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Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Dominick Kay - Bootlegger

Dominick Klucznick, aka. Dominick Kay was a contractor, garbage man and sand and gravel dealer in Morrisville who got in a bit of trouble in the year after Prohibition was repealed. 

Kay started out with petty crime. In 1920 he was fined for driving without a license, and accused of stealing tools from Miss Daisy M. Hall.

...She alleged that Kay stole some tools, piping and a forge, valued at $500...McGovern said that he located ths stolen goods on Kay's property in Morrisville. Oct 17, 1920 Trenton Times

Kay advertised many times in the Trenton Times his Sand and Gravel business, looking for laborers, selling mules, lumber and machinery. In 1924 he advertises 2 farms for sale, saying "need money."

Sep 27, 1924 Trenton Times

In 1930 Dominick Kay was awarded a 5 year garbage contract for Morrisville. He had been the garbage collector for the past 3 years, when collection first started. Before this contract would run its course, he would be jailed for liquor violations.

Morrisville Man Held After Raids - July 26, 1934 Trenton Times

Federal agents and officers of the State Liquor Control Board raided two farms of Dominick Kay, Morrisville contractor, early yesterday, alleged liquor being seized in both places.

The first fair was conducted by control board officers at a farm in Wrightstown Township, near Newtown, where, police said, equipment for the manufacture of liquor was found, together with a quantity of the finished product.

As a result of this raid, Kay was released in $1,000 bail for a further hearing before Justice of