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2nd annual Groveville & Yardville Reunion Saturday, September 10 at 1:00pm at Alstarz Sports Pub (alstarzsportspub.com), Bordentown, NJ 08505

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Buckley's Tavern and Restaurant, Yardville, New Jersey


Buckley's Tavern and Restaurant ~ Route 130, Yardville, New Jersey






This ashtray is just a little Memorabilia
I have from Buckley's
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Buckley’s Tavern, a Yardville institution for many years. I really wish I could find more about the history, I have been told it was the Buckley Family Homestead and became The Buckley family’s tavern and restaurant.
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Buckley’s was the place to go, back when it was a rural and out of the way Tavern and Restaurant, back when Route 130 (AKA Route 25) was a two lane highway, back when the only thing between Yardville and Robbinsville was Buckley’s Tavern, Edgebrook School, Sadley’s Apple Farm (now Hamilton Market Place), and another small farm north of where I-195 crosses.
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The food was home cooking at its best. Almost everyone that worked there was a Buckley or Buckley family, everyone knew everyone by name, the waiters & bartenders wore black pants, white shirts, sometimes an apron, the waitresses wore black skirts and white blouses, it was the time before casual dining, no one wore shorts or jeans, it was a place where you went for Sunday Dinner, the men wore jackets and ties, the women wore dresses, it was a place where you felt comfortable, people would have a drink, an appetizer, their meal, then coffee and desert, people would chat with friends at other tables and share a drink at the bar before leaving. Buckley's was not a place where you rushed through your meal, because you had to be somewhere in a hurry, it was a place where you sat and took your time and enjoyed a meal and conversation.
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During the week they had the "After Work" crowd. Saturday nights there was music, Marlene Donnell mentioned that her Mom and Dad Spent many a Saturday night listening and dancing to the Chubby Britton Band, Chubby's wife was also a Buckley.
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When you sat in one of the dining rooms you were actually sitting in what was the living room or the dining room of the Buckley Homestead, it does not get much homier than that. Except for the large bar on the back of the building it could have been someone’s house, it was, it was the Buckley’s house.
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I believe it was in the 1980’s the Tavern left the Buckley family and became “Casey Jones Restaurant”, along with that name came seventy five feet of Railroad Track, a Railroad Box Car and a Caboose, just to boost the new theme of the restaurant. You could dine in the Rail cars or in the dining rooms. At that time the kitchen was expanded.
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That name lasted a few years then it became “Spikes”, I guess what you would call a “Fun Eatery”, part of the Railroad Box Car became a game room for kids, with prizes. The menu was geared toward kids with lots of fun and finger foods, to attract a more family group, with children.
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Around 2000 it became Savoy’s, geared to a twenty to Thirty year old crowd, with live bands, and outdoor deck was added and they featured “Lawn parties”, this kind of went with the ban on indoor smoking.
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Savoy’s closed about two years ago and the building has sat vacant ever since, rumor has it the building has been slated to be torn down, a sad loss for the area.
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The building and its charm was lost when it left the Buckley Family, it was the end of an era, when men and women dressed up to go out for Sunday Dinner, it was an era where people spoke to the people at the other table, not hidden in their own little booth. It was when food was prepared in the kitchen, not thawed and reheated from some kitchen in Tennessee or Texas.
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That is when the Tavern closed back in the 1980’s, when it was no longer Buckley’s.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Groveville Fire Company Ladies Auxiliary~ 1950

Groveville Fire Company Ladies Auxiliary, at the New Jersey State Fireman's Convention in Atlantic City.
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Left to right (standing), Helen Bell, Noma Bell Eades, Stella Sellers, & Emma Lommason. (seated) Jean Bell Mushinski, Lillian Brooks, Katharine "Kate" Johnson (my Grandmother) and seated on the Running Board is Betty Senf. I notice Grand Mom has her hat on backwards, the ladies must have been trying to keep up with the Firemen and stopped at at Tavern or two.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

J.P. Golden and Son, Yardville Roller Mills

I received this from some one that has had this around the house for the last 90 years and now has decided to part with it, so glad it came to me. The part scratched out after the name is "DR.", not sure what that might be for.
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The top lines of the receipt are for Rye, it's difficult to read, but the bottom line is for Corn. $191.12 that is a lot of money in 1919, and with our current economy its a lot of money now.
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Back in September 9, 2007 I posted a copy of a bill from this company. I received that as a copy, by Email and was told by the sender that this was at one time the name of the Grist Mill, on Church Street, powered by the water power of the Groveville Pond on Doctor's Creek

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

HamiltonSpace.com

I was honored to have been contacted by Kimberly Baldwin and the staff of the Hamilton Post Newspaper and HamiltonSpace.com. of the Community News Service, LLC. They had read my Blog, I guess found it interesting, and asked if I would be interested in an interview. Seems they felt there were some folks out there that had not read my blog (bet there is a lot of people that have not read my blog) and they felt it was something worth sharing. I proudly consented to the interview and here is the result. Someone You Should Know: Gary Lippincott - HamiltonSpace