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WILLIAM B. JOBES was born in March of 1857 to George W. Jobes Sr. and Elizabeth Horn Jobes. George Jobes was a tinsmith by trade, and a veteran of the Civil War. His uncle, Captain Samuel B. Jobes, had commanded Union troops at the Bliss Farm during the Battle of Gettysburg in July of 1863. The family had moved to Camden's Middle Ward by the time of the 1870 Census, where they lived with his grandmother Ann Jobes and uncle Jacob Jobes. William Jobes was the oldest child at the time of the 1870 Census, coming before sister Leonora and brothers Howard and Pancoast Jobes. The Jobes family was fairly well off, then owning a home valued at $3000. The home was most likely at 35 South Fourth Street. George Jobes and his family resided there when the 1880 Census was taken. By this time William B. Jobes had married and struck out on his own, following his father into the tinsmith's trade. Ironically, William B. Jobes would later lose his life within sight of the family home. At the age of 20 William B. Jobes married Emily McCracken, the daughter of a Scotland born carpet weaver, James McCracken and his wife Margaret. The young couple lived with her parents and brothers at 558 Pine Street in South Camden. Brother-in-law James McCracken Jr. had served as an extra man with the Camden Fire Department in 1876 and early 1877, and would serve again from 1882 into 1884. Emily bore at least two children, Leonora, born in July of 1882, and George Arthur, on August 29, 1894. James McCracken passed around 1887, survived by his widow. William and Emily Jobes remained at at 558 Pine Street through at least the summer of 1900. By the middle of 1895 William Jobes was employed by the City of Camden as a fire fighter, as a hose man assigned to Engine Company 1, which was located at 409 Pine Street. He was serving with that company on March 17, 1906 when he, along with brother fire fighters George Shields and William Hillman of Ladder Company 2, were killed in the line of duty while fighting a fire at the former Sixth Regiment Armory at 4th and Mickle Streets. Fireman Jobes was laid to rest at Harleigh Cemetery, not far from poet Walt Whitman. His widow was residing at 576 Line Street by the end of 1906, and remained at that address through at least 1914. Last a resident of Westmont (Haddon Township) NJ, she passed away on May 26, 1937. Daughter Leonora, also a Westmont resident, joined her parents in 1942. George Jobes became an architectural draftsman. He was living in Westmont when he registered for the draft in June of 1917. After serving in World War I, he returned to 576 Line Street in Camden, where he lived with his wife Serena. By 1930 he had moved to Westmont NJ. |
Philadelphia Inquirer - May 30, 1894 |
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Joseph Logue -
William Patterson - George Cox |
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Camden Daily Telegram May 31, 1894 James Baird |
Philadelphia
Inquirer - March 19, 1906
George
Shields - William
Hillman - William
Jobes West
Street - Mickle
Street - Beckett
Street Engine
Company 1 -
Engine
Company 2 6th Regiment, New Jersey National
Guard "Joseph Gail" was actually Joseph Daley |
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Frank
G. Hitchener - William
Morgenweck - Sperry & Hutchinson - Camden Bowling Alleys Gardner Corson was appointed to the Fire Department in November of 1907. |
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Altoona
Mirror Altoona, Pennsylvania March 17, 1906
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Grave of William Jobes Harleigh Cemetery - Camden, New Jersey Photograph taken at burial in March 1906, showing the floral tributes presented at the funeral Click on Image to Enlarge - Click HERE to Supersize |
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Philadelphia Inquirer - March 22, 1906 | |
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Charles
H. Ellis - First
Baptist Church - Broadway
Methodist Episcopal Church George Shields - William Jobes - William Hillman - Kaighn Avenue Rev. John S. Heisler Samuel S. Elfreth - Samuel Price - William Deno - Charles Robinson - Peter Carter Joseph Ernst - George Quinn |
100
Years Later Story and Photos by Bob Bartosz, Camden NJ Fire Department Photographer |
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US Congressman Robert Andrews, second from the right, speaking at the dedication of the new Headstone for Camden Fireman William Hillman. Left to right in photo are, Honor Guard Camden FF David Melendez, Camden Chief of the Department Joseph Marini, in background Captain David Dilks with his Bagpipe, Congressman Robert Andrews and Msgr. Michael T. Mannion, S.T. L. |
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US Congressman Robert Andrews and Camden Mayor Gwendolyn A. Faison remove the cover from the headstone, as Honor Guard Camden FF David Melendez looks on.
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Camden Fire Chief Joseph Marini saying a few words about the tragic fire in 1906 which claimed the lives of three Gallant Fire Fighters- Jobes, Shields, Hillman. . |
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Chief
of the Department Joseph Marini gives a final farewell salute to Fireman
William Hillman who died in the Line Of Duty in 1906. |
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Firefighters
admiring the new headstone at the gravesite of Hillman at the conclusion
of the ceremonies. |
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Flags and wreath at the grave site of Fireman George Shields who also died in the tragic 1906 fire. |
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Flags and wreath at the grave site of Fireman William Jobes who also died in the tragic 1906 fire. |
CAMDEN NJ FIRE FIGHTER'S MEMORIAL