Linden Society for Historic Preservation

Linden Society for Historic Preservation An Organization formed to preserve & promote the collective history & heritage of Linden, New Jersey.

LINDEN...A LEGACY OF HOOPS Another chapter in the lengthy legacy of Linden basketball history was made this week with th...
06/17/2026

LINDEN...A LEGACY OF HOOPS

Another chapter in the lengthy legacy of Linden basketball history was made this week with the retirement of the high school jersey number of Otis Livingston II, just the fourth player to have such an honor bestowed upon them by Linden High School.

The son of the CBS Sports Anchor Otis Livingston, he served as the captain of the 2014 Linden High School Group 4 State Champion squad, and went on to earn all-state, all-county and Player of the Year honors before graduating and then embarking on a prolific college career. The 6' guard was a four-year captain and earned countless collegiate accolades at George Mason University.

He has since carved out an impressive professional career throughout the European basketball leagues and continuous to play at the highest levels of competition. And in light of the Knicks' NBA Championship earned this week, New York's Jalen Brunson has shown that one does not have to be the tallest player on the court to be the best player on the court, the exact sentiment that watchers of Otis Livingston II leave games with, going right back to the very first time I watched him play in Linden High School's gymnasium.

Hats off to Otis Livingston II, as the number 3 jersey will forever hang proudly in the rafters forevermore at Linden High School.

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW Should we have a city bumper sticker for the semiquincentennial? Does anyone remember having one o...
06/11/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

Should we have a city bumper sticker for the semiquincentennial? Does anyone remember having one of these stickers on their cars fifty years ago? What else did the City of Linden do for the Bicentennial?

There was a trailer exhibit on North Wood Avenue sponsored by New Jersey Bell for the Bicentennial celebration. It sat directly in front of City Hall, I wish I recall it better. You can see the old familiar New Jersey Bell logo on the upper corner of the trailer. I loved those old concrete and dark green-painted wood slat benches that were so prevalent around Linden.

New Jersey Bell was a huge supporter of New Jersey's local history, as every month I looked forward to my mom saving me the tri-fold pamphlet called Tel-news that came with the monthly telephone bill. It always seemed to tell some sort of interesting, New Jersey history-related story. Does anyone remember those?

Fully armed F-16 flying tight circles overhead Linden this afternoon and a brief shut down of commercial air traffic, a ...
06/06/2026

Fully armed F-16 flying tight circles overhead Linden this afternoon and a brief shut down of commercial air traffic, a little disconcerting...not to mention loud. I'm hoping just an errant pilot in restricted airspace.

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW Half a century apart on Wood Avenue, has that much really changed? The first photo was taken durin...
06/04/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

Half a century apart on Wood Avenue, has that much really changed? The first photo was taken during the Bicentennial, the second photo last week. I've been mildly annoyed by these machines for my entire driving life. I've never seemed to have adequate change when I need it most. And today, I'm very wary of scanning QR codes and inserting credit cards.

Do parking meters really generate appreciable revenue for the city? Do they really keep parking behavior under control? Are they a necessary evil? How would the chaos and traffic on Wood Avenue change should they ever be removed? I'm generally pretty ignorant when it comes to truthfully answering these questions. What are your thoughts?

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW Fifty years separate these two photos, but I'm sure the building's legacy goes back much further. ...
05/27/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

Fifty years separate these two photos, but I'm sure the building's legacy goes back much further. Known as the Little Market in the mid 1970's, touting Royal Crown Cola, one of my faves back then, George's Corner Deli today occupies 319 Roselle Street on the corner of Hussa Street, advertising Thumann's, ci******es and the lottery.

Very little has changed in the photos over half a century and the small business is typical of many of the mom and pop neighborhood businesses that were located throughout Linden. This Third Ward establishment continues to serve the local community in the area. Does anyone have memories of this business from earlier times?

