^Howard Hathaway AikenArchived 2015-03-30 at the Wayback Machine, The History of Computing Project. Accessed June 1, 2007. "Howard Hathaway Aiken was born March 8, 1900 in Hoboken, New Jersey."
^ abcNarvaez, Alfonso A. "Hoboken", The New York Times, August 1, 1982. Accessed September 12, 2017. "Old-time residents boast of having had Frank Sinatra among their neighbors, while newcomers point to John Sayles, the writer and movie director; Glenn Morrow, the singer, and Richard Barone, principal songwriter for the musical group The Bongos."
^"W. Beutenmuller, 69, Dies; Entomologist Was Long a Curator at Natural History Museum,", The New York Times, February 25, 1934. Accessed November 22, 2020. "Tenafly, N. J., Feb. 24.-William Beutenmuller of 85 Elm Street, Tenafly, one of the leading American entomologists, who was curator of the Department of Entomology of the American Museum of Natural History from 1889 to 1910, died today in the Englewood Hospital of heart disease.... Mr. Beutenmuller was born in Hoboken, a son of William and Mathilda Hauser Beutenmuller."
^ abThis Week's Show Recap, Late Show with David Letterman, September 26, 2003. Accessed July 7, 2007. "Joe is from Hoboken, across the Hudson in New Jersey....Other celebrities who now live in Hoboken, New Jersey: Bob Borden."
^"Hoboken Now exclusive: Joanne Borgella interview". NJ.com. February 15, 2008. Accessed February 6, 2013. "American Idol hopeful Joanne Borgella took a break from rehearsals in Hollywood last night to talk to Hoboken Now about her home town, how she got her start in music, and her hopes for the future."
^Yu, Roger. "20-year-old YouTuber is tech reviewing star", USA Today March 3, 2015. Accessed September 5, 2016. "Sitting in his bedroom in Hoboken, N.J., in June, 20-year-old YouTube tech reviewing sensation Marques Brownlee held a secretly leaked iPhone 6 screen up to a camera and began stabbing repeatedly at its supposedly indestructible glass surface."
^Lambert, Bruce. "Vincent Copeland, 77, Is Dead; Led Anti-War Protests in 1960's", The New York Times, June 10, 1993. Accessed January 1, 2018. "Vincent B. Copeland, a co-founder of the Workers World Party, former labor officer and a leader of protests against the Vietnam War, died on Monday at his home in Hoboken, N.J. He was 77. "
^Holl, John. "Hoboken in the ’70s: Stayin’ Alive", The New York Times, February 25, 2007. Accessed October 22, 2018. "A companion book, From Another Time: Hoboken in the 1970s ($25), features all the photographs in the exhibition (and quite a few more) and essays by Sada Fretz, a local resident, and Anthony DePalma, a reporter for The New York Times and a Hoboken native who now lives in Montclair."
^Feiden, Douglas. "Sun Sets On 6,000 'Chainsaw Al' Says: I'm A Superstar", New York Daily News November 13, 1996. Accessed September 12, 2017. "He also has earned a slew of other monickers for purging workers, including Darth Vader, The Shredder, Rambo in Pinstripes. Dunlap, 59, was born in Hoboken and graduated from West Point."
^"The Insect Trust; Luke Faust"Archived 2012-12-01 at the Wayback Machine, Perfect Sound Forever. Accessed February 6, 2013. "I moved to Hoboken in 1963 when I was 27. I'd been there a year working on the docks and doing all kinds of jobs, studying painting, playing music occasionally. I've never been a full-time musician."
^Concert In Sinatra Park: Julio Fernandez And Friends, City of Hoboken. Accessed July 15, 2019. "He was six years old when his family left Cuba and came to Hoboken. Fernandez picked up the guitar at 8 and by the time he was a student at Hoboken High School, he was playing in different bands around town."
