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Frank Hague

Frank Hague (January 17, 1876 – January 1, 1956) was an American Democratic Party politician who served as the Mayor of Jersey City from 1917 to 1947, Democratic National Committeeman from New Jersey from 1922 until 1949, and Vice-Chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 1924 until 1949.

Frank Hague
Hague in 1920
30th Mayor of Jersey City
In office
May 15, 1917 – June 17, 1947
Preceded byMark Matthew Fagan
Succeeded byFrank Hague Eggers
Personal details
Born(1876-01-17)January 17, 1876
Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.
DiedJanuary 1, 1956(1956-01-01) (aged 79)
New York City, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseJennie W. Warner (1874–1962)
Children2
ResidenceJersey City, New Jersey

Hague has a widely known reputation for corruption and bossism and has been called "the grandaddy of Jersey bosses".[1] By the time he left office in 1947, he enjoyed palatial homes, European vacations, and a private suite at the Plaza Hotel.[2] His wealth has been estimated to have been over $10 million at the time of his death, although his City salary never exceeded $8,500 per year and he had no other legitimate source of income.[2] His desk, according to legend, had a specially designed lap drawer which could be pushed outward towards the person with whom he was meeting. This allowed his "guests" to discreetly deliver bribes in the form of envelopes containing large amounts of cash.[3][4] However, according to New Jersey preservationist John Hallinan, the drawers were a traditional feature of 19th century partners desks and that "[t]he last thing [Hague] would need to do is take a bribe personally". As of October 2021, the desk was on display in City Hall.

During the height of his power Hague's political machine, known as "the organization", was one of the most powerful in the United States controlling politics on local, county, and state levels.[5] Hague's personal influence extended to the national level, influencing federal patronage,[6] and presidential campaigns.[7]

Early life

Francis "Frank" Hague, born in Jersey City, was the fourth of eight children to John D. and Margaret Hague (née Fagen), immigrants from County Cavan, Ireland.[8] He was raised in Jersey City's Second ward, an area known as The Horseshoe due to its shape which wrapped around a railroad loop.[9] The ward was created when the Republican-controlled legislature gerrymandered a district within Jersey City in 1871 to concentrate and isolate Democratic, and mostly Catholic, votes.[10]

By age 14, Hague was expelled from school prior to completing the sixth grade for poor attendance and unacceptable behavior.[11] He worked briefly as a blacksmith's apprentice for the Erie Railroad. While training at a local gym for his own potential debut as a prizefighter, he arranged to become manager for Joe Craig, a professional lightweight boxer. Craig was successful enough to allow Hague to buy a few suits that made him appear successful.[12] In 1896, Hague's apparent prosperity gained him the attention of local tavern owner "Nat" Kenny who was seeking a candidate for constable in the upcoming primary to run against the candidate of a rival tavern owner.[13] Kenny provided Hague with $75 to "spread around", and Frank Hague quickly won his first election by a ratio of three-to-one.[14]

Political career

Early success

Hague's victory in the Constable election brought him to the attention of Hudson County Democratic political boss "Little Bob" Davis, and Davis asked Hague to help get out Democratic votes for the upcoming 1897 Mayoral election.[14] Hague's efforts were credited with generating large voter turnout in the Second Ward for the 1897 and 1899 elections. As a reward for his work, Hague was appointed as a deputy sheriff at a salary of $25 per week.[15] Over this time, Hague took a leadership role in the Second Ward Democratic club.[15]

In the 1901 Mayoral election, Republican Mark M. Fagan was elected. Hague's second ward was one of only two that voted Democratic. Hague survived a Republican challenge for a third term as Constable the following year.[15]

The "Red Dugan" affair

As a ward leader, Hague was approached by a woman to provide assistance for her son, who had been arrested for passing a forged check. The son, Red Dugan, had been a classmate of Hague's in school. According to the Boston Evening Transcript of October 4, 1904, Dugan had deposited a forged check for $955 in the Peoples Bank of Roxbury, Massachusetts, and convinced the bank manager to let him withdraw $500. Hague ignored a subpoena to testify in Hudson County Court and traveled to Massachusetts to provide an alibi for Dugan. Hague and another deputy sheriff, Thomas "Skidder" Madigan, claimed that they had seen Dugan in Jersey City on the day of the alleged offense. Both were threatened with perjury charges.[16]

Upon returning to Jersey City, Hague was found guilty of contempt of court for ignoring the subpoena. He was fined $100 and stripped of his duties as Deputy Sheriff.[16]

In spite of the resulting press coverage of the event, Hague was more deeply embraced by his constituency. Thomas Smith wrote: "But to the residents of the Horseshoe, Frank Hague had gone out of his way to help a friend – had practically given his livelihood to aid a brother."[17] In the succeeding municipal election of 1905, which saw the return of incumbent Fagan to the office of mayor, Hague was elected to a fourth term as constable.

Ward leader

Hague rose through the Democratic machinery of Hudson County, which drew much of its strength by providing newly arrived immigrants with rudimentary social services.[18] Hague took a job as a collector for a local brewery, leaving him with time to spend in the streets and the local taverns which were hubs of political activity.[19] He also spent his time cleaning up the loose ends of the Second Ward's south-end Democratic Club to consolidate his power.

As a reward for his efforts in turning out votes in the 1905 election, Bob Davis named Hague as the party leader for the Second Ward and arranged for Hague to be appointed as Sergeant at Arms for the New Jersey State Assembly.[20]

Political reformer

Hague broke ties with "Boss" Davis in 1906 over a difference of opinion on a candidate for appointment to the city Street and Water Board.[21] As a result, Hague supported H. Otto Wittpenn for mayor in the 1907 election. Wittpenn was a reformer who opposed the control Davis held over Hudson County politics. Over the objections of Davis, newly elected Mayor Wittpenn appointed Hague as chief custodian of City Hall – a "cushy" job with plenty of patronage opportunities.[22] During the Wittpenn administration, Hague also became friendly with Wittpenn's secretary – a Presbyterian Sunday school teacher named A. Harry Moore.[23]

The resulting battle for control of the Hudson County Democratic machine would ironically result in one of the greatest boosts to Hague's rise to power – the Walsh Act of 1911.[24] In 1909 Davis, seeing support for Hague increasing, supported Wittpenn's re-election against former mayor Fagan. Hague's second ward produced the largest plurality of Wittpenn votes of any of Jersey City's 12 wards.[25] Davis then arranged the appointment of Fagan to the Hudson County Tax Board. When Wittpenn's administration began facing troubles, including Fagan's discovery of a Pennsylvania Railroad property that had paid no taxes for four years, Wittpenn blamed Davis.[26]

Seeking to curb the influence of Davis, Wittpenn announced his candidacy for Governor, stating "I have endured the machine as long as possible, but patience is no longer a virtue."[26] Davis, in turn, prevailed upon Woodrow Wilson, then President of Princeton University, to oppose Wittpenn's candidacy.[26] Wilson's victory was overwhelming even in Hague's ward, despite heavy-handed tactics used there. The Jersey Journal wrote: "Cops on duty were using clubs and blackjacks to assist Mayor Wittpenn and Frank Hague defeat the Davis men."[26]

Wilson's reform-minded term as Governor saw the establishment of Presidential primary elections, introduced workers' compensation, and brought about passage of the Walsh Act which provided for a non-partisan commission form of municipal government that was greatly reflective of his academic writings in Congressional Government.