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW When I was a kid, the closest Sunnyside supermarket was A&P at 350 West St. George Avenue. They ha...
05/21/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

When I was a kid, the closest Sunnyside supermarket was A&P at 350 West St. George Avenue. They had all of the necessities and I especially enjoyed watching the coffee bean grinders at checkout.

It didn't last long though after the arrival of Pathmark just down the road for A&P to continue their slide into oblivion. They would close and the building was eventually transformed into a mini strip mall, a phenomenon that seemed to be all the rage in that era. After all, the Plaza Theater was about to be split into multiple theaters, why not take the large floor space of a supermarket and divide it into three separate businesses?

The first photo was taken over fifty years ago now. Shoe Town was the anchor store closest to the roadway, while the Bobbie Shop and Just Men were able to survive for a short time as fashion retailers, although that didn't last long either with the 1980's ascent of the mega malls. The parking lot was usually filled with vehicles, sometimes customers running to the adjacent post office, or to Bill's Candy Store and Counter, officially known as the Emm-Bee Sweet Shop. Both nearby Midas and Adler Jewelers had their own parking lots in the rear as well, and the entire business area seemed to thrive in those days.

Lots of transition took place over the following decades, Boston Market would have some moderate success in place of Shoe Town, while Top Banana sold fresh produce at the opposite end of the building. Can others help me out with recalling some of the other businesses that occupied this location over the years?

Today, the all-hours oddly-named Drop-A-Load Laundromat occupies the front portion of the property, while the remainder of the building is used by the Kessler Rehabilitation Center. When I walk by these days, there's usually a heavy odor of w**d in the area. Gone are the rows of diagonally parked cars of shoppers, and today the heavily pot-holed parking lot seems more likely to be strewn with garbage and litter than vehicles.

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW The Bicentennial year of 1976 was a big deal here in Linden, as we celebrated the 200th anniversar...
05/14/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

The Bicentennial year of 1976 was a big deal here in Linden, as we celebrated the 200th anniversary of the birth of this great country. It seemed that everything had a sort of tie-in with the nation's birthday, and this view of North Wood Avenue captured an advertisement for one such newfangled item to be added to our culture in that year...the scratch-off lottery. Little did we know that that fun, new experience of using the edge of a coin to reveal three like symbols, would morph over the next fifty years to vending machines in our supermarkets that spit out cardboard lottery tickets in nearly every denomination for nearly every occasion, and how dependent the State would become on the monies generated by our lottery system.

The photo also reveals some long-honored Linden businesses, long missing from today's Wood Avenue. Fischler's candy store and counter service no doubt sold the new lottery tickets, and their familiar Coca-cola add banner barely peeks into view in the old photo. Today a Boost Mobile store takes its place.

Mr. Palermo sold insurance and countless Linden homes to many residents for years from his realty office next door. Today, his office is split into two businesses, the Olowosibi African Market and the adjacent MJM Hair Studio.

Dr. Ortner took care of the eyesight of many Linden residents in his office below the billboard, today replaced by the popular Polish-run Wawel Travel.

Have the parking meters changed at all? I welcome the addition of today's antique streetlights, not to mention the shade tree added at some point in time. I cant recall when that billboard was removed? Does anyone have other memories from the 400 block of North Wood Avenue?

LINDEN...THEN AND NOWSometimes change comes quickly to Linden, at least in my mind perhaps. I find it somewhat difficult...
05/06/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

Sometimes change comes quickly to Linden, at least in my mind perhaps. I find it somewhat difficult to comprehend that the development of the former Linden Airport property, the strip mall now known as Aviation Plaza, will soon be celebrating a quarter century that it has graced our fair city. As part of that complex, a major change is in store for this summer, as the Exxon gas station and it's sizable convenience store have been razed and the property is currently being transformed into a fast food eatery, Raising Cane's.

