Alexander Simpson

Alexander Simpson (June 12, 1872 July 20, 1953) was an American journalist, attorney, and Democratic politician. He served in both houses of the New Jersey Legislature and as Assistant Attorney General of New Jersey.

Biography

Simpson was born in 1872 in Jersey City, New Jersey. He graduated from Jersey City High School and attended Columbia Law School but could not afford to complete his studies there. He worked for a judge and took a second job as a reporter, working for the New York Recorder and then for the New York World and New York Globe.[1]

Simpson started his political career as an election officer in Jersey City's First Ward. He was a member of the New Jersey General Assembly for three terms and the New Jersey Senate from 1920 to 1930. In 1932 he was the Democratic candidate for United States Senate, unsuccessfully opposing Republican nominee Dwight Morrow.[1]

In his position as Assistant Attorney General, Simpson achieved fame as the prosecuting attorney in the Hall-Mills Murder trial. After investigating the 1922 murder of Edward Wheeler Hall, a New Brunswick Episcopal priest, and Eleanor Reinhardt Mills, a member of Hall's choir, Simpson was assigned as a special prosecutor in 1926 in the state's case against the priest's wife and her brothers. The three defendants were never convicted and the case remained unsolved.[1]

Simpson died in 1953 at Jersey City Medical Center at the age of 81.[1]

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Party political offices
Preceded by
Frederick W. Donnelly
Democratic Nominee for the U.S. Senate (Class 2) from New Jersey
1930
Succeeded by
Percy H. Stewart
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