"Little Bob" Davis died of cancer shortly after the 1910 gubernatorial election leaving a vacuum in the power structure of the Hudson County Democrats.[27] Wittpenn quickly endorsed the idea of converting Jersey City to a commission form of government, but was opposed by forces, including Hague, attempting to take control of the party. Hague campaigned heavily against the idea in the Horseshoe, claiming that such a system of citywide elected commissioners would erode the influence of the working-class and consolidate power among the city's elite.[27] Wittpenn's opponents successfully petitioned for a change in the date of the vote on the charter change, moving it from September to mid-July, and the proposal was defeated. As a result of this campaign, Hague came under the scrutiny of The Jersey Journal, which had supported the proposed charter change. It was reported that Hague's older brother, a battalion chief on the city fire department, had been on "sick leave" for three years at full pay.[28]

Hague reconciled with Wittpenn to support his re-election in 1911. Wittpenn then supported Hague's nomination for Commissioner of Streets and Water. Both were elected. The new position greatly expanded Hague's patronage authority. While City Hall employed a few dozen custodians, there were hundreds of workers in the Street and Water Department.[29] Hague's work as head of the Department of Street Cleaners even convinced The Jersey Journal to endorse him as a "reform candidate" in the next election.[30]

In the spring of 1913, having gained confidence in his own ability to assure himself a place on the commission, Hague supported the renewed effort to change the Jersey City government from the Mayor-Council model to a commission model under the recently adopted Walsh Act. This act would place all executive and legislative powers in a five-man commission, each of whom would head a city department. The five commissioners would choose one of their colleagues to be mayor. The vote for charter change passed, and the stage was set for Frank Hague's rise to power.

Commissioner

In 1913, the first election for the city commission saw 91 men on the ballot competing for five available seats on the commission. Hague finished fourth with 17,390 votes and was elected to the five-man commission. The only Wittpenn-supported candidate, A. Harry Moore, was also elected.[31] As a result of having garnered the most votes (21,419) former mayor Fagan became the first mayor under this new form of government, and the only Republican to hold that title in Jersey City for the following 75 years. Hague was named public safety commissioner, with control over the police and fire departments. In the same year, Hague cemented his control of the Hudson County political machine by securing for himself the leadership of the Hudson County Democratic Organization Executive Committee.

 
Aftermath of the Black Tom explosion, an act of sabotage on American ammunition supplies by German agents which took place on July 30, 1916, in Jersey City

Hague immediately set about reshaping the corrupt Jersey City police force with tough Horseshoe recruits.[32] Hague spearheaded crackdowns on prostitution and narcotics trafficking, earning him favor with religious leaders.[32] These enforcement acts went as far as Hague himself marching across local Vaudeville stages personally directing the shut down of "girlie shows."[32] At the heart of this change was an inner cadre of officers known as the Zeppelin Squad or "zepps" who were personally loyal to Hague alone.[32] The "zepps" would spy on, and report back to Hague about other members of the department.[33] Eventually, Jersey City had one patrolman for every 3,000 residents, causing a marked decline in the city's once-astronomical crime rate.[34]

Hague took steps to curb the police department's lackadaisical work ethic, punishing offenses that had gone unpunished for years. He also made much-needed improvements to the fire department; at the time he took office Jersey City's fire insurance rates were among the highest in the nation.[35]

Upon discovering in early 1916 that millions of pounds of munitions were being stockpiled on the Jersey City waterfront, Hague travelled to Washington, D.C. to register concerns for the safety of his constituents.[33] His meetings with Congressmen resulted in no action, Congress having decided that Jersey City was an "appropriate port."[33] Hague's concerns were shown to be valid in July 1916 when the Black Tom explosion sent shrapnel flying across the city.

In 1917, Hague, with his reputation as the man who cleaned up the police force, ran for reelection. He put together a commission ticket called "The Unbossed."[34] The ticket consisted of him, Parks Commissioner Moore, Revenue Commissioner George Brensinger, ex-judge Charles F.X. O'Brien and City Clerk Michael I. Fagan. It swept all five spots on the commission. Moore topped the poll, and traditional practice called for him to be appointed mayor. However, when the commission met for the first time on May 11, Hague was chosen as the new mayor.[35]

Boss of Jersey City

 
Building at 2600 Hudson (now Kennedy) Boulevard, one of Hague's residences

Technically, Hague's only responsibility as mayor was to appoint the school board. Otherwise, he was merely first among equals, with no powers over and above the other four commissioners. However, soon after taking office, he wrested control of the Hudson County Democratic Party from Wittpenn.[35] This allowed him to significantly influence the makeup of the commission in this overwhelmingly Democratic city. He soon built the organization into one of the most powerful political machines in the country. Hague himself became very wealthy, owning a $125,000 summer home in Deal, living in a large apartment in the best building in the city, and able to give a $50,000 altar to a local Catholic church.[36] In 1941, Dartmouth professor Dayton David McKean wrote The Boss, a book about Hague's political machine, in which he estimated his amassed wealth at four million dollars on an annual mayoral salary of $8,000 a year.[37]

He also had the support of a significant faction of Republicans which dated to his initial election as mayor, when he cut a deal with then-Governor Walter Edge in which Edge effectively ceded North Jersey to Hague in return for keeping South Jersey for himself.[38] Also, as public safety commissioner (a post he held throughout his entire tenure), he controlled the two departments with the most patronage appointments in the city. This post also placed responsibility for maintaining public order in his hands.[35]

Hague soon extended his influence statewide by helping to elect his "puppets" as governor.[36] In the 1919 gubernatorial election, Hague endorsed State Senator Edward I. Edwards and aggressively campaigned for him. Edwards carried Hudson County by 50,000 votes, which was enough for him to win statewide by just under 15,000 votes. Hague proclaimed himself leader of the New Jersey Democratic Party, and Edwards allowed him to recommend dozens of appointments to high state offices. Democrats won five out of eight gubernatorial races between 1919 and 1940, more often than not due to massive landslides in Hudson County. However, he was never able to extend his dominance to the state legislature.[34]

Hague was able to stay in power despite a nearly constant effort to turn him out of office from 1921 onward.[38] He was also able to avoid prosecution despite numerous federal and state investigations in part due to the fact he took most of his kickbacks in cash. However, from the early 1940s onward, many of the older ethnic groups started moving to the suburbs. They were replaced by Poles, Italians, Eastern Europeans and African-Americans. Hague never adapted his methods to the new groups.[34]

