Today, Slate Magazine featured the work of Camilo Jose Vegara, who makes it his business to document the slow decay of American buildings and neighborhoods. His photographs are utterly fascinating to me, but what really caught my attention today was his photograph of the William Cooper Manor House located in Camden, New Jersey.
William Cooper was one of the earliest settlers of Gloucester County, and managed one of the earliest ferries across the Delaware River. In West New Jersey history, he is an important person. But his house, which amazingly has lasted into the 21st century, is now slowly disappearing and completely neglected.
This is probably unfair. I have not communicated with the Gloucester County Historical Society. I’m sure they know about the tragedy that is taking place with this house and would do something about it if they could.
I am just grateful to Mr. Vegara for taking the trouble to photograph this house and all the other places in America that we seem to want to forget and ignore.
If you would like to see more of Mr. Vegara’s amazing pictures, visit his beautifully designed website. Here’s the link.
David Larsson
March 4, 2010 @ 12:57 pm
Thanks for the post. Camden County was part of Gloucester County until 1944, so the references to William Cooper in "Gloucester County" would, today, be "Camden County." I will pass this post (and the existence of this blog) along to my fellow West Jersey friends who have websites at http://www.westjersey.org and http://www.westjerseyhistory.org.
Diane rosenblum
February 23, 2015 @ 7:55 pm
I need to see your link of Williams cooper home
Marfy Goodspeed
February 24, 2015 @ 9:45 am
Diane, I regret to say I cannot find a link. I’ve searched on the photographer Camilo Jose Vegara and on Slate.com and got nothing. I’m pretty certain I first saw the photograph on Facebook, but a search there also got me nothing. That’s a lesson for me; I assumed that photo would be easy to retrieve, but it is not. My apologies for not posting a better link, but it’s possible there simple wasn’t one.
Bill Woodall
February 24, 2015 @ 2:44 pm
The problem is – there is no “William Cooper Manor House” – the building is more appropriately named the “Benjamin Cooper House.” The property was featured by PreservationNJ in 2013 after a devastating fire in November of 2012.
HABS surveyed the house in the 1950s; and there are good photos and historical data here – http://www.dvrbs.com/camden/CamdenNJ-BenjaminCooperHouse.htm