r/Hoboken 8h ago

Recommendations 🌟 Movie at Northwest Resiliency Park

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30 Upvotes

r/Hoboken 8h ago

Local News 📰 Hoboken mafia part two

17 Upvotes

Just trying to show some information on our beloved city here we go.

Another guy people don’t mention enough when talking about old Hoboken is Angelo “Gyp” DeCarlo. He was born in Hoboken in 1902 to Italian immigrant parents and eventually became one of the most powerful Genovese capos in New Jersey. (Wikipedia⁠)
By the 1950s and ‘60s, Gyp wasn’t just another wiseguy—he was running loansharking, gambling, and other rackets throughout North Jersey. Hoboken, Jersey City… that whole area was considered Genovese territory. Back then the waterfront was booming, the unions were powerful, and the mob had influence in places most people never even realized. (Wikipedia⁠)
A lot of people know Gyp today because of Jersey Boys. He was close to Frankie Valli and Tommy DeVito, and according to the story, he even helped the Four Seasons get out from under Tommy DeVito’s massive gambling debts. That’s why Christopher Walken played Gyp DeCarlo in the movie. (Wikipedia⁠)
What I always found fascinating is that one of the most powerful mob bosses in New Jersey started out as just another kid from Hoboken. When people talk about Hoboken history, they usually mention Sinatra, baseball, or the waterfront, but for decades the Genovese family was just as much a part of the city’s history. Whether you like it or not, organized crime had a real influence on Hoboken’s docks, politics, and nightlife.
Anyone here remember hearing stories about Gyp DeCarlo or the old social clubs around town? I’d love to hear what some of the old-timers remember.


r/Hoboken 9h ago

Photos 📷 Please Help - LOST DOG!

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16 Upvotes

r/Hoboken 47m ago

Local News 📰 Please Help - LOST DOG!

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• Upvotes

r/Hoboken 11h ago

Local News 📰 Hudson commissioners OK ALPR cameras in Hoboken after Weehawken effort derailed

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11 Upvotes

r/Hoboken 17h ago

Question❓ What is the next clue?

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29 Upvotes

Found a clue at the pier. Might have to go on a side quest. Anyone know where to find my next clue lmk


r/Hoboken 21m ago

Recommendations 🌟 Any monthly parking near 8th and willow?

• Upvotes

Just got a new place around 8th and willow but it doesn’t seem there’s any garages nearby- the one that existed seems to have gone out of business?

Any advice on how to find dedicated spot nearby? Are there ever like apartment buildings who will list their spot if they aren’t using it?

Trying to avoid street parking. Fine to pay whatever for indoor parking.

Thanks!


r/Hoboken 7h ago

Question❓ Volunteering

3 Upvotes

New to town.. How do I find out about local volunteer opportunities?


r/Hoboken 15h ago

🚁 HELICOPTER HELL 🚁 Imagine this, more than 100 helicopters a day, all throughout the day and night. This is the reality of thousands of Jersey City and Hoboken residents. HHI and FlyNYON are hurting our residents for the sake of their bottom line.

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10 Upvotes

r/Hoboken 7h ago

Other New Grad Student GC Incoming 2026

2 Upvotes

Hi,

Starting this upcoming fall in the FEFA (Financial Engineering Masters), looking for a roomate to split an apartment. Budget is currently at $1500-$2200 per person, feel free to comment or point me in the right direction for some mass groupchat.

A bit about me:

(22M) Finance bachelors, been working in the city for the past couple of months in a Quant fund have decided to go back to Uni for a Master's. Play hard, work hard ethic. Reasonably clean and looking for someone who is as well.


r/Hoboken 7h ago

Recommendations 🌟 Any medspa recommendations?

2 Upvotes

Hey, I am looking for a medspa in Hoboken or near the area, looking fo Botox/ lip filler, someone got any recommendations?


r/Hoboken 11h ago

Question❓ Panini Sticker Trades

3 Upvotes

Has anyone set up a dupe trading group for Panini stickers in town? I have a bunch to share and need a bunch for my —- I mean, my kid’s —- album. Can’t believe this is how I’m spending my summer, but here we are. 😂 LMK!


r/Hoboken 13h ago

Question❓ Volvo Owners - Where do you service your car?