Hague had little tolerance for those who dared oppose him publicly. He relied on two ordinances of dubious constitutionality to muzzle critics. A 1920 ordinance effectively required people making political speeches to obtain clearance from the chief of police. A 1930 ordinance gave the public safety commissioner—Hague himself—the power to turn down permits for meetings if he felt it necessary to prevent "riots, disturbances or disorderly assemblage." The latter ordinance was struck down as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States, but continued to be enforced for several years after that decision.[39] The police were also allowed to stop and search anyone without probable cause or a warrant after 9 pm.[36]

President maker

In 1932, Hague, a friend of Al Smith, backed Smith against Franklin D. Roosevelt during the race for the Democratic nomination. When Roosevelt won the nomination, Hague offered to organize the biggest political rally anyone had ever seen if Roosevelt would launch his presidential campaign in New Jersey. When Roosevelt formally began his campaign with an event at the Jersey Shore town of Sea Girt, Hague's machine made sure there were several thousand Hudson County voters looking on and cheering.[40] Hague's support was rewarded with funding for a massive medical center complex complete with a maternity hospital named after his mother, Margaret Hague.[41] During the 1936 campaign Hague provided 150,000 adults and children to cheer Roosevelt during a visit.[36]

Accusations of voter fraud

Hague's use of voter fraud is the stuff of legend.[42] In 1937, for instance, Jersey City had 160,050 registered voters, but only 147,000 people who were at least 21 years old—the legal voting age.[34]

In 1932, Governor Moore appointed a lawyer named Thomas J. Brogan, who had served as Hague's personal attorney in corruption hearings, to an associate Justice seat on the state's Supreme Court. Less than a year later Brogan was named as Chief Justice. In at least two instances of alleged voting fraud in the 1930s (Ferguson v. Brogan, 112 N.J.L. 471; Clee v. Moore, 119 N.J.L. 215; In re Clee, 119 N.J.L. 310), Brogan's court issued extraordinary rulings in favor of the Democratic machine, in one case asserting that the district superintendent of elections had no authority to open ballot boxes, and in another case ruling that the boxes could be opened, but no one had the right to look inside.[43] Brogan also assigned himself to the Hudson County jurisdiction, thereby controlling the local grand jury process and squelching other election fraud cases.[44]

Although Hague, like other political bosses of the time, was not above outright fraud at the polls, the keys to Hague's success were his matchless organizational skills and demand for complete loyalty from his subordinates. His command over the Democratic voters of Hudson County, a densely populated urban area in a state that was still mostly rural, made him a man to reckon with among state Democrats and Republicans alike. He was a close friend of Al Smith, the New York governor who would become the first Irish-American presidential candidate in 1928. In addition, Hague's support of Roosevelt for President was rewarded with a steady stream of perks that sustained Hague's organization throughout the Depression.

 
Hague tosses out the first ball at the Jersey City Giants' 1946 home opener, Roosevelt Stadium

Retirement from politics

The beginning of the end for Hague came in 1943, when former governor Walter Edge was returned to office. Edge's attorney general, Walter Van Riper, initiated several prosecutions of Hague cronies. Hague retaliated by having his handpicked U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey bring federal indictments against Van Riper, but Van Riper was acquitted. Edge also initiated reforms in the civil service, freeing it from Hague's control.[38]

Edge's successor, fellow Republican Alfred Driscoll, succeeded in further curbing Hague's power over state government. He led the effort to implement a new constitution, which streamlined state government and made it less vulnerable to control by locally based bosses like Hague. For example, county prosecutors were now directly accountable to the state attorney general. It also set up a new state Supreme Court, which was given supervision over the state's judges. As the first Chief Justice, Driscoll appointed an old Hague foe, Arthur T. Vanderbilt. Driscoll also installed voting machines throughout the state, which made it harder for corrupt politicians to steal elections.[38]

Seeing the writing on the wall, Hague abruptly announced his retirement in 1947. However, he was able to have his nephew, Frank Hague Eggers, chosen as his successor. It was generally understood that Hague still held the real power.[45] This ended in 1949 when John V. Kenny, a former Hague ward leader alienated by the appointment of Eggers, put together his own commission ticket. Due to the presence of a "third ticket," Kenny's ticket was able to oust the Hague/Eggers ticket from power, ending Hague's 32-year rule.[38] Kenny soon set up a machine which proved every bit as corrupt as Hague's, but far less efficient at providing services.[46][47]

Friend and foe to labor

 
The Pulaski Skyway between Kearny and Jersey City over the Hackensack River

Hague was accommodating to labor unions during the first half of his mayoral career. For instance, Jersey City police were known for turning back strikebreakers, something unheard of during the 1920s. However, he became a savage opponent of labor organizers in the 1930s. The turnaround came about during a dispute with labor boss and former supporter Theodore "Teddy" Brandle, whose attempts to organize the work crews on the Pulaski Skyway construction project (1930–32) touched off a labor war so intense that local newspapers called it "the war of the meadows."[48]

The rise of the CIO in the mid-1930s represented a threat to Hague's policy of guaranteeing labor peace to the sweatshop type industries that might otherwise have fled Jersey City's high property taxes. When Socialist presidential candidate Norman Thomas came to speak on behalf of the CIO during a May Day rally in Journal Square, Hague's police swept Thomas and his wife into a car, took them to the Pavonia ferry and sent them back to New York.[49] Hague spent much of the decade inveighing against Communists and labor unions,[36] and his attempts to suppress the CIO's activities in Jersey City led to a U.S. Supreme Court decision, Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization, 307 U.S. 496 (1939), that is a cornerstone of law concerning public expression of political views on public property.

