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Eldridge Reeves Johnson (February 6, 1867 in Wilmington, Delaware [1] – November 14, 1945 in Moorestown, New Jersey [2] [3]) was an American businessman and engineer who founded the Victor Talking Machine Company in 1901 and built it into the leading American producer of phonographs and phonograph records and one of the leading phonograph companies in the world at the time.
Cooper Library in Johnson Park is located in the Cooper Grant section of Camden, Camden County, New Jersey, United States. It was built in 1916 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 11, 1980, for its significance in architecture, art, education, and sculpture. [3] It is part of Rutgers University–Camden.
The Victor Talking Machine Company was an American recording company and phonograph manufacturer, incorporated in 1901. Victor was an independent enterprise until 1929 when it was purchased by the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) and became the RCA Victor Division of the Radio Corporation of America until late 1968, when it was renamed RCA Records.
In August 1900, after a brief period working in Philadelphia for the Berliner Gramophone Co., which was closed by a legal action, Douglass agreed to go into business with Eldridge R. Johnson, who owned a machine shop in Camden, New Jersey and had supplied machines to Berliner. The company started doing business in September 1900 as The ...
The second annual Train Day at the park May 25 will feature exhibits, operating model trains, food trucks, vendors and live music. Local railroad history will come to life May 25 at Elmira's ...
Camden: 29: Cooper Library in Johnson Park: Cooper Library in Johnson Park. March 11, 1980 2nd and Cooper Sts. ... 912 Eldridge Ave.
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Toronto, Ontario, Canada; erected on 14 September 1929 by the College Heights Association in a park that became known as "Peter Pan Park", which was later named Glenn Gould Park. [16] The grounds of Rutgers University, Camden, New Jersey, by Eldridge R. Johnson in 1929, outside the Walt Whitman Arts Center. [17]