^Difilippo, Dana. "New Monmouth assemblywoman sets sights on pandemic recovery", New Jersey Monitor, January 18, 2022. Accessed May 2, 2023. "Born in Hoboken, Flynn is a lifelong New Jersey resident who graduated from Rutgers and Seton Hall Law School."
^"Christina Fontanelli sings 'Christmas in Italy' program" The Union City Reporter, November 28, 2010, Page 20
^Gialanella, Donna. "Ken Freedman", The Star-Ledger at NJ.com, October 14, 2007. Accessed November 9, 2016. "He brings the garbage cans in from the curb of the station's Jersey City brownstone. He carts the mail from the post office box near his home in neighboring Hoboken."
^via Associated Press. "Thomas A. Gallo, Legislator, 80", The New York Times, December 12, 1994. Accessed August 5, 2019. "Mr. Gallo, a lifelong resident of Hoboken, was secretary to the city's Board of Education. He represented Hudson County in the Assembly from 1973 to 1984. Prior to his time in the Legislature, he served as Council president, the city's director of finance and a city commissioner."
^Hack, Charles. "Hoboken native wins Black Hollywood Film Festival talent slam", The Jersey Journal, October 20, 2013. Accessed October 8, 2022. "Born and raised in Hoboken, Garcia moved to Hollywood to pursue an acting career in 2011. She was chosen from hundreds of entrants who submitted monologue entries on YouTube.com for this year's Slam."
^Kennedy, Ray. "Making All the Right Moves", Sports Illustrated, January 12, 1976. Accessed February 20, 2022. "John Grefe, 28, of Hoboken, N.J., who prepared for a game by sitting at the board with his shoes off, back straight and eyes staring into the beyond."
^"US Champion John Grefe Dies at 66", United States Chess Federation, December 24, 2013. Accessed February 20, 2022. "International Master and US Champion, John Alan Grefe, died on Sunday, December 22nd in San Francisco of kidney cancer at the age of 66. Grefe was born on September 6, 1947 in Hoboken, New Jersey."
^Rosenblum, Constance. "'Hetty': Scrooge in Hoboken", The New York Times, December 19, 2004. Accessed December 2, 2007. "At the time of her death in 1916, she had amassed a fortune estimated at $100 million, the equivalent of $1.6 billion in current dollars. Through it all she lived in small apartments in Brooklyn Heights and even -- horror of horrors! -- Hoboken."
^Weiss, Adam. "Jewish Life in Hudson County, Past and Present"Archived 2013-08-14 at the Wayback Machine, copy of article from Jewish Standard, February 1, 2008. Accessed February 6, 2013. "Hoboken and its neighbors once even had their own Chief Rabbi, the illustrious Rabbi Chaim Hirschensohn (1857–1935), who migrated from his native Palestine in 1904 to serve the Hoboken-area Jewish community."
^ abGarrets, C. "Mother's Day with Mike (and Juliet!)", NJ.com, May 9, 2008. Accessed November 9, 2016. "In addition to those Hoboken politicians, we also asked Mike Jerrick and Juliet Huddy - co-hosts of Fox's 'late night' morning show - what they had planned this weekend.The two share not just the stage on the Morning Show with Mike and Juliet, but also the city of Hoboken, where they both live. (Separately.)"
^"August William Hutaf". Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. 2018-09-21. Retrieved 2020-02-14. Hutaf was born in Hoboken, New Jersey in 1879.
^ abTesta, Jim. "Hoboken singer/songwriter Kate Jacobs releasing new album, returning to live performance", The Jersey Journal, November 5, 2010. Accessed January 21, 2018. "It's been six years since singer/songwriter Kate Jacobs released her last album, time she's spent raising two sons in her Hoboken apartment.... Another longtime Hobokenite, guitarist Dave Schramm (who's worked with Jacobs for over a decade,) produced the new album, which Jacobs says strays from her usual country/folk stylings a bit.... Jacobs recorded four albums for Hoboken's Bar None Records, the last in 2004, but Home Game will be released on Small Pond Music."
