Horseshoe, Jersey City

Coordinates: 40°43′52″N 74°02′31″W / 40.731039°N 74.042026°W / 40.731039; -74.042026
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Map showing District 2 in 1872

The Horseshoe section of

Democratic, and mostly Catholic, votes, thus preserving Republican dominance in the rest of the city.[2] The curved shape of the district was said to resemble a horseshoe.[3]

As competing railroads built

Harsimus Cove, Hamilton Park, Powerhouse and the former site of the Erie Railroad's Hudson waterfront Pavonia Terminal and the Pavonia Ferry, which since the 1980s has been redeveloped as Newport
. Frank Hague was born in the Horseshoe,[4] and used it as his power base to become mayor of Jersey City and influential in local, state, and national politics.

References

  1. ^ "Jersey City History - the Early Career of Mayor Frank Hague - Foreword by J. Owen Grundy".
  2. ^ (Smith 1982, pp. 25–26)
  3. ^ "The Horseshoe and Hague". American Heritage.
  4. ^ "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).

Works cited

40°43′52″N 74°02′31″W / 40.731039°N 74.042026°W / 40.731039; -74.042026