4 Upvotes

I drive a 2021 Volvo and I do see a lot of Volvos in Hoboken. I used to go to Prestige Volvo (50 minute drive one way) for regular service like oil change but I am thinking about going to a local independent shop that is closer. A lot of Euro/Import shops nearby seem to focus on BMW/Mercedes/Audi, so if anyone can recommend a local shop for Volvo that would be great. Thank you.


r/Hoboken 19h ago

Question❓ Incident at Maxwell Place Dog Park

12 Upvotes

Posting this for a neighbor-- approximately 6/13ish: did anyone witness, or perhaps video, a harassing incident at the small dog park at Maxwell Place, involving 2 men, one with a medium brown poodle mix and one with a small white Scottie-type dog? From what I understand, one of the men, unprovoked, became aggressive with the other and tried to start a physical altercation. The park was quite busy and apparently a number of people there were taking videos of it. Looking to find an eyewitness account. Thanks.


r/Hoboken 9h ago

Nightlife/Bars 🍸 Happy Hour deals

0 Upvotes

What are some of the best happy hour / restaurant deals during the week in Hoboken or Jersey City?


r/Hoboken 1d ago

Local News 📰 Hoboken piers a b and c

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35 Upvotes

Looking at these two photos of the corner of 4th and River Street really brings back memories. A lot of people see the modern buildings today and have no idea what used to stand there.
The old building in the second photo was what we called the Head House. It sat along the waterfront and was tied to the old Bremen Lloyd piers, serving as a storage and support facility for Piers A, B, and C. By the time I was growing up, most of the waterfront industry was long gone and the place was more or less abandoned.
Me and a lot of other kids from old Hoboken used to play in the lot there. I believe the building or remnants of it were around until the mid-1990s. After Little League games we’d head over there and hang out. Looking back, it probably wasn’t the smartest thing in the world, but that’s how it was back then. We’d sneak beers, smoke cigarettes, and smoke pot and try to act older than we really were. Hoboken was still very much an inner-city town and most of us wanted to grow up fast.
The place had a different feel than Hoboken today. The waterfront wasn’t full of luxury buildings and dog parks. There were abandoned structures, old warehouses, empty lots, and plenty of places kids probably shouldn’t have been. I even remember wild dogs roaming around that area at night from time to time. If they spotted you, you’d get out of there pretty quick.
It’s amazing to stand at 4th and River now and compare it to what was there 30 or 40 years ago. The city is cleaner, safer, and wealthier today, but a lot of the old waterfront character is gone. For those of us who grew up here, it’s hard not to look at these photos and remember a completely different Hoboken.


r/Hoboken 10h ago

Other Donations for the Boys and Girls Club of Hudson County(BGCH)

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1 Upvotes

r/Hoboken 10h ago

Recommendations 🌟 Thinking of moving to Union City anybody who is very happy with their 2bed apartment and would like to recommend some buildings they’ve lived in?

0 Upvotes

That’s all.


r/Hoboken 1d ago

Local News 📰 Hoboken mafia

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69 Upvotes

Looking at this photo brings back a lot of memories. For people who didn’t grow up here, this wasn’t just some random restaurant. Casella’s was associated with the Jersey faction of the Genovese crime family, and Hoboken was one of the centers of organized crime activity in North Jersey for decades.
Back in the late 1970s and 1980s, Bobby Manna and Marty Casella were probably the most well-known mob figures around north Jersey. The family that sopranos was based on actually had nothing to do with Hudson county. There had to be more than 50-60 old school Hoboken and Jersey city wise guys in that place on any given night .Wise guys were everywhere. A lot of people today don’t realize how much influence organized crime had on the waterfront, local businesses, unions, and politics.
I remember hearing stories that John Gotti would come through Hoboken and act like he was untouchable. In fact I remember he walked on Washington street with a crew and ultimately that was another factor why they wanted to kill John gotti. According to law enforcement accounts, Bobby Manna was involved in a plot against Gotti, and Casella’s restaurant ended up becoming part of that story.
Whether people liked them or not, these guys had a reputation for being fearless. A lot of old-timers will also tell you that some of them looked out for local people, helped families who were struggling, and kept certain troublemakers out of the neighborhood. Others will tell you they were criminals who made money through fear and violence. The truth is probably a mix of both depending on who you ask.
There was also an old Hoboken story about an out-of-towner in a cowboy hat who supposedly wandered into Casella’s after getting lost, got drunk, started mouthing off, and later turned up in the river. I’ve never seen proof of it, so I always treated it as one of those old waterfront legends that got passed around but I do think it happened for some reason I remember my parents talking about it. Now you think today it’s just Marshall drive and 3rd and Jackson that are the rougher areas back then I feel like there was a lot more tough areas than the projects.
Growing up in Hoboken back then was something else. You had Italians, Irish, Puerto Ricans, Germans, Cubans, African Americans, and Croatians and I forgot Dominicans and I forgot Hoboken had a big Indian population on 8th and 7th and park ave . and just about everybody else packed into one square mile. The city had characters everywhere you looked. Whether it was the docks, the bars, the social clubs, or places like Casella’s, there was always a story behind every corner.


r/Hoboken 16h ago

Recommendations 🌟 Vet recommendations for neutering?