Death

Hague died on New Year's Day in 1956 at his 480 Park Avenue duplex apartment in Manhattan, New York City.[50] While hundreds gathered to see the casket depart the funeral home, only four men were seen to remove their hats for the passing of the coffin.[9] One woman present held an American Flag and a sign that read, "God have mercy on his sinful, greedy soul."[9]

Hague was interred in a large mausoleum at Holy Name Cemetery in Jersey City.[51]

Legacy

Hague's pride and joy was the Jersey City Medical Center, which he began creating almost as soon as he became mayor. By the 1940s it had grown into a 10-building complex that provided virtually free medical care to Jersey City residents. At the time of its completion, the Medical Center was one of the biggest medical facilities in the country and included the Medical Center Hospital, Pollak Chest Diseases Hospital, Murdoch Hall, and Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital, named in honor of Hague's mother. The buildings, funded in part through federal funds obtained by Hague, are known for their Art Deco details, including marble walls, terrazzo floors, etched glass, and decorative moldings.[52] Even at the time the Medical Center was too large to operate cost-effectively.[53] In 2005 the 14 acre complex (much of which had fallen into disuse) was sold to a private developer who began converting two towers into a luxury condominium complex called the Beacon.[54]

Quotes

"We hear about constitutional rights, free speech and the free press. Every time I hear those words I say to myself, 'That man is a Red, that man is a Communist.' You never heard a real American talk in that manner." – speech to the Jersey City Chamber of Commerce, January 12, 1938.[55]

"Listen, here is the law! I am the law! These boys go to work!" – speech on city government to the Emory Methodist Episcopal Church in Jersey City, November 10, 1937.[56][57][58]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ingle, Bob; Sandy McClure (2008), The Soprano State: New Jersey's Culture of Corruption, New York: St. Martin's Press, p. 74, ISBN 978-0312368944
  2. ^ a b "Hague's End", Time, May 23, 1949
  3. ^ Powell, Michael (November 3, 2006), "Menendez Seeks to Bury Image of a Shady Dealer", The Washington Post, p. A02
  4. ^ Joseph Tanfani (January 11, 2014), "Chris Christie bridge scandal looks to many like Jersey as usual", Los Angeles Times
  5. ^ (Erie 1988, p. 68)
  6. ^ (Erie 1988, p. 138)
  7. ^ , Time, July 11, 1932, archived from the original on October 27, 2010
  8. ^ (Leinwand 2004, p. 69)
  9. ^ a b c Time. January 16, 1956. Archived from the original on December 14, 2008. As the eight professional pallbearers hefted the 700-lb., hammered copper casket out of Lawrence Quinn's Funeral Home in Jersey City, a solemn voice called out to the pressing crowd: "Hats, men." Of the hundreds on the sidewalk, only four men were seen to lift their hats as a final gesture of respect toward Frank Hague, who died last week at 81. He was the last of the great machine bosses and the most absolute of them all. On a salary that never exceeded $8,500 a year during his eight terms as mayor of Jersey City, he came to reckon his personal fortune at more than $2,000,000, his homes at four (in Jersey City, on Manhattan's Park Avenue, on Miami's Biscayne Bay and on the Jersey coast at Deal).
  10. ^ (Smith 1982, pp. 25–26)
  11. ^ (Van Devander 1974, p. 92)
  12. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 34)
  13. ^ (Smith 1982, pp. 34–35)
  14. ^ a b (Smith 1982, p. 35)
  15. ^ a b c (Smith 1982, p. 36)
  16. ^ a b (Smith 1982, p. 38)
  17. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 38)
  18. ^ (Hart 2007, pp. 77–78)
  19. ^ (Smith 1982, pp. 38–39)
  20. ^ Treasury Dept, New Jersey; Joint Committee On Treasurer's Accounts, New Jersey. Legislature (1908), Annual Report, Treasurer of the State of New Jersey, Trenton, NJ: State Gazette Publishing Company, p. 477
  21. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 39)
  22. ^ (Hart 2007, p. 44)
  23. ^ (Smith 1982, pp. 39–40)
  24. ^ (Hart 2007, pp. 44–45)
  25. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 40)
  26. ^ a b c d (Smith 1982, p. 41)
  27. ^ a b (Smith 1982, p. 42)
  28. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 43)
  29. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 44)
  30. ^ Fleming, Thomas (1984), New Jersey: A History, New York: W.W. Norton, p. 174, ISBN 978-0393301809
  31. ^ "Wittpenn Men Lose in Jersey City Vote" (PDF), The New York Times, p. 1, June 11, 1913
  32. ^ a b c d (Hart 2007, p. 45)
  33. ^ a b c (Smith 1982, p. 55)
  34. ^ a b c d e Frank Hague at New Jersey City University's Jersey City history page
  35. ^ a b c d Foster, Mark. The Early Career of Mayor Frank Hague. Get NJ, 2002.
  36. ^ a b c d e "Jersey City's Mayor Hague: Last of the Bosses, Not First of the Dictators". Life. February 7, 1938. p. 45. Retrieved November 25, 2011.
  37. ^ Gunther, John, Inside U.S.A., Curtis Publishing, 1947, pg. 596
  38. ^ a b c d e Grundy, J. Owen. Before 1949: Thirty Years War on Hagueism. Get NJ, 2003.
  39. ^ Foster, David. The Manufacture of Consent in Jersey City Machine. Get NJ, 2003.
  40. ^ Farley, James. Behind the Ballots: The Personal History of a Politician, Harcourt Brace, 1940
  41. ^ "Jersey City Past and Present | New Jersey City University". www.njcu.edu.
  42. ^ How to Steal an Election, John Fund, City Journal, Autumn 2004. [1] September 27, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ The Boss: The Hague Machine in Action, Dayton David McKean, pp. 64–65
  44. ^ New York Post, January 20, 1938, p. 8
  45. ^ Time, July 19, 1954 {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  46. ^ Hanley, Robert (June 3, 1975). "Ex-Mayor John V. Kenny Of Jersey City Dies at 82". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2008. John V. Kenny, the former Mayor of Jersey City whose control of the Hudson County Democratic party crumbled after a flurry of Federal extortion charges in late 1970, died last evening of heart disease. He was 82 years old.
  47. ^ "Kenny Funeral Held With Few Politicians Attending". The New York Times. June 6, 1975. Retrieved April 23, 2008. John V. Kenny, the leader of Hudson County politics for more than 20 years, was buried here in Holy Name Cemetery today after a funeral mass sparsely attended by political figures.
  48. ^ (Hart 2007, p. 6)
  49. ^ (Smith 1982, p. 128)
  50. ^ "Frank Hague Is Dead Here at 79. Long Boss of Jersey Democrats. Jersey City Mayor 32 Years Had National Influence". The New York Times. January 2, 1956. Retrieved August 21, 2007. Frank Hague, former Democratic boss in New Jersey and Mayor of Jersey City for thirty two years, died at 5 p.m. yesterday in his apartment at 480 Park Avenue.
  51. ^ Holy Name Cemetery, The Political Graveyard. Accessed August 15, 2007.
  52. ^ Hampson, Rick (April 16, 2007). "Model of urban future: Jersey City?". USA Today. Retrieved June 27, 2015.
  53. ^ Jersey City – Past and Present. Carmela Karnoutsos. 2001
  54. ^ Renshaw, Jarrett (April 4, 2012). "Once a modern marvel, Beacon of Jersey City sold after hitting rough times". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved June 27, 2015.
  55. ^ Andrews, Robert (1996), The Columbia World of Quotations, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0231105187
  56. ^ Coogan, Tim Pat (2002), Wherever Green Is Worn, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-1403960146
  57. ^ "'I Am the Law,' Mayor Hague Tells 1,000 In Speech on Jersey City Government", The New York Times, p. 1, November 11, 1937
  58. ^ Alexander, Jack (October 26, 1940), "King Hanky-Panky of Jersey City", The Saturday Evening Post, p. 122

