Frederick Beasley Ogden (July 20, 1827 - November 1, 1893) was an American attorney, jurist, and politician who served as the eighth Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey from 1865 to 1867.[1][2]
He died on November 1, 1893, from an "attack of paralysis".[6]
References
^ abcdShaw, William H. (1884). History of Essex and Hudson Counties, New Jersey. p. 1065. Frederick Beasley Ogden, a son of Elias B. D. Ogden, late a justice of the Supreme Court, was born at Paterson, July 20, 1827. received an academic education at Princeton, and graduated there in the class of 1847; studied law, and was admitted to the bar at July term, 1850, as an attorney, and as a counselor at February term, 1854. ...
^Van Alstyne, Lawrence (1907). The Ogden family in America. J.B. Lippincott company. p. 373. Judge Frederick Beasley Ogden was graduated from Princeton College in 1847. He was admitted to the bar of N. J. as attorney in July, 1850, and as counsellor in Feb., 1854, and became a prominent lawyer of Hoboken, where he served as Mayor of the city and Judge of the Dist. Court. ...
^"Frederick B. Ogden". Trenton Evening Times. November 2, 1893. Retrieved 2015-02-19. Ex-Judge Frederick B. Ogden died from an attack of paralysis. He was mayor of Hoboken in 1865-66. ...