Located adjacent to the Home Depot anchor store at 801 West Edgar Road, the convenience store, which started as a Tiger Mart before becoming part of the Circle K chain, and the gas station were removed and construction is currently underway on Central Jersey's first Raising Cane's, the wildly popular chicken-finger eatery that was founded by Todd Graves in Louisiana in 1996. Now some thirty years later, the chain boasts more than 900 locations and remains privately owned, as Mr. Graves is today worth more than $22 billion according to Forbes magazine.

South Jersey already has a half dozen Raising Cane's locations, and Central Jersey is now following suit, as sites in both Edison and Watchung are currently under construction as well. This location will afford Linden with yet another cutting edge fast food dining option, as it is but a stone's throw away from Checker's next door, while across the highway is Chick-fil-A, Freddy's Frozen Custard & Steakburgers, Panera Bread, Taco Bell, and the other nearby newcomer, Dave's Hot Chicken. (it certainly seems that Linden loves it's chicken.)

On a personal note, I've yet to try Raising Cane's and look forward to doing just that when it opens, knowing full well I will enjoy it immensely and also realizing that it will be added to my doctor's stay-away list. What is the general concensus on this latest Linden addition?

LINDEN...THEN AND NOWWith summer and warmer weather approaching, (at least I hope, as it's been a rather chilly spring,)...
04/30/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

With summer and warmer weather approaching, (at least I hope, as it's been a rather chilly spring,) this has to be another one of Linden's biggest losses over the years. That We-Are-Open sign meant the long, cold winter was over, and on a warm spring night, those long lines on West St. George Avenue might be disheartening at first sight, but once you got to the little sliding window, it all seemed worth it.

This photo dates back a half century to the mid 1970's, shortly before the Dairy Queen franchise changed to Magic Fountain. Eventually that change brought Mrs. Carlucci on the scene, the tough, raspy-voiced proprietor who could be very nice, in her own tough Linden style. There was no cutting in line on her watch.

Soon, times would be a changing. The St. George Diner next door would come down, replaced by a bank, today the popular Wells Fargo branch with the annoyingly tight parking lot. The used car dealership next to Dairy Queen also disappeared, but its black top remained, becoming the overflow parking lot for the bank.

The beloved red-roofed ice cream purveyor seemed to get caught up in those real estate dealings and it, too, went away. Despite it being some of the Avenue's choicest real estate, we've been left with years of a simple grassy lot, and no more Blizzards or chocolate-dipped cones. Ironically, if you look very closely, the unique design of the original curbs still remains, today half-buried by the subsequent re-pavings of the Avenue.

With the subsequent loss of Wood Avenue's Carvel and the smaller Elm Street Dairy Queen, Linden really seems to suffer from a dearth of ice cream vendors these days, at least compared to the days of my youth. Does anyone else lament these losses or have good memories of those old days?

LINDEN...THEN AND NOWIn light of the recent decision that told us nothing that we all didn't know, Ticketmaster and Live...
04/23/2026

LINDEN...THEN AND NOW

In light of the recent decision that told us nothing that we all didn't know, Ticketmaster and Live Nation were ruled to be an unfair monopoly, and that consumers were getting overcharged for concert tickets. Why thank you, Captain Obvious. The dilemma of fairly distributing concert tickets for a popular event probably predates the gladiators in the Coliseum. Somehow, I still sort of prefer the way is was done in my youth, get up early and stand in line.

For a window of time in the mid 70's, the Linden Travel Bureau on Wood Avenue had a Ticketron inside. This would be the typical routine back then and this a common sight on Wood Avenue. This photo dates back almost 50 years and may have been for the release of Led Zeppelin tickets at Madison Square Garden.

Of course, that short-lived parking lot was filled in with a new building and I walk past the same spot today, rarely thinking back about the excitement that very spot generated as you stood outside in any weather, always nervous until the printed tickets would be in hand. What was your favorite place to procure coveted tickets? What shows or events did you wait patiently in line for?

Address

301 N Wood Avenue
Linden, NJ
07036

Telephone

(908) 474-8493

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