^Jay I. Kislak, Library of Congress. Accessed November 6, 2022. "Jay I. Kislak, businessman, philanthropist, aviator and history enthusiast, was born on June 6, 1922, in Hoboken, New Jersey."
^Steward, Julian H. Julian H. Steward, "Alfred L. Kroeber 1876–1960: Obituary", American Ethnography, first published in American Anthropologist, October 1961, New Series 63(5:1):1038-1087. Accessed November 9, 2016. "Alfred was born in Hoboken, New Jersey, June 11, 1876, but his family moved to New York City when he was very young."
^Weber, Bruce. "Johnny Kucks, Who Pitched Yanks to Title, Dies at 81", The New York Times, November 1, 2013. Accessed November 3, 2013. "John Charles Kucks Jr. was born in Hoboken, N.J., on July 27, 1932. His father was a butcher. He graduated from Dickinson High School in Jersey City and played one year of minor league ball in the Yankees' organization before serving in the Army.... He had lived for many years in Hillsdale, N.J."
^Hortillosa, Summer Dawn. "Artie Lange -- loving life in Hoboken and heading to Comedy Festival", The Jersey Journal, September 27, 2013. Accessed November 9, 2016. "SDH: You've been in Hoboken for 12 years. Do you like it? AL: I love it. I love the fact that you can see New York, but you're not in it ... It's perfect. I love Hoboken. It's a great community with great food and great people."
^Vaughn, Stephen L. Encyclopedia of American Journalism. 2008, page 254
^Photographer: Dorothea Lange, Library of Congress. Accessed February 6, 2013. "Dorothea Lange was born in Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1895 and studied photography in New York City before the First World War."
^ abGalant, Debra. "In Person; The Parent Not Chosen", The New York Times, April 25, 2004. Accessed February 6, 2013. "Ms. Leavitt and her husband, Jeff Tamarkin, who edits Global Rhythm, a world music magazine, did not get nearly as far as the adoptive parents in Girls in Trouble.... The 48-year-old Ms. Leavitt -- who grew up in Waltham, Mass., and moved to Hoboken in 1992 -- is no stranger to tragedy."
^Grove, Lloyd. "The Reliable Source", The Washington Post, August 16, 2001. Accessed February 6, 2013. "When G. Gordon Liddy was a puny lad in Hoboken, N.J., he roasted and ate a rat -- 'to demonstrate to myself my lack of fear,' the convicted Watergate burglar explained in his 1980 autobiography, Will."
^Staff. "Gold Tee Designer Dead. Dr. William Lowell of Jersey Patented Reddy Device in '21", The New York Times, June 25, 1954. Accessed August 6, 2019. "East Orange, N.J., June 24- Dr. William Lowell, designer of the Reddy Golf Tee, which came into universal use in the sport, died yesterday at Orange Memorial Hospital after a short illness.... Born in Hoboken, he lived in South Orange, Maplewood and Summit before moving here four years ago."
^Biography, JanetLupo.com. Accessed February 6, 2013. "She was born Janet Paula Lupo in Hoboken, NJ."
^"Janet Paula Lupo", The Jersey Journal, November 18, 2017. Accessed February 13, 2023. "Janet Paula Lupo, 67 of Hoboken passed away peacefully at the Jersey City Medical Center on Monday, November 13th.... After graduating from Hoboken High School, Janet attended Parisian Beauty Academy where she specialized in cosmetology."
^ abKocieniewski, David; and McGeehan, Patrick. "Corzine's Mix: Bold Ambitions, Rough Edges", The New York Times, November 2, 2005. Accessed August 8, 2018. "But within a year, he had left his wife and the stately New Jersey house in Summit where they had raised their three children. He moved to a Hoboken apartment building that was also home to the Giants quarterbacks Eli Manning and Jesse Palmer, who also starred in the reality series The Bachelor."
