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Crime

Image of the text of "An Act Concerning Wrecks." Image credit: State Library of New Jersey, Public Domain.
May 31, 1799

Early Legislative History of New Jersey State Laws Concerning Wrecks

Overview In 1799, the New Jersey House of Assembly passed a new law entitled “An act concerning wrecks,” which would be revised and amended a number of times over subsequent years.  The intent of the law was to establish that...
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Samual-Johnson-Project-FINAL-1000
March 5, 1886

Samuel Johnson, Victim of a Lynching

Thousands of Black people were the victims of racial terror lynching in the United States between 1865 and 1950, including hundreds of lynchings that took place outside the South. Violent resistance to equal rights for African Americans led to fatal...
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Photo of organized crime boss Vito Genovese. Library of Congress photo, public domain.
November 21, 1897

A Timeline of Vito and Anna Genovese in Monmouth County

Editor’s note: Vito Genovese was involved in criminal activities from his early years in New York City and continued to run the rackets even after he was finally behind bars for good.  His nefarious deeds have been extensively chronicled elsewhere...
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November 4, 1902

Laura Biggar, Fugitive Gold-Digger, Finally Turns Herself In

By John R. Barrows On November 4, 1902, nationally famous vaudeville stage actress Laura Biggar surrendered herself to Monmouth County authorities in Freehold, where she was placed under arrest, arraigned, and confined to the county jail there.  She had arrived...
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Keyport Weekly sketch of fugitive mayor B.B. Ogden. Published prior to 1926, public domain.
September 16, 1903

Whatever Happened to B.B. Ogden, the Fugitive Mayor of Keyport?

By John R. Barrows By today, September 16, everyone in Keyport finally realized that their mayor was gone.  Missing.  Disappeared. Vamoosed. Am-scrayed. On the lam, a fugitive from justice. In 1903, Benjamin B. Ogden was president of the Keyport town...
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Composite image of three Lovett's Nursery catalogs. Images courtesy Little Silver Historical Society.
September 24, 1912

John Thompson Lovett Sr., the Small Fruit Prince of Little Silver

By John R. Barrows Editor’s note: The author is indebted to Timeline contributor and noted historian Randall Gabrielan, author most recently of Lost Monmouth County (The History Press, 2021), for sharing much of his research into John Thompson Lovett, as...
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There is no known image of the WKKK in Monmouth County. This image shows the first public appearance of women of the KKK on Long Island. This photograph shows at least four women kneeling in front of shrouded Klansman reading from a book; other Klansmen stand behind them on the platform while spectators watch the initiation. Triangle Studio, photographer, created / published c1924. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Public Domain.
August 17, 1923

The Ku Klux Klan Recruits the Women of Monmouth County

On August 17, 1923, the Ku Klux Klan held its first-ever open-air initiation ceremony in New Jersey, in Allenwood, in Wall Township. With 900 men and 700 women in robes and hoods looking on, 434 women were welcomed into the...
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Composite image of the Arethusa, Bill McCoy's smuggling vessel, and a wanted poster for America's most famous bootlegger. Image composite by John R. Barrows.
November 25, 1923

End of the Line for Bill McCoy, King of the Rum-Runners

On November 25, 1923, Bill McCoy, possibly the most celebrated bootlegger of the Prohibition era, found his career as a smuggler at an end at the hands of the U.S. Coast Guard, off Sandy Hook. He was born William Frederick...
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Photograph of rum-runner schooner Kirk and Sweeney with contraband stacked on deck. Coast guard Photo No. G-APA-01-13-24 (02) G.F. January 13, 1924, Public Domain.
April 21, 1924

The Rum Line: The Beginning of the End of Bootlegging Along the Monmouth County Shore

On April 21, 1924, the United States Congress extended the territorial limit of U.S. jurisdiction in international waters from three miles to 12.  The move was designed to enhance law enforcement efforts during Prohibition, especially in and around Monmouth County,...
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Blackbeard’s Raid on Middletown, original illustration ©2024 Emma D’Orazio, Perilize Art, commissioned by Monmouth Timeline Inc.
December 16, 1927