References

External links

  • 307 U.S. 496 (1939) Full text of the decision from FindLaw.com
  • Frank Hague at Find a Grave
  • Frank Hague Page at Jersey City History
  • The Life and Times of Frank Hague (2001) A five-part radio program

frank, hague, january, 1876, january, 1956, american, democratic, party, politician, served, mayor, jersey, city, from, 1917, 1947, democratic, national, committeeman, from, jersey, from, 1922, until, 1949, vice, chairman, democratic, national, committee, from. Frank Hague January 17 1876 January 1 1956 was an American Democratic Party politician who served as the Mayor of Jersey City from 1917 to 1947 Democratic National Committeeman from New Jersey from 1922 until 1949 and Vice Chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 1924 until 1949 Frank HagueHague in 192030th Mayor of Jersey CityIn office May 15 1917 June 17 1947Preceded byMark Matthew FaganSucceeded byFrank Hague EggersPersonal detailsBorn 1876 01 17 January 17 1876Jersey City New Jersey U S DiedJanuary 1 1956 1956 01 01 aged 79 New York City U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseJennie W Warner 1874 1962 Children2ResidenceJersey City New JerseyHague has a widely known reputation for corruption and bossism and has been called the grandaddy of Jersey bosses 1 By the time he left office in 1947 he enjoyed palatial homes European vacations and a private suite at the Plaza Hotel 2 His wealth has been estimated to have been over 10 million at the time of his death although his City salary never exceeded 8 500 per year and he had no other legitimate source of income 2 His desk according to legend had a specially designed lap drawer which could be pushed outward towards the person with whom he was meeting This allowed his guests to discreetly deliver bribes in the form of envelopes containing large amounts of cash 3 4 However according to New Jersey preservationist John Hallinan the drawers were a traditional feature of 19th century partners desks and that t he last thing Hague would need to do is take a bribe personally As of October 2021 the desk was on display in City Hall During the height of his power Hague s political machine known as the organization was one of the most powerful in the United States controlling politics on local county and state levels 5 Hague s personal influence extended to the national level influencing federal patronage 6 and presidential campaigns 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Early success 2 2 The Red Dugan affair 2 3 Ward leader 2 4 Political reformer 2 5 Commissioner 2 6 Boss of Jersey City 2 7 President maker 2 8 Accusations of voter fraud 2 9 Retirement from politics 2 10 Friend and foe to labor 3 Death 4 Legacy 5 Quotes 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditFrancis Frank Hague born in Jersey City was the fourth of eight children to John D and Margaret Hague nee Fagen immigrants from County Cavan Ireland 8 He was raised in Jersey City s Second ward an area known as The Horseshoe due to its shape which wrapped around a railroad loop 9 The ward was created when the Republican controlled legislature gerrymandered a district within Jersey City in 1871 to concentrate and isolate Democratic and mostly Catholic votes 10 By age 14 Hague was expelled from school prior to completing the sixth grade for poor attendance and unacceptable behavior 11 He worked briefly as a blacksmith s apprentice for the Erie Railroad While training at a local gym for his own potential debut as a prizefighter he arranged to become manager for Joe Craig a professional lightweight boxer Craig was successful enough to allow Hague to buy a few suits that made him appear successful 12 In 1896 Hague s apparent prosperity gained him the attention of local tavern owner Nat Kenny who was seeking a candidate for constable in the upcoming primary to run against the candidate of a rival tavern owner 13 Kenny provided Hague with 75 to spread around and Frank Hague quickly won his first election by a ratio of three to one 14 Political career EditEarly success Edit Hague s victory in the Constable election brought him to the attention of Hudson County Democratic political boss Little Bob Davis and Davis asked Hague to help get out Democratic votes for the upcoming 1897 Mayoral election 14 Hague s efforts were credited with generating large voter turnout in the Second Ward for the 1897 and 1899 elections As a reward for his work Hague was appointed as a deputy sheriff at a salary of 25 per week 15 Over this time Hague took a leadership role in the Second Ward Democratic club 15 In the 1901 Mayoral election Republican Mark M Fagan was elected Hague s second ward was one of only two that voted Democratic Hague survived a Republican challenge for a third term as Constable the following year 15 The Red Dugan affair Edit As a ward leader Hague was approached by a woman to provide assistance for her son who had been arrested for passing a forged check The son Red Dugan had been a classmate of Hague s in school According to the Boston Evening Transcript of October 4 1904 Dugan had deposited a forged check for 955 in the Peoples Bank of Roxbury Massachusetts and convinced the bank manager to let him withdraw 500 Hague ignored a subpoena to testify in Hudson County Court and traveled to Massachusetts to provide an alibi for Dugan Hague and another deputy sheriff Thomas Skidder Madigan claimed that they had seen Dugan in Jersey City on the day of the alleged offense Both were threatened with perjury charges 16 Upon returning to Jersey City Hague was found guilty of contempt of court for ignoring the subpoena He was fined 100 and stripped of his duties as Deputy Sheriff 16 In spite of the resulting press coverage of the event Hague was more deeply embraced by his constituency Thomas Smith wrote But to the residents of the Horseshoe Frank Hague had gone out of his way to help a friend had practically given his livelihood to aid a brother 17 In the succeeding municipal election of 1905 which saw the return of incumbent Fagan to the office of mayor Hague was elected to a fourth term as constable Ward leader Edit Hague rose through the Democratic machinery of Hudson County which drew much of its strength by providing newly arrived immigrants with rudimentary social services 18 Hague took a job as a collector for a local brewery leaving him with time to spend in the streets and the local taverns which were hubs of political activity 19 He also spent his time cleaning up the loose ends of the Second Ward s south end Democratic Club to consolidate his power As a reward for his efforts in turning out votes in the 1905 election Bob Davis named Hague as the party leader for the Second Ward and arranged for Hague to be appointed as Sergeant at Arms for the New Jersey State Assembly 20 Political reformer Edit Hague broke ties with Boss Davis in 1906 over a difference of opinion on a candidate for appointment to the city Street and Water Board 21 As a result Hague supported H Otto Wittpenn for mayor in the 1907 election Wittpenn was a reformer who opposed the control Davis held over Hudson County politics Over the objections of Davis newly elected Mayor Wittpenn appointed Hague as chief custodian of City Hall a cushy job with plenty of patronage opportunities 22 During the Wittpenn administration Hague also became friendly with Wittpenn s secretary a Presbyterian Sunday school teacher named A Harry Moore 23 The resulting battle for control of the Hudson County Democratic machine would ironically result in one of the greatest boosts to Hague s rise to power the Walsh Act of 1911 24 In 1909 Davis seeing support for Hague increasing supported Wittpenn s re election against former mayor Fagan Hague s second ward produced the largest plurality of Wittpenn votes of any of Jersey City s 12 wards 25 Davis then arranged the appointment