A May 31, 1926 photo of firefighters at the unveiling of the Red Bank War Memorial. The photo hangs in the Navesink Hook and Ladder Company firehouse on Mechanic Street. (Photo by Brian Donohue. Click to enlarge.)
By BRIAN DONOHUE
Longtime firefighter Kevin Moss and Chief Michael Welsh hold the 100-year-old photo from the 1922 War Memorial dedication. (Photo by Brian Donohue)“Curiosity as to the names of the heroes, local pride and a widespread public desire to show appreciation for the gift of the firemen drew an enormous gathering to the exercises,” the Register reported.
When the flags hiding the statue were pulled back, locals “instantly recognized” two of the figures, the paper said.
The central figure, a Civil War veteran with one arm, represented the late Henry M. Nevius, who was circuit judge. One of his arms was shot away during a battle of the Civil War.
The figure on the left side of the monument represents Dr. Peter P. Rafferty, a Red Banker physician who served as a major during World War I. The third figure represents the traditional “unknown soldier” and is not based on anyone specific.
The ceremony program discovered in the Mechanic Street Firehouse includes a three-paragraph narrative of the firefighter-led effort to raise funds and install the monument.
There’s mention of a sealed metal box embedded within the statue containing “a complete record of this committee’s work” along with “other interesting articles.”
In its edition a few days later, The Register quotes Harry O. Degenring, chairman of the war memorial committee, in his welcome speech:
“I am proud that in the years to come, when Red Bank has grown into a big city and has a paid fire department, when your children have grown to be fathers and mothers and grandfathers and grandmothers; when they look in the vault of this memorial monument they will find deposited there papers and records showing that the monument was erected and presented by the Red Bank volunteer fire department to the town of Red Bank.”
There’s no need to open the vault.
Because DeGenering himself is still there in the Navesink Hook and Ladder, telling the story, as he stares out from that photo,11th from left in the front row.
redbankgreen editor Brian Donohue may be reached via email at [email protected] or by calling or texting 848-331-8331.



