daugen
Epic Contributor
I was fooling around yesterday afternoon pursuing one of my hobbies, the family history on father's side.
We knew the family business was butter and eggs in Newark, and I found a marvelous AI write up on the dairy business.
But I never could find anything about my grandfather's car garage he started when he lost all his butter and eggs money in
the big stock market crash. Started all over.
and on a sunday afternoon, the very nice folks in West Orange NJ responded to me immediately, and there was a pic
of West Orange Motors Inc. I have the deed showing that name
AI says this about old family dairy business
my grandfather came through Ellis Island in 1901, so I guess his brother told him to emigrate
and join family business
now my goal is to find a Newark archive with that pic.
We knew the family business was butter and eggs in Newark, and I found a marvelous AI write up on the dairy business.
But I never could find anything about my grandfather's car garage he started when he lost all his butter and eggs money in
the big stock market crash. Started all over.
and on a sunday afternoon, the very nice folks in West Orange NJ responded to me immediately, and there was a pic
of West Orange Motors Inc. I have the deed showing that name
AI says this about old family dairy business
my grandfather came through Ellis Island in 1901, so I guess his brother told him to emigrate
and join family business
- Company timeline: Meyer Augenblick founded the butter company on Commerce Street in 1899. In 1930, after buying out two other local processors, the company moved to 1065 Raymond Boulevard, near Pennsylvania Station. In 1928, General Distributors acquired the company, which was sold to the Borden Co. the following year.
- Products and reach: At its peak, the company was a major processor of sweet cream butter, also selling poultry, cheese, and eggs. A fleet of 17 trucks serviced 125 New Jersey communities, from Point Pleasant to the New York state line.
- Facility: The butter company's 1930s facility was noted for its cleanliness and resembled a bank, with a tiled interior and three-story white walls.
now my goal is to find a Newark archive with that pic.