of Fagan to the Hudson County Tax Board When Wittpenn s administration began facing troubles including Fagan s discovery of a Pennsylvania Railroad property that had paid no taxes for four years Wittpenn blamed Davis 26 Seeking to curb the influence of Davis Wittpenn announced his candidacy for Governor stating I have endured the machine as long as possible but patience is no longer a virtue 26 Davis in turn prevailed upon Woodrow Wilson then President of Princeton University to oppose Wittpenn s candidacy 26 Wilson s victory was overwhelming even in Hague s ward despite heavy handed tactics used there The Jersey Journal wrote Cops on duty were using clubs and blackjacks to assist Mayor Wittpenn and Frank Hague defeat the Davis men 26 Wilson s reform minded term as Governor saw the establishment of Presidential primary elections introduced workers compensation and brought about passage of the Walsh Act which provided for a non partisan commission form of municipal government that was greatly reflective of his academic writings in Congressional Government Little Bob Davis died of cancer shortly after the 1910 gubernatorial election leaving a vacuum in the power structure of the Hudson County Democrats 27 Wittpenn quickly endorsed the idea of converting Jersey City to a commission form of government but was opposed by forces including Hague attempting to take control of the party Hague campaigned heavily against the idea in the Horseshoe claiming that such a system of citywide elected commissioners would erode the influence of the working class and consolidate power among the city s elite 27 Wittpenn s opponents successfully petitioned for a change in the date of the vote on the charter change moving it from September to mid July and the proposal was defeated As a result of this campaign Hague came under the scrutiny of The Jersey Journal which had supported the proposed charter change It was reported that Hague s older brother a battalion chief on the city fire department had been on sick leave for three years at full pay 28 Hague reconciled with Wittpenn to support his re election in 1911 Wittpenn then supported Hague s nomination for Commissioner of Streets and Water Both were elected The new position greatly expanded Hague s patronage authority While City Hall employed a few dozen custodians there were hundreds of workers in the Street and Water Department 29 Hague s work as head of the Department of Street Cleaners even convinced The Jersey Journal to endorse him as a reform candidate in the next election 30 In the spring of 1913 having gained confidence in his own ability to assure himself a place on the commission Hague supported the renewed effort to change the Jersey City government from the Mayor Council model to a commission model under the recently adopted Walsh Act This act would place all executive and legislative powers in a five man commission each of whom would head a city department The five commissioners would choose one of their colleagues to be mayor The vote for charter change passed and the stage was set for Frank Hague s rise to power Commissioner Edit In 1913 the first election for the city commission saw 91 men on the ballot competing for five available seats on the commission Hague finished fourth with 17 390 votes and was elected to the five man commission The only Wittpenn supported candidate A Harry Moore was also elected 31 As a result of having garnered the most votes 21 419 former mayor Fagan became the first mayor under this new form of government and the only Republican to hold that title in Jersey City for the following 75 years Hague was named public safety commissioner with control over the police and fire departments In the same year Hague cemented his control of the Hudson County political machine by securing for himself the leadership of the Hudson County Democratic Organization Executive Committee Aftermath of the Black Tom explosion an act of sabotage on American ammunition supplies by German agents which took place on July 30 1916 in Jersey City Hague immediately set about reshaping the corrupt Jersey City police force with tough Horseshoe recruits 32 Hague spearheaded crackdowns on prostitution and narcotics trafficking earning him favor with religious leaders 32 These enforcement acts went as far as Hague himself marching across local Vaudeville stages personally directing the shut down of girlie shows 32 At the heart of this change was an inner cadre of officers known as the Zeppelin Squad or zepps who were personally loyal to Hague alone 32 The zepps would spy on and report back to Hague about other members of the department 33 Eventually Jersey City had one patrolman for every 3 000 residents causing a marked decline in the city s once astronomical crime rate 34 Hague took steps to curb the police department s lackadaisical work ethic punishing offenses that had gone unpunished for years He also made much needed improvements to the fire department at the time he took office Jersey City s fire insurance rates were among the highest in the nation 35 Upon discovering in early 1916 that millions of pounds of munitions were being stockpiled on the Jersey City waterfront Hague travelled to Washington D C to register concerns for the safety of his constituents 33 His meetings with Congressmen resulted in no action Congress having decided that Jersey City was an appropriate port 33 Hague s concerns were shown to be valid in July 1916 when the Black Tom explosion sent shrapnel flying across the city In 1917 Hague with his reputation as the man who cleaned up the police force ran for reelection He put together a commission ticket called The Unbossed 34 The ticket consisted of him Parks Commissioner Moore Revenue Commissioner George Brensinger ex judge Charles F X O Brien and City Clerk Michael I Fagan It swept all five spots on the commission Moore topped the poll and traditional practice called for him to be appointed mayor However when the commission met for the first time on May 11 Hague was chosen as the new mayor 35 Boss of Jersey City Edit Building at 2600 Hudson now Kennedy Boulevard one of Hague s residences Technically Hague s only responsibility as mayor was to appoint the school board Otherwise he was merely first among equals with no powers over and above the other four commissioners However soon after taking office he wrested control of the Hudson County Democratic Party from Wittpenn 35 This allowed him to significantly influence the makeup of the commission in this overwhelmingly Democratic city He soon built the organization into one of the most powerful political machines in the country Hague himself became very wealthy owning a 125 000 summer home in Deal living in a large apartment in the best building in the city and able to give a 50 000 altar to a local Catholic church 36 In 1941 Dartmouth professor Dayton David McKean wrote The Boss a book about Hague s political machine in which he estimated his amassed wealth at four million dollars on an annual mayoral salary of 8 000 a year 37 He also had the support of a significant faction of Republicans which dated to his initial election as mayor when he cut a deal with then Governor Walter Edge in which Edge effectively ceded North Jersey to Hague in return for keeping South Jersey for himself 38 Also as public safety commissioner a post he held throughout his entire tenure he controlled the two departments with the most patronage appointments in the city This post also placed responsibility for maintaining public order in his hands 35 Hague soon extended his influence statewide by helping to elect his puppets as governor 36 In the 1919 gubernatorial election Hague endorsed State Senator Edward I Edwards and aggressively campaigned for him Edwards carried Hudson County by 50 000 votes which was enough for him to win statewide by just under 15 