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Hoboken NJ

Hotel Victor – Bar & Grill – Hoboken, NJ – Jordan Jacobs

Hotel Victor Bar & Grill on 77 Hudson in Hoboken closed its doors in August 2018 and is now the Pig & Parrot. © Jordan Jacobs

Hoboken Ghosts & Obsolescence – Featured Contributors – O’Shaughnessy & Behar

Hoboken Terminal – Telephones

Hoboken Terminal © Lonny Behar

“Doc” Izzo – Paramount Radio & Music Co. – Since 1922 – Zenith

© Jaqui O’Shaughnessy

“Free Local Delivery” close-up © Jaqui O’Shaughnessy

“Ask ‘Doc,’ He knows!” close-up © Jaqui O’Shaughnessy

Grumbacher Art Materials – Commercial Stationery – Engineering…

… & Drafting Supplies – Greeting Cards, School Supplies, Rubber Stamps © Jaqui O’Shaughnessy

Neumann Leathers – Hoboken, NJ – Estelle Saltiel

© Estelle Saltiel

© Estelle Saltiel

The old Neumann Leathers factory will be preserved and rehabilitated, creating a mix-used site that includes residential and retail components and new public space, according to Hoboken’s new draft plan for the historic site released Monday.

– By Laura Herzog – NJ.com – October 20, 2015

Erie Lackawanna Terminal Close Up – Hoboken, NJ

© Frank H. Jump

Erie Lackawanna Terminal – Hoboken – Scenes from the High Line

© Frank H. Jump

Old-time sign painted over in Hoboken – Hudson Reporter

© Vincenzo Aiosa

HOBOKEN — Like many old cities, Hoboken still has some painted signs from the past coating the brick walls of its buildings — including one for Goodman’s Haberdashery at First and Washington streets (that store ran from 1923 until the 1990s) and one for Doc Izzo’s TV and Radio Repair at Seventh and Wash.

But another old-timey painted sign, for a commercial stationery store at Fourth and Washington streets, was painted over last week — disappointing at least one local resident.

Hoboken resident and writer Jack Silbert happened to snap a shot last week of someone working on scaffolding near the sign, but he wasn’t sure if they would really paint over the whole thing. Days later, he saw the same sign — covered up in white, with stenciling for a beer ad to come. He expressed some sadness that this piece of history is gone. (For another view of the sign, check out Frank H. Jump’s ‘Fading Ad Blog.’)

© Jack Silbert

Previously posted:

Commercial Stationery – Grumbacher Art Materials – Hoboken, NJ

Washington & Fourth Streets - © Vincenzo Aiosa

Washington & Fourth Streets - © Vincenzo Aiosa