New Jersey’s Deadly Brew
#ReedsyOctoberFor nearly 360 years the area of my birth and early upbringing, Elizabethport, New Jersey, has given its residents plenty of fodder to produce tales of the strange and macabre. Much of its eerie history has evolved from its location along the Arthur Kill as it flows into the Hudson River and the constant change in the landscape along the banks of the kill as the area has evolved from a Colonial shipping commerce hub to center of industry to a modern transportation corridor feeding into Newark International Airport.
Much of the transformation has left behind hundreds of residential and business relics abandoned over the years by the diverse populations as the members of these immigrant groups have moved up on the economic scale and into other more suburban areas.
As a student at Rutgers University and a journalism graduate, I often explored the rich history of the beer brewing industry that flourished before, during and after Prohibition in the area of E’Port. One of the most interesting of these, the Rising Sun Brewery, had its start in two buildings bordered by Marshall and Seventh Streets, in the heart of the area,
Founded in the late 1880s, the site of the brewery survived a fatal explosion and fire early in its history that killed one of the workers there. A newer complex replaced the original and changed hands under a number of different names and several owners whose tales added to both its famous and infamous history.
Like many liquor-manufacturing facilities in the Garden State, much of the most notable activity for the Rising Sun happened during the 13-year period of Prohibition, when illegal alcoholic beverage-making and sales operations headed by several highly-ranked members of the underworld dominated the headlines.
I had heard rumors of many spirits besides those consumed illegally during those wild and crazy times haunting the building after several breweries established there succeeded for a while then went out of business. One of the former owners also reportedly had been New York mobster Waxey Gordon.
Long-time Reading, Pa. brewer and bootlegger Max Hassel reportedly set up several bootlegging operations in Elizabeth’s Carteret Hotel in 1929 with Gordon and Max Greenberg, another manufacturer of illegal beer.
Their success caught the eye of high profile mobster Dutch Schultz, and he supposedly hired hitmen to kill Hassel and Greenberg at the Carteret on April 12, 1933. Reportedly, Gordon escaped because he had skipped out with a prostitute in one of the other hotel rooms.
Although none of the mobsters associated with the Rising Sun lived to tell any tales of its sordid past, I believe I had a close encounter with the ghost of a federal agent killed during a raid on the complex.
Perusing newspaper accounts of the era, I read how, in 1928, gangsters in the Rising Sun complex trapped federal agent John J. Finiello inside the building, which they had turned into a fortress for the protection of their illegal hooch operations, during a raid by the FBI and other agencies.
Finiello, based in Philadelphia, had a reputation many said rivaled that of legendary Elliot Ness. Barrelling his way in, Finiello reportedly fired his revolver twice but died with eight bullets in his body. Five of the shots supposedly pierced the search warrant the crack agent had used to authorize his search of the building.
Later, John G. Smith, chief of federal prohibition agents, led a squad into the Rising Sun through an underground passageway into a blacksmith’s shop where they found 1,500 barrels of beer. There they arrested Julius H. Russell, who they held pending an investigation.
Federal Judge William Clark later ordered the brewery padlocked for one year. The defendant company supposedly appealed the legality of the raid to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, which held the search warrant valid.
The padlocks came off on April 7, 1933 and the Rising Sun again rose on February 14, 1934. It eventually closed its doors and only two smokestacks from the original facility still stand.
Shortly after my Rutgers graduation in 1970 my curiosity about this interesting period in the history of my hometown struck a chord with me and I decided to explore the ruins of what remained of the brewery. So, one afternoon, I contacted Harold Goodrich from the Elizabeth Historical Society, another rabid fan of E’town’s mobster past like myself. He agreed to guide me and we got permission from city officials to tour the complex
On that trip, I believe I crossed paths with Finiello. Goodrich, walking cautiously ahead of me, pried open the door to the area where he believed the blacksmith’s shop once had stood. After a half hour of combing through dusty rubble we heard a dull banging noise like a piece of lumber being moved, followed by a loud clicking sound, like that of a person loading a revolver.
We kept feeling our way forward, moving objects out of our way. A few feet ahead the clicking sound came back again, followed by what sounded like human footsteps. Then another piece of lumber fell down, almost striking me on the head and nearly knocking me unconscious.
My guide and myself turned and moved debris out of our way as quickly as we could, finally feeling our way out into the fresh air.
As we sat down for a breather on an abandoned barstool Goodrich told me about rumors concerning the “ghost of the Rising Sun.”
“Supposedly Finiello’s spirit did not rest after his death because he believed he could not go onto the netherworld until he captured the bootlegger who shot him. Rumor says he still roams the halls of the brewery seeking to even the score.”
“Now you tell me,” I screamed.
With that, we ran to our cars and sped back to the historical society building where our tour started. A few years later, the city finished demolishing most of what remained of the Rising Sun, leaving only two smokestacks, one on each of the former brewery facilities.
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