^Conte, Annemarie. "His Name is Earl", New Jersey Monthly, February 6, 2008. Accessed September 6, 2020. "After graduating from New York’s School of Visual Arts in the early 1980s, McDonnell moved to Hoboken, where there was a community of underground cartoonists.... 'When Earl and Mooch go into town, you can see the influence of Hoboken in things like the Fatty Snax deli.'"
^Foster, Robert; Metz, Holly, Interviewers (2006). "Club Zanzibar: Recollections of Dorothy McNeil"(PDF). Hoboken Museum.org. Vanishing Hoboken: The Hoboken Oral History Project. Hoboken Historical Museum and Friends of the Hoboken Public Library. Retrieved 21 April 2020. {{cite web}}: |first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Keturah Orji, United States Olympic Committee. Accessed August 9, 2016. "Birthplace: Hoboken, N.J.; Hometown: Mount Olive, N.J.; High School: Mount Olive High School (Mount Olive, NJ) '14"
^"Alumni Profile: Maria Pepe", FDU Magazine, Fall / Winter 1998. Accessed August 20, 2008. ""As a young girl in Hoboken, N.J., in the early 1970s, Pepe often joined the boys' stick-ball or wiffle-ball games. But when her fellow players decided to sign up for Little League, she thought she might have to sit on the sidelines.... Once she got permission and passed the tryouts, the young pitcher became the first girl to don a Little League uniform."
^"10 Bookends Memoirs, essays personality-filled", San Antonio Express-News, November 10, 1991. Accessed August 20, 2008. "Now we hear more about that old bandit and other loves in "Chicago Days/Hoboken Nights" (Addison-Wesley, $17.95), a collection of stories about Pinkwater's boyhood in Chicago and his early years as an artist in Hoboken."
^Kurtz, Howard. "Pulitzer-Winner Anna Quindlen to Leave N.Y. Times", Los Angeles Times, September 10, 1994. Accessed August 20, 2008. "But Quindlen, who works out of her Hoboken, N.J., home and prizes her time with her three children, ages 11, 9 and 5, decided the price was too high."
^Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey, Volume 201, Part 2, p. 276. J.A. Fitzgerald., 1985. "Assemblyman Ranieri was born in Hoboken on Feb. 25, 1929. He attended St. Michael's High School, Union City, and Leonia High School, Leonia. He was graduated at St. Peter's College in 1950, and has taken additional courses at Rutgers Law School and San Francisco Law School."
^Widdicombe, Ben. "New York Minute: Gallo bails on 'Giallo'", New York Daily News, February 7, 2008. Accessed August 20, 2008. "A-Rod closed a deal on two multimillion-dollar apartments in Hoboken's Hudson Tea complex (which is also home to Giants QB Eli Manning), reports Chaunce Hayden in Steppin' Out magazine."
^Seracini, Debbie. Descriptive Finding Guide for Rohr Aircraft Corporation, San Diego Air & Space Museum, June 20, 2013. Accessed August 8, 2018. "Frederick Hilmer Rohr (born Hoboken, New Jersey, May 10, 1896; died San Diego, California, November 8, 1965) entered the aircraft industry as an independent metal parts manufacturer in 1923 and in 1925 became a general superintendent of the Prudden (later Solar) Aircraft Company for four years where he developed a punch-and-die 'drop hammer' system."
^Baldassari, Arlene Phalon. "The Road from Rio; From the Marvelous City to the Mile Square City", The Hudson Reporter, December 30, 2012. Accessed November 9, 2016. "How do you get from Rio De Janeiro to Hoboken? For Carlos Saldanha, the answer was not one you could find on Google Maps. The director of three Ice Age movie blockbusters, as well as the critically acclaimed Rio, drew up his own map to success. Fortunately for us, he makes Hoboken his home and shared with us the story of this journey."