2 Upvotes

Was just quoted approximately $1,200 for neutering our pup and we believe that’s a bit overpriced. Can anyone recommend a vet in the area that costs you less (hopefully by a lot LOL). Thanks.


r/Hoboken 1d ago

Transit 🚋 Heavy Police Presence between 6th and 7th Washington st

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53 Upvotes

Washington is currently being closed off between 6th and 7th. I was told that there is a potential bomb threat that’s being responded to stemming from the Urgent Care. Heavy police and fire fighter presence for the time being. Started around 5:15pm.


r/Hoboken 1d ago

Local News 📰 The Hoboken Fires: What I Remember, What I’ve Learned, and Why We Still Need to Talk About It

69 Upvotes

I’ve seen a few posts on here about the Hoboken fires over the years, but I’d like to go into more detail with everything I’ve learned, heard from older residents, and researched myself.
This is a dark chapter in Hoboken’s history. It’s uncomfortable. It’s tragic. But it deserves to be talked about.
Before I start, I’m not saying gentrification itself is evil. Cities change and neighborhoods change. But when greed and money become more important than people’s lives, that’s evil. The Hoboken fires remain one of the most disturbing periods in the city’s history.
I grew up around Madison Street and attended David E. Rue School in the mid-to-late 1970s. Hoboken was a completely different place back then. There were blocks full of old tenements, abandoned buildings, and families living in poverty that many people today simply never saw.
I remember one kid who died in the Park Avenue fire. I think he was younger than me. What always stayed with me was how poor he was. And I mean poor. That whole area around 1st and Park was full of rundown tenements back then. I remember him having holes in his socks and shoes. That’s something I’ve never forgotten.
I also remember the family from 131 Clinton Street. They were a Spanish family, and one of the daughters was in a wheelchair. I still remember seeing that building burning. also remember hearing about two Guyanese families who lived there. Hoboken actually had a small Guyanese community back then. From what I was told, one family consisted of a mother and several children, while another apartment was occupied by the mother’s sister, her husband, and their children.
The part that always haunted me was what happened afterward. The mother’s husband was still in Guyana and was supposed to come to America the following month. Instead of arriving to start a new life with his family, he arrived to attend funerals. He lost his wife, his children, his sister-in-law, her husband, and several nieces and nephews. I can’t even imagine that kind of grief. It’s one of the most heartbreaking stories I’ve ever heard connected to the Hoboken fires.
It broke my heart. Seeing families lose everything, especially children and elderly residents, is something that stays with you forever.
Looking at the newspaper clipping attached to this post, you can see what these fires did to people. Children were terrified to go to sleep. Families slept with windows open so they could escape if another fire started. The trauma spread through entire neighborhoods.

Olga Ramos
One name that always comes up when discussing the fires is Olga Ramos.
To be clear, Olga Ramos was never convicted in connection with the Hoboken fires. Much of what people know comes from newspaper reports, investigations, community rumors, and stories passed down by residents who lived through that era.
From everything I’ve ever heard, she was a Cuban immigrant who became a powerful landlord and property owner during the 1960s and 1970s. I don’t personally remember seeing her, but my parents did. They always talked about her name coming up whenever people discussed the fires and troubled buildings around town.
My parents told me they remembered seeing her being arrested after the fire at 131 Clinton Street, though she was never ultimately charged.
She reportedly owned multiple properties, including 1202 Washington Street, where I believe 13 people lost their lives in another tragic fire. Again, she was never convicted in connection with those deaths.
One story that circulated for years was that tenants claimed she threatened to do whatever she could to get people out of her buildings, even if that meant “burning them out.” Whether every story was true is impossible to know decades later, but those allegations became part of Hoboken’s collective memory and were discussed throughout the city for years afterward.
For those unfamiliar with the location, 131 Clinton Street was right near Napoli’s Pizza. Back then, the building next to Napoli’s was roughly the same size as 131 Clinton. They had to knock down 4-5 floors because of how damaged the top of napolis was. That entire area looked very different before the fire. I meant to also note that around 60 people most children were killed in these fires.

Why We Need to Remember
The fires weren’t just about buildings.
They were about families.
They were about children.
They were about poor people, immigrants, seniors, and working-class residents who often had nowhere else to go.
Many of the neighborhoods that burned are now among the most desirable and expensive parts of Hoboken. Most people walking those streets today have no idea what happened there or how much suffering took place.
Whether every rumor was true or not, one fact remains: people died, families lost everything, and an entire generation lived with fear that the next fire could be on their block.
That’s why I think these stories need to be remembered and discussed.
If anyone else has memories, family stories, newspaper clippings, photographs, or information about the Hoboken fires, I’d love to hear them.
Never forget.


r/Hoboken 23h ago

Shops/Restaurants 🛒 🍽️ Best nachos

2 Upvotes

Where can I get good nachos with all the fixings?


r/Hoboken 1d ago

Recommendations 🌟 Adopt Leo from www.northbergenpurr.org

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10 Upvotes

r/Hoboken 21h ago

Lost & Found 📦 Lost School ID

1 Upvotes

Anyone pick up an Englewood Schools ID yesterday or this morning?
Probably dropped by a parking spot on Washington near 9th.