Delbert Fisher, of Fisher Place, has placed the following faces, reading
the photo from left to right in roughly three rows:
Front row seated at left
is James B. Weaver, Club Commodore, and a merchant tailor; Charley Bird,
Charles B. Irwin; next gentleman Unknown, and then Sam Morford, who was in
the coal business.
Seated
in the second row, the second man from the left with a handlebar mustache
is Charles Grover, next to him is the man who formerly owned William
O'Brien's plumbing business but his name escapes Mr. Fisher and the next
man is unidentified. Seated in front of the stove Is Henry Woods, then
another unknown, then James Doughty who owned a pickle factory on Oakland
Street. To the right of the gentleman who looks like Santa Claus Is
Charles Allen, a summer oysterman and a farmer. Leaning in the right
foreground is Walter Minton.
Standing
in the back row is Fred Thompson, Sid Earl, Douglas Riddell. Closest to
the stove at left is Garrett Morford. Third from the stove to the right is
Charles Minton who was a druggist in a shop next to Kridel's, and a man
Mr. Fisher believes is named Swannell, an architect. In the derby hat,
with stiff collar, tie and mustache is Red Bank Register reporter George
Longstreet and Edward Asay stands alongside him. Partially seated in the
right foreground is a man named Woorl - first name unknown. The bearded
one in the right rear is Gus Haviland, a boat builder whose place Is now
the Irwin Yacht Works.