^Hughes, Robert. "How The West Was Spun", Time magazine, May 13, 1991. Accessed August 14, 2007. "It is of Charles Schreyvogel, a turn-of-the-century Wild West illustrator, painting in the open air. His subject crouches alertly before him: a cowboy pointing a six-gun. They are on the flat roof of an apartment building in Hoboken, N.J."
^Garetts, C. "Meet Your Neighbor: Steve Shelley", NJ.com, June 21, 2007. Accessed November 9, 2016. "Shelley -- who turns 44 on Saturday -- was born in Michigan but now lives somewhere in the Mile Square City; Smells Like Records, which he founded in 1992, also is based here."
^Staff. "The Will of the Late Edwin A. Stevens.", The New York Times, September 20, 1868. Accessed October 7, 2017. "The will of the late Edwin A. Stevens, of Hoboken, was opened and read in the presence of his family on Thursday afternoon. His real estate in Hoboken and Weehawken is estimated to be worth from $28,000,000 to $27.000,000, and altogether it is estimated that he was worth upward of $50,000,000."
^Colonel John Stevens, IIIArchived 2013-02-20 at the Wayback Machine, Stevens Institute of Technology. Accessed February 6, 2013. "After the war in 1784, John Stevens, III, or Colonel John as he became known, bought at public auction from the state of New Jersey land which had been confiscated from a Tory landowner. The land, described as 'William Bayard's farm at Hoebuck' comprised approximately what is now the city of Hoboken."
^Verde, Tom. "The View From/Mystic; New York Yacht Club Reclaims Its Clubhouse", The New York Times, December 26, 1999. Accessed February 6, 2013. "Built in 1845 at the Hudson River estate of the club founder, John Cox Stevens (now the site of the Stevens Institute of Technology), in Hoboken, N.J., the 987 square-foot, chapel-like building served as the organization's clubhouse until 1868, when the yacht club moved its headquarters to Staten Island."
^Staff. "New York City: Death of Robert L. Stevens", The New York Times, April 21, 1856. Accessed October 7, 2017. "Robert L. Stevens died a this residence, at Hoboken, at 4 o'clock on Sunday morning. The flags of the Hoboken boats were worn at half-mast during the day, and a very general expression of sorrow at Hoboken indicated that the residence there recognized his departure as that of one who had been best benefactor of the place. Mr. Stevens was born at Hoboken, at or near his last of residence, in the year 1798 and is consequently about 68 years old."
^Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey,, 1975, p. 190. J.A. Fitzgerald, 1975. Accessed July 22, 2019. "Mrs. Rosemarie Totaro (Dem., Denville) - Assemblywoman Totaro was born in Hoboken June 4, 1933. She attended Weehawken High School."
^Staff. "The Cake Boss is just everyone's Buddy", Little Ferry Local, October 23, 2009. Accessed September 5, 2016. "Valastro was born in Hoboken and moved to Redneck Drive in Little Ferry when he was just 1 year old."
^"Philip A. White Prominent Black Aristocrat of New York (1823-1891)", Trailblazing Through Greenwich Village, Spring 2012. Accessed February 5, 2022. "Phillip grew up in Hoboken, New Jersey with 5 other siblings. Later on around 8 years old the Whites moved to the Lower Manhattan, New York."
^Baldwin, Carly. "From Slave to Stage Star: "Blind Tom" Wiggins at the Hoboken Museum", The Star-Ledger, November 28, 2007. Accessed February 6, 2013. "This Saturday, December 1, at 4 p.m., the Hoboken Historical Museum welcomes scholar and musician John Davis back to Hoboken for a talk and to play recordings of the music of the 1850s pianist and music savant 'Blind Tom' Wiggins, who retired in Hoboken at the end of his career."
^Frank Winters - Class of 2012, Hudson County Sports Hall of Fame. Accessed February 6, 2012. "A native of Hoboken, Winters is a former American football center in the National Football League for the Cleveland Browns (1987-88), New York Giants (1989), Kansas City Chiefs (1990-91), and the Green Bay Packers (1992-2002)."