The Enduring Myth of Blackbeard’s Raid on Middletown

The Enduring Myth of Blackbeard's Raid on Middletown By John R. Barrows   On December 16, 1927, the Matawan Journal ran a story about a new book that had been published about the history of Middletown, New Jersey.  Among many...
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Photo of Oscar Hammerstein mansion. Creator, date of creation, publisher and date of publication unknown. Image courtesy Ralph Bitter and Middletown Township Historical Society, used with permission.
October 16, 1929

Bootlegger Compound Raided in Former Middletown Home of Oscar Hammerstein Sr.

On October 16, 1929, at the height of Prohibition, federal agents raided an isolated house atop the ridge in the Navesink section of Middletown, overlooking Sandy Hook Bay (pictured above...the person in the photo is unidentified). Before 1920, the house...
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Photo of Oscar Hammerstein mansion. Creator, date of creation, publisher and date of publication unknown. Image courtesy Ralph Bitter and Middletown Township Historical Society, used with permission.
March 23, 1933

Gangster Al Lillien’s Unsolved Murder in Middletown Ends his Criminal Organization

On March 23, 1933, Alexander (Al) Lillien Jr. (born February 28, 1897), a "master liquor-runner,” was found murdered in his Middletown mansion.  Lillien, 36, along with his brother William, controlled a bootlegging gang that extended from Montreal down to Virginia,...
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The SS Morro Castle burns at sea. Image Credit: International News Photos, Inc. - This image is available from the United States Library of Congress Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID cph.3b14818.
September 8, 1934

SS Morro Castle: An Inferno at Sea, a Burning Hulk on the Beach, and Many Unanswered Questions

On September 8, 1934, the luxury passenger liner SS Morro Castle caught fire and burned during a raging storm off the coast of New Jersey, killing 137 passengers and crew members.  The ship, en route from Havana to New York...
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William Scott and Robert Mentzinger after being arrested. Creator and publisher unknown. Image courtesy National Guard Militia Museum of New Jersey, used with permission.
September 11, 1934

Two Doofuses from Long Island Go Souvenir Hunting on the Wreck of the SS Morro Castle

Editor’s note: On September 11, 1934, the S.S. Morro Castle was a blackened hulk resting just off the beach at Asbury Park, three days after coming to a rest there after a horrific fire at sea. The site of numerous...
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The only known photograph of the Dangler Mansion, purchased by mob kingpin Vito Genovese.
June 28, 1935

Vito and Anna Genovese Move to Middletown

On June 28, 1935, Vito Genovese purchased a 35-acre (other accounts set it at 42 and 24 acres) property at 152 Red Hill Road in Middletown from Mrs. Florence Sperling.  The estate was originally part of a large farm owned by...
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Photo of organized crime boss Vito Genovese. Library of Congress photo, public domain.
December 13, 1935

Vito Genovese, American Citizen of Good Moral Character

On December 13, 1935, while the family was living in Middletown, Vito filed a petition to become a naturalized U.S. citizen.  On November 25, 1936, his petition was granted and Vito became a U.S. citizen in New York City.  On...
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Genovese mansion in Atlantic Highlands. Creator and publisher unknown.
August 27, 1944

Vito Genovese Returns to America, and to Monmouth County

On August 27, 1944, Vito Genovese was placed under arrest in Italy by U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division Agent Orange C. Dickey, who had recognized Vito from wanted posters.  With the war nearing an end, Dickey had difficulty finding anyone who...
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Aerial photo of Naval Weapons Station Earle. Official U.S. Navy photo, public domain.
July 10, 1947

Vito Genovese Asserts Himself on the Monmouth County Docks

On July 10, 1947, Vito Genovese, Andrew Richard, and Louis and Dominic A. Caruso formed a new corporation called the Atlantic Highlands Wharf Company, that “handles freight and passenger transportation at the yacht harbor.”  The company acquired the railroad pier...
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Philip Genovese carrying his father's casket.
March 26, 1950

