Historic Horse Drawn Carriage Returns Home
It’s been more than 100 years since a horse-drawn carriage made its way through the streets of Asbury Park to deliver the local newspaper. But thanks to the generosity of the Gannett Corporation, the publisher of The Asbury Park Press, one such carriage may soon return to Asbury Park.
The carriage, which dates to 1879, was used to deliver the Shore Press and was the forerunner of the Asbury Park Press. It has been on display in the lobby of the Press building on Route 66 in Neptune, but the Press is moving to a new building, and needs to find a new home for the carriage and some other pieces of memorabilia.
“The Press called and asked if we were interested in it,” said Don Stine, president of the Asbury Park Historical Society, who quickly agreed to consider the Press offer. “This is truly a museum quality piece of Americana, specifically related to Asbury Park.”
Stine suggested putting the carriage on display in the Transportation Center, which houses another piece of Asbury Park history, the Rainbow Room sign that hung on the former Albion Hotel. The Historical Society spent $15,000 to restore the sign.
“A public area like the transportation center is the perfect place to display these items to be enjoyed by everyone,” Stine said.
Kathleen Abatemarco, Senior Human Resources Manager for the East Region of Gannett, says the carriage “is a neat piece of history,” and noted that the wheels still move. She said it was used to deliver the Shore Press, owned by Dr. Hugh S. Kinmouth who sold the paper to his nephew J. Lyle Kinmouth, who converted it into the Daily and Sunday Press, which later became The Asbury Park Press. The carriage was stored at a Press garage on Summerfield Avenue until the Press moved from the city in 1986.
Stine says moving the carriage will be a tricky project, and he has enlisted the aid of city Public Works Director Joe Cunha and together with Kathleen Abatemarco of the Press they made a presentation to the City Council at its December 17 workshop session, and the council approved placing the carriage in the transportation center. Besides the carriage, there are some other historical Press items which will be moved to the paper’s new office, located in the former AIG building across Route 66 from the current Press headquarters.
A vintage linotype machine is too large for the new space, and Stine has suggested donating it to Monmouth University’s Jules L. Plangere Center for Communication, named for former Press Publisher Jules L. Plangere, Jr. He said that would be the most appropriate place for it.
(Reprinted from The Coaster Newspaper)