000 votes Hague proclaimed himself leader of the New Jersey Democratic Party and Edwards allowed him to recommend dozens of appointments to high state offices Democrats won five out of eight gubernatorial races between 1919 and 1940 more often than not due to massive landslides in Hudson County However he was never able to extend his dominance to the state legislature 34 Hague was able to stay in power despite a nearly constant effort to turn him out of office from 1921 onward 38 He was also able to avoid prosecution despite numerous federal and state investigations in part due to the fact he took most of his kickbacks in cash However from the early 1940s onward many of the older ethnic groups started moving to the suburbs They were replaced by Poles Italians Eastern Europeans and African Americans Hague never adapted his methods to the new groups 34 Hague had little tolerance for those who dared oppose him publicly He relied on two ordinances of dubious constitutionality to muzzle critics A 1920 ordinance effectively required people making political speeches to obtain clearance from the chief of police A 1930 ordinance gave the public safety commissioner Hague himself the power to turn down permits for meetings if he felt it necessary to prevent riots disturbances or disorderly assemblage The latter ordinance was struck down as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States but continued to be enforced for several years after that decision 39 The police were also allowed to stop and search anyone without probable cause or a warrant after 9 pm 36 President maker Edit In 1932 Hague a friend of Al Smith backed Smith against Franklin D Roosevelt during the race for the Democratic nomination When Roosevelt won the nomination Hague offered to organize the biggest political rally anyone had ever seen if Roosevelt would launch his presidential campaign in New Jersey When Roosevelt formally began his campaign with an event at the Jersey Shore town of Sea Girt Hague s machine made sure there were several thousand Hudson County voters looking on and cheering 40 Hague s support was rewarded with funding for a massive medical center complex complete with a maternity hospital named after his mother Margaret Hague 41 During the 1936 campaign Hague provided 150 000 adults and children to cheer Roosevelt during a visit 36 Accusations of voter fraud Edit Hague s use of voter fraud is the stuff of legend 42 In 1937 for instance Jersey City had 160 050 registered voters but only 147 000 people who were at least 21 years old the legal voting age 34 In 1932 Governor Moore appointed a lawyer named Thomas J Brogan who had served as Hague s personal attorney in corruption hearings to an associate Justice seat on the state s Supreme Court Less than a year later Brogan was named as Chief Justice In at least two instances of alleged voting fraud in the 1930s Ferguson v Brogan 112 N J L 471 Clee v Moore 119 N J L 215 In re Clee 119 N J L 310 Brogan s court issued extraordinary rulings in favor of the Democratic machine in one case asserting that the district superintendent of elections had no authority to open ballot boxes and in another case ruling that the boxes could be opened but no one had the right to look inside 43 Brogan also assigned himself to the Hudson County jurisdiction thereby controlling the local grand jury process and squelching other election fraud cases 44 Although Hague like other political bosses of the time was not above outright fraud at the polls the keys to Hague s success were his matchless organizational skills and demand for complete loyalty from his subordinates His command over the Democratic voters of Hudson County a densely populated urban area in a state that was still mostly rural made him a man to reckon with among state Democrats and Republicans alike He was a close friend of Al Smith the New York governor who would become the first Irish American presidential candidate in 1928 In addition Hague s support of Roosevelt for President was rewarded with a steady stream of perks that sustained Hague s organization throughout the Depression Hague tosses out the first ball at the Jersey City Giants 1946 home opener Roosevelt Stadium Retirement from politics Edit The beginning of the end for Hague came in 1943 when former governor Walter Edge was returned to office Edge s attorney general Walter Van Riper initiated several prosecutions of Hague cronies Hague retaliated by having his handpicked U S Attorney for the District of New Jersey bring federal indictments against Van Riper but Van Riper was acquitted Edge also initiated reforms in the civil service freeing it from Hague s control 38 Edge s successor fellow Republican Alfred Driscoll succeeded in further curbing Hague s power over state government He led the effort to implement a new constitution which streamlined state government and made it less vulnerable to control by locally based bosses like Hague For example county prosecutors were now directly accountable to the state attorney general It also set up a new state Supreme Court which was given supervision over the state s judges As the first Chief Justice Driscoll appointed an old Hague foe Arthur T Vanderbilt Driscoll also installed voting machines throughout the state which made it harder for corrupt politicians to steal elections 38 Seeing the writing on the wall Hague abruptly announced his retirement in 1947 However he was able to have his nephew Frank Hague Eggers chosen as his successor It was generally understood that Hague still held the real power 45 This ended in 1949 when John V Kenny a former Hague ward leader alienated by the appointment of Eggers put together his own commission ticket Due to the presence of a third ticket Kenny s ticket was able to oust the Hague Eggers ticket from power ending Hague s 32 year rule 38 Kenny soon set up a machine which proved every bit as corrupt as Hague s but far less efficient at providing services 46 47 Friend and foe to labor Edit The Pulaski Skyway between Kearny and Jersey City over the Hackensack River Hague was accommodating to labor unions during the first half of his mayoral career For instance Jersey City police were known for turning back strikebreakers something unheard of during the 1920s However he became a savage opponent of labor organizers in the 1930s The turnaround came about during a dispute with labor boss and former supporter Theodore Teddy Brandle whose attempts to organize the work crews on the Pulaski Skyway construction project 1930 32 touched off a labor war so intense that local newspapers called it the war of the meadows 48 The rise of the CIO in the mid 1930s represented a threat to Hague s policy of guaranteeing labor peace to the sweatshop type industries that might otherwise have fled Jersey City s high property taxes When Socialist presidential candidate Norman Thomas came to speak on behalf of the CIO during a May Day rally in Journal Square Hague s police swept Thomas and his wife into a car took them to the Pavonia ferry and sent them back to New York 49 Hague spent much of the decade inveighing against Communists and labor unions 36 and his attempts to suppress the CIO s activities in Jersey City led to a U S Supreme Court decision Hague v Committee for Industrial Organization 307 U S 496 1939 that is a cornerstone of law concerning public expression of political views on public property Death EditHague died on New Year s Day in 1956 at his 480 Park Avenue duplex apartment in Manhattan New York City 50 While hundreds gathered to see the casket depart the funeral home only four men were seen to remove their hats for the passing of the coffin 9 One woman present held an American Flag and a sign that read God have mercy on his sinful greedy soul 9 Hague was interred in a large mausoleum at Holy Name Cemetery in Jersey City 51 Legacy EditHague