Department of History, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, History Newsletter (New Brunswick, NJ, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2008). Several graduate students are now pursuing theses about Newark. The Black Political Experience in Newark-(Xerox University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, MI, 1975 and Depression and Decline: Newark, New Jersey: 1929-1941 - University Microfilm International, Ann Arbor, MI, 1982.
2.
Marc Holzer, Elizabeth A. Strom, and Lois Redman-Simmons, eds., Reinventing Newark: Visions of the City in the Twentieth Century (Newark, 2005); Harold Kaplan, Urban Renewal Politics: Slum Clearance in Newark (New York, 1963); Alan V. Lowenstein, Alan V. Lowenstein: New Jersey Lawyer & Community Leader (Piscataway, NJ, 2001).
3.
Christina M. Senezak, "A Selective Booklist of Publications on Newark," in Stanley B. Winters, ed., From Riot to Recovery: Newark after Ten Years (Washington, DC, 1979), 491-509; Nancy Castor, A Bibliography of Newark, N.J. 1966-1986 (Newark, NJ, 1986), 1-28; Newark in the 21st Century Task Force. Selected Bibliography (Newark, NJ, 2000); John T. Cunningham, "Newark in Print," in Newark, 3rd ed. (Newark, NJ, 2002), 398-99; Brad Small, A Bibliography of Current and Standard Works on Newark, New Jersey 2005 (Newark, NJ, 2005).
4.
Information on the morgue was provided by former Newark News reporter Douglas Eldridge.
5.
Samuel H. Popper, "Newark, N.J., 1870-1910: Chapters in the Evolution of an American Metropolis" (PhD diss., New York University, 1952), 7-8.
6.
George Amick , The American Way of Graft (Princeton, NJ, 1976), 58-75, 241-42.
7.
Fred J. Cook, "Mayor Kenneth Gibson Says-Wherever the Central Cities Are Going, Newark Is Going to Get There First,"New York Times Magazine, July 25, 1970, esp. 36-37; Frank A. Fiorito, "The Newark Teachers Strike,"New YorkTimes, "Letters," August 15, 1971; Arthur M. Louis, "The Worst American City,"Harpers Magazine, January 1975, 67-71.
8.
" Hearings before the United States Commission on Civil Rights," Newark, New Jersey, September 11-12, 1962, 388-413.
9.
Warren Grover was briefly my colleague in the early 1960s on the history faculty of Newark College of Engineering, now New Jersey Institute of Technology.
10.
Sander A. Diamond , The Nazi Movement in the United States, 1924-1941 (Ithaca, NY, 1974); George S. Clark, "The German Presence in New Jersey," pp. 219-228, and Edward S. Shapiro, "The Jews of New Jersey," pp. 294-213, in Barbara Cunningham, ed., The New Jersey Ethnic Experience (Union City, NJ, 1971); Barbara Cunningham, "Ethnic and Racial Minorities," in Silvio R. Laccetti , ed., The Outlook on New Jersey (Union City, NJ, 1979), 84-99; Martha Glaser, "The German-American Bund in New Jersey,"New Jersey History42 (Spring 1974): 33-49.
11.
On the "Four Minute Men," see Martin V. Minner, "Metropolitan Aspirations: Politics and Memory in Progressive Era Newark" (PhD diss., Indiana University, 2005), 295.
12.
The Wisconsin Historical Society would not verify that the picture was of Hayden. The NYU Press said Dr. Mumford supplied all the pictures and their captions. He admitted that he never met Hayden.
13.
See the caption on Curvin in "Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders," March 1, 1968, 31. Also see Ron Porambo, No Cause for Indictment. An Autopsy of Newark (New York, 1971), 107, 209.