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JOSEPH H. FORSYTH was born in Burlington County NJ on May 30, 1879 to Joshua and Luisa Hatch Forsyth. His father was a farmer, and at the time of the 1880 census the family lived in Pemberton NJ. His uncle was Cooper B. Hatch, who was Mayor of Camden NJ from 1898 to 1902. By 1920 Joseph Forsyth had established himself in Camden NJ, and had a prosperous real estate and insurance business, trading as the Cooper B. Hatch Company, at 315 Market Street. At the time of the 1920 census he was living at 708 Cooper Street with his wife Hazel. Joseph Forsyth served as a state senator from Camden in the 1920s, and was still serving in that capacity as late as 1928. In January of that year he proposed a bill in the State Senate exempting Camden from participation in the state Civil Service system. While the bill had support from may of the old guard Republican politicians locally and state wide, it did not deter the movement to institute Civil Service regulation of government jobs in New Jersey, which by the mid-1930s was virtually universal throughout the state. Joseph Forsyth passed away on November 7 of that year, leaving a large estate. From his estate he established the Cooper B. Hatch Foundation, to aid crippled children from poor families. |
Philadelphia Inquirer - July 27, 1906 |
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Trenton
Times May 10, 1911 Jeff
Kay - Joseph
Forsyth - Jack
Johnson |
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Philadelphia
Inquirer February 6, 1913 Alfred C. Kraft - William J. Kraft Click on Image for Complete Article |
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Philadelphia Inquirer - December 23, 1912 |
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Joseph
Nowrey - Joseph
Forsyth - Frederick
Triplett - Hubert Pfeil - A.C.Kraft Isaac Moffett - Thomas Little - Harry M. Knight - Charles H. Ellis |
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Philadelphia
Inquirer January 2, 1918 T. Gordon Coulter |
Camden Post-Telegram * May 1, 1918 |
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William
P. Hallinger - Raymond L. Warren - Joseph
H. Forsyth - Robert
D. Clow - George W. Kirkbride Meyers Baker - Howard A. Walton - George W. Jessup - William B. Hambleton - Johan A. Ackley Frank Burr - R.A. Rockhill - Maurice B. Rudderow - Ralph D. Baker - Edgar Freeman - William Schmidt Charles G. Jessup - Clinton I. Evans - Anthony J. Oberst - Leon E. Todd - William Derham - T. Yorke Smith Eldred I. Hibbs - Henry Budney - Carl Evered - Francis C. Ely - William Schmid |
Camden Saily Courier - September 17, 1920 |
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Joseph
H. Forsyth - William
W. Patterson - Charles H.
Fitzsimmons
IV |
Philadelphia
Inquirer |
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Joseph
Forsyth - Levi
Farnham - Martin
Schreiber -
Wellington Barto |
Philadelphia
Inquirer - November 26, 1922 |
Joseph Forsyth - Engine Company 9 |
Camden
Evening Courier - January 24, 1928 |
ENLIGHTENED
SUPPORT FOR SUPPORT FOR BILL NO. 10 Camden may well be proud of its showing in Trenton yesterday. Camden showed the rest of the State that its
leading citizens are intensely interested in civic affairs. For
did not two busloads of them journey up to the State capitol to attend
the hearing on Senator
Forsyth’s
Bill No. 10? Headed
by that outstanding civic leader, “Mickey”
Brown, of the Eighth Ward the flower of Camden’s patriotic
citizenry, invaded the Senate gallery, and showed their intense
interest by cheering or jeering every speaker for or against the bill. As
one of Mr. Brown’s
cohorts described it to the editor of The Courier: “Did
we give them Simple Service guys the raspberry—and how.” “This
here Senator
Forsyth
certainly had the gang with him. ‘Mickey’
is one swell cheerleader. I yelled meself hoarse. An elegant time was
had by all. “And
to think I might of missed the whole jamboree if I hadn’t bumped into Mickey
at Jones soft drink, emporium
when I was getting my morning glass of buttermilk. “Hello,
Foghorn,” says Mickey.
“Ain’t you the guy what used to holler ‘Rags-any-old-rags’?
How’s the old pipes today?” “As
good as ever when I keeps ‘em moist, but very poor when, they’re
dry,” I tells Mickey. “Come
along and we’ll keep ‘em moist,” says me friend Mickey. “And
that was the way I got in on the party. “You
ask me what it was all about. Gosh, you’re ignorant for an editor. “Senator
Forsyth’s
Simple Service bill to make it simpler to get jobs for guys what do
their bit on election day?. The Courier congratulates Senator Forsyth on the enlightened support which his bill has evoked.. |
Camden Courier-Post - January 28, 1928 |
Patrons, Patronesses Announced Today for First Military Ball Patrons and patronesses for the first military ball of the Camden Post No. 960, Veterans of Foreign Wars, to be held on Friday evening February 3 in the Elks auditorium, Seventh and Cooper Streets., are announced today. The following prominent men and women are listed: Mrs. J.W. Connor, Miss C.M. Day, Mrs. J.H. Forsyth, Mrs. H.J. Goodyear, Miss B. Graham, Mrs. R.E. Green, Mrs. E.F. Haines, Mrs. J. Hood Jr., Mrs. W. Hurley, Mrs. J. Jarrell, Mrs. T. Keefe, Mrs. J.F. Kobus, Mrs. L. Liberman, Mrs. F.L. Lloyd, Mrs. M.A. Logan, Mrs. T.P. McConaghy, Mrs. F.F. Neutze, Mrs. L.K. Marr, Mrs. J.A. Pennington, Mrs. M.E. Ramsey, Mrs. E. Truax, Mrs. S.M. Shay, Mrs. W.J. Staats, Mrs. B.G. Tarburton, Mrs. R.W. Waddell, Mrs. E. Watson, Mrs. E.P. Wescott, Mrs. C.A. Wolverton. David Baird Jr., William T. Boyle, Isaac Ferris, William Hurley, John Hood Jr., John Jarrell, Victor King, William J. Kraft, Thomas Keefe, Joseph F. Kobus, Hon. Edmund B. Leaming, Dr. A. Haines Lippincott, James H. Long, L.K. Marr, Dr. Thomas P. McConaghy, Hon. Frank F. Neutze, Samuel P. Orlando, Albert E. Simmons, Edwin Watson, Ethan P. Wescott. |
Camden Courier-Post - January 31, 1928 |
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Camden Courier-Post - April 5, 1928 |
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Joseph H. Forsyth - Samuel M. Shay - Ethan Wescott |
Camden Courier-Post - June 23, 1933 |
MRS. MABEL FORSYTH
ROBBED OF GEMS AND CASH IN ERIE HOTEL
Word was received last night that Mrs. Mabel Forsyth, widow of former State Senator Joseph H. Forsyth, and her son and three sisters were robbed at Erie, Pennsylvania, en route to the Chicago fair. She was accompanied by Mrs. Grace Gerry, Mt. Holly, and Miss Josephine Hendrickson, Mt. Holly, sisters, and her son Jack and a chauffeur. They stayed over night. Wednesday in a hotel at Erie. When they arose in the morning they discovered several hundred dollars' worth of their jewelry and $300 in cash had been taken by a hotel thief. Mrs. Forsyth formerly lived on Cooper street, near Seventh, and later, in Haddonfield. She now resides in Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia. |
Camden Courier-Post - September 18, 1933 |
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