s pride and joy was the Jersey City Medical Center which he began creating almost as soon as he became mayor By the 1940s it had grown into a 10 building complex that provided virtually free medical care to Jersey City residents At the time of its completion the Medical Center was one of the biggest medical facilities in the country and included the Medical Center Hospital Pollak Chest Diseases Hospital Murdoch Hall and Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital named in honor of Hague s mother The buildings funded in part through federal funds obtained by Hague are known for their Art Deco details including marble walls terrazzo floors etched glass and decorative moldings 52 Even at the time the Medical Center was too large to operate cost effectively 53 In 2005 the 14 acre complex much of which had fallen into disuse was sold to a private developer who began converting two towers into a luxury condominium complex called the Beacon 54 Quotes Edit We hear about constitutional rights free speech and the free press Every time I hear those words I say to myself That man is a Red that man is a Communist You never heard a real American talk in that manner speech to the Jersey City Chamber of Commerce January 12 1938 55 Listen here is the law I am the law These boys go to work speech on city government to the Emory Methodist Episcopal Church in Jersey City November 10 1937 56 57 58 See also EditList of mayors of Jersey City New JerseyNotes Edit Ingle Bob Sandy McClure 2008 The Soprano State New Jersey s Culture of Corruption New York St Martin s Press p 74 ISBN 978 0312368944 a b Hague s End Time May 23 1949 Powell Michael November 3 2006 Menendez Seeks to Bury Image of a Shady Dealer The Washington Post p A02 Joseph Tanfani January 11 2014 Chris Christie bridge scandal looks to many like Jersey as usual Los Angeles Times Erie 1988 p 68 Erie 1988 p 138 Congress Hotel Deal Time July 11 1932 archived from the original on October 27 2010 Leinwand 2004 p 69 a b c When the Big Boy Goes Time January 16 1956 Archived from the original on December 14 2008 As the eight professional pallbearers hefted the 700 lb hammered copper casket out of Lawrence Quinn s Funeral Home in Jersey City a solemn voice called out to the pressing crowd Hats men Of the hundreds on the sidewalk only four men were seen to lift their hats as a final gesture of respect toward Frank Hague who died last week at 81 He was the last of the great machine bosses and the most absolute of them all On a salary that never exceeded 8 500 a year during his eight terms as mayor of Jersey City he came to reckon his personal fortune at more than 2 000 000 his homes at four in Jersey City on Manhattan s Park Avenue on Miami s Biscayne Bay and on the Jersey coast at Deal Smith 1982 pp 25 26 Van Devander 1974 p 92 Smith 1982 p 34 Smith 1982 pp 34 35 a b Smith 1982 p 35 a b c Smith 1982 p 36 a b Smith 1982 p 38 Smith 1982 p 38 Hart 2007 pp 77 78 Smith 1982 pp 38 39 Treasury Dept New Jersey Joint Committee On Treasurer s Accounts New Jersey Legislature 1908 Annual Report Treasurer of the State of New Jersey Trenton NJ State Gazette Publishing Company p 477 Smith 1982 p 39 Hart 2007 p 44 Smith 1982 pp 39 40 Hart 2007 pp 44 45 Smith 1982 p 40 a b c d Smith 1982 p 41 a b Smith 1982 p 42 Smith 1982 p 43 Smith 1982 p 44 Fleming Thomas 1984 New Jersey A History New York W W Norton p 174 ISBN 978 0393301809 Wittpenn Men Lose in Jersey City Vote PDF The New York Times p 1 June 11 1913 a b c d Hart 2007 p 45 a b c Smith 1982 p 55 a b c d e Frank Hague at New Jersey City University s Jersey City history page a b c d Foster Mark The Early Career of Mayor Frank Hague Get NJ 2002 a b c d e Jersey City s Mayor Hague Last of the Bosses Not First of the Dictators Life February 7 1938 p 45 Retrieved November 25 2011 Gunther John Inside U S A Curtis Publishing 1947 pg 596 a b c d e Grundy J Owen Before 1949 Thirty Years War on Hagueism Get NJ 2003 Foster David The Manufacture of Consent in Jersey City Machine Get NJ 2003 Farley James Behind the Ballots The Personal History of a Politician Harcourt Brace 1940 Jersey City Past and Present New Jersey City University www njcu edu How to Steal an Election John Fund City Journal Autumn 2004 1 Archived September 27 2006 at the Wayback Machine The Boss The Hague Machine in Action Dayton David McKean pp 64 65 New York Post January 20 1938 p 8 Time July 19 1954 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Hanley Robert June 3 1975 Ex Mayor John V Kenny Of Jersey City Dies at 82 The New York Times Retrieved April 23 2008 John V Kenny the former Mayor of Jersey City whose control of the Hudson County Democratic party crumbled after a flurry of Federal extortion charges in late 1970 died last evening of heart disease He was 82 years old Kenny Funeral Held With Few Politicians Attending The New York Times June 6 1975 Retrieved April 23 2008 John V Kenny the leader of Hudson County politics for more than 20 years was buried here in Holy Name Cemetery today after a funeral mass sparsely attended by political figures Hart 2007 p 6 Smith 1982 p 128 Frank Hague Is Dead Here at 79 Long Boss of Jersey Democrats Jersey City Mayor 32 Years Had National Influence The New York Times January 2 1956 Retrieved August 21 2007 Frank Hague former Democratic boss in New Jersey and Mayor of Jersey City for thirty two years died at 5 p m yesterday in his apartment at 480 Park Avenue Holy Name Cemetery The Political Graveyard Accessed August 15 2007 Hampson Rick April 16 2007 Model of urban future Jersey City USA Today Retrieved June 27 2015 Jersey City Past and Present Carmela Karnoutsos 2001 Renshaw Jarrett April 4 2012 Once a modern marvel Beacon of Jersey City sold after hitting rough times The Star Ledger Retrieved June 27 2015 Andrews Robert 1996 The Columbia World of Quotations New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231105187 Coogan Tim Pat 2002 Wherever Green Is Worn Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1403960146 I Am the Law Mayor Hague Tells 1 000 In Speech on Jersey City Government The New York Times p 1 November 11 1937 Alexander Jack October 26 1940 King Hanky Panky of Jersey City The Saturday Evening Post p 122References EditConnors Richard 1971 A Cycle of Power The Career of Jersey City Mayor Frank Hague Metuchen NJ Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0810804357 Erie Steven P 1988 Rainbow s End Irish Americans and the Dilemmas of Urban Machine Politics 1840 1985 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0520071834 Hart Steven 2007 The Last Three Miles Politics Murder and the Construction of America s First Superhighway New York The New Press ISBN 978 1595580986 Leinwand Gerald 2004 Mackerels in the Moonlight Four Corrupt American Mayors Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0786418459 McKean Dayton David 1967 The Boss the Hague Machine in Action New York Russell amp Russell Pub ISBN 978 0846208211 originally published Boston Houghton Mifflin 1940 Smith Thomas F X 1982 The Powerticians Secaucus NJ Lyle Stuart ISBN 978 0818403286 Luthin Reinhard H 1954 Frank I Am The Law Hague Jersey City American Demagogues Twentieth Century Beacon Press ASIN B0007DN37C LCCN 54 8428 OCLC 1098334 Van Devander Charles W 1974 The Big Bosses New York Arno Press ISBN 978 0405059032External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Frank Hague Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frank Hague 307 U S 496 1939 Full text of the decision from FindLaw com Frank Hague at Find a Grave Frank Hague Page at Jersey City History The Life and Times of Frank Hague 2001 A five part radio program The Pragmatic Populism of a Non Partisan Politician An Analysis of the Political Philosophy of Charles Edison Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php 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