernard Helfand, Miss Bertha Cuden and Anna Recowitz, a domestic.

 Mrs. Yubas, who is recovering from an illness, was too weak to make her way outside through the smoke. Assisted by her husband, Policemen Becker and Cheeseman and Constable John Cunningham, Mrs. Yubas was half carried downstairs, and out through the rear of the building to safety.

Blaze Had Big Start

“The fire had gained such rapid headway,” said Sergeant Thomas Cunningham, “that when the firemen arrived, smoke was actually issuing from cracks in the sidewalks and between the cobbles near the trolley tracks.”

 The second and third floors of 419 to 423 Kaighn Avenue are occupied by private families as apartments. In the rear were number of frame dwellings. More than a score of families were obliged to leave their homes in scant attire when the firemen began playing hose upon their properties as a precaution against the fire spreading.

Mrs. Catherine Fox, 410 Sycamore Street, and Mrs. E. Chambers, 412 Sycamore Street, whose homes are in the rear of the Economy Store property, had removed part of the furniture to the street. Even after firemen assured them the danger of their homes catching on fire was over, the women and children could hardly be persuaded to return.

Crumbling walls and cracking of glass hampered the foremen in their work and made their task hazardous. The firemen were further handicapped by the big start the fire had gained. Despite this, they stuck dangerously close to the flames.

To play hose upon the fire to advantage, several firemen scaled the outside walls of adjoining properties and reached cornices, from which they directed streams of water.

 High Wind Fanned Flames

 A high wind gave them great difficulty. A number of times, when the firemen seemed to have the fire under control, the flames burst out afresh and compelled them to retreat. Then the reflection would light up the sky overhead.

 Water Chief Long gave the firemen great service in maintaining the water at a high pressure to ensure facility in getting the streams to play upon the flames.

 Kaighn Avenue, between Broadway and Fourth Street, was literally alive with residents and passers-by attracted by the flames. Included among the spectators were scores of persons who came from Philadelphia and distant points, in the belief the blaze was much more serious.

 According to the estimate of the loss made today, the insurance on the property and stock damaged by the fore will not pay for one-half the loss sustained.

 Chief Carter was determined to take no chances with the fire because of the high wind and the fire was attacked on all sides. While firemen were fighting the flames from Kaighn Avenue several companies of firemen had worked their way into the yard in the rear, from whence they played streams of hose.

 An effort is being made today to determine the origin of the blaze.

 Thomas Shanahan, Engine Company 6, was a spectator when the wall crashed in. Hearing the cries of the buried men, he immediately dashed into the dirt. Six men, including Harry Seeley, formed a human chain and pulled four of the men from the heap of rubbish.

 Someone had the presence of min to turn off the nozzle of a hose, which was playing directly o the mound. When found, the water was trickling through to the pinned men.


Philadelphia Inquirer * September 26, 1922

Simon Wilkinsky

Frank Ford Patterson Jr.

Harry Reeves

Irving Buckle

Leon Buckle

O. Glen Stackhouse

David Rankins

Frank S. Van Hart

George A. Frey

A.B. Sparks

Robert Irving

Victor King

George W. Tash

Benjamin S. Maloney

Isaac Albertson

T. Harry Rowland

J. Heulings Coles

Willard T. Gibbs

C. Lawrence Gregorio

John J. Tischner

Frank B. Hambleton

Frank J. Leonard

Dr. William H. Pratt

Mrs. Katherine Donges

Mrs. Mae Hawkins

Edward Kelleher

Albert Neutze

Louis Bantivoglio

J.H. Williams

John H. Carroll

John P. Shaw

Joseph B. Davis

William Frost

Patrick Carr

Alfred L. Sayers

William D. Brown

John Rogers

Charles E. Hill

Charles S. Wolverton

Samuel Edwards

John Dobbins

Lizzie P. Abbot

Edward L. Aument

Frederick Stanton

Walter J. Farrell

John B. Dean

S. Raymond Dobbs

Harry McCloskey

Herman Neissner

Francis Stratton

Clara K. Stamm

Morris Steppa

Thomas Heil

Albert Bardsley

Albert H. Starr

George A. Harkins

John McAlack

Richard Davies

Leo Harkins

William Smith

Joseph Wood


Parkside Trust
Haddon and Kaighn Avenues
Camden Daily Courier - July 5, 1926


South Jersey A History - 1664-1924

Few men can be successful in both politics and business, but Alfred Leon Sayers has a proud record in both fields. He was born in Blackwood NJ, June 9, 1869, and was educated in the Stevens School, of Camden, and Abrahamson's Business College, in that city. He entered the Camden Police department April 14, 1894, and while in that department became a steam and hot water contractor, in which he was very successful. In 1904 he resigned from the Police Department to become a member of the Board of Freeholders, and in 1906 he was made a director and president of that body, and served until 1910, when he resigned to become street commissioner of Camden. Up to this time he had been carrying on his heating and hot water contracting work, but now he sold out and devoted all his time to his position as street commissioner, this service running from 1910 to 1923. He was a committee clerk in the New Jersey Legislature, associated with William J. Bradley in the Senate 1904-05. On January 12, 1918 he was made a Director of the Parkside Trust Company. He was active in its organization, which was consummated January 12, 1918, the date of his election, and is still its President. Mr. Sayers is President of the Seventh Ward Republican Club, of Camden. In religion he adheres to the Methodist faith.

Mr. Sayers was married, February 9, 1897, to Clara V. DeBarth, in Camden. His father, deceased, a cloth finisher, served in the Civil War, enlisting from Camden. His mother was Mary E. (Munyon) Sayers. Both died on the same day, in 1915, from pneumonia.


Camden Courier-Post
Evening Courier - April 25, 1928



Ben Courter - Charles Leo McKeone - Dr. Wilson G. Bailey
Dr. Rowland Haines - Alfred L. Sayers
Federal Street - Haddon Avenue - Mount Ephraim Avenue

Camden Courier-Post * August 28, 1935
William D. Sayrs - Frank J. Hartmann Jr. - Alfred L. Sayers - Martha Kemble

Camden Courier-Post
September 16, 1955

Alfred L. Sayres - Vincent Raczykowski
Newport Bottling Works - Morton Street
Camden Trust Company - Sylvan Fletcher
Parkside Trust Company
West Jersey Trust Company
Albert S. Woodruff - William C. Davis
Mark Bulifant -
Dr. Orris W. Saunders
Dr. William E. Miller - O.O. Phillips

 


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