Vito Genovese and His Son Run Into Trouble in Freehold

On March 26, 1950, Philip Genovese, 18, son of Vito and Anna, driving his father's car, crashed into a parked vehicle on Route 9 in Freehold, injuring five people. The initial newspaper report at the time erroneously stated that Vito was...
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December 8, 1952

Anna Genovese vs. Vito Genovese

On December 8, 1952, Anna filed a lawsuit against Vito Genovese in Superior Court in Freehold, seeking $300 monthly “separate maintenance” financial support for her and son Philip, and $5,000 in attorney’s costs.  In the initial hearing before the Chancery Court...
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Original illustration of Anna Genovese conferring with her attorney Irwin Silber in family court. Original art commissioned by Monmouth Timeline by Scott Zelazny.
March 3, 1953

On Day Two of the Trial, Vito’s Witnesses Testify

On March 3, 1953, the second day of Anna Genovese's Freehold trial where she sought "separate maintenance" financial support from her estranged husband Vito, 22 witnesses were called who would testify mostly on behalf of Vito.   Anna took the...
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Photo credit: Phil Stanziola, World Telegram staff photographer. New York World-Telegram & Sun Collection. No copyright restriction known. Staff photographer reproduction rights transferred to Library of Congress through Instrument of Gift. Public Domain Created: January 1959
March 4, 1953

Vito Genovese’s Enemies Prevail In New Jersey Court

On March 4, 1953, just two days after Anna’s explosive open-court testimony, the Caruso Construction Company of Atlantic Highlands won a lawsuit against Vito seeking $32,724 for labor and supplies for the 130 Ocean Blvd. mansion, for which no payment...
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Cars belonging to organized crime leaders parked at Joseph Barbara's home in Apalachin, N.Y. FBI file photo, public domain.
November 14, 1957

The Meeting at Apalachin: The Beginning of the End for Vito Genovese

By the late 1950's, it was estimated that there were between 25 and 30 major organized crime families across the United States, with an army of approximately 5,000 “made men,” or formal members. On November 14, 1957, more than 100...
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Reputed mobster Vito Genovese smiles as he arrives at the federal courthouse in New York, April 17, 1959, where he was scheduled to be sentenced for his conviction on narcotics charges. At left is Wilfred Davis, his attorney. (AP Photo)
July 7, 1958

“King of the Rackets” Vito Genovese is Arrested and Convicted for Narcotics Crimes

On July 7, 1958, narcotics agents of the U.S. Treasury Department placed Vito Genovese under arrest at his home on Highland Avenue in Atlantic Highlands. Along with his longtime associates, Vincent “The Chin” Gigante, and Carmine Galante, Genovese was named...
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Mugshot of Carmine Galante, the boss of the Bonanno crime family. New York Police Department official photograph, 1943. Public Domain
June 3, 1959

Mafia Kingpin Carmine Galante Arrested in Holmdel

On June 3, 1959, New Jersey State Police officers arrested the notorious mob leader Carmine Galante after stopping his car on the Garden State Parkway in Holmdel. Camillo Carmine Galante (February 21, 1910 - July 12, 1979) was at that...
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Mafia informer Joseph Valachi takes the oath before a US Senate investigations committee. Used under license from Getty Images.
February 5, 1963

From the Fort Monmouth Stockade, Genovese Henchman Joe Valachi Breaks the Mafia’s Code of Silence

If we let him out on the street, he'd be dead in a half an hour. Unnamed federal agent, on the need to protect star mob witness Joe Valachi Vito Genovese was among the most feared mobsters in the history...
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Genovese grave. Find a Grave database and image.
February 14, 1969

A Monmouth County Funeral for Vito Genovese

On February 14, 1969, Vito Genovese dies of congestive heart failure, at the U.S. Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri; he had been imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas.  An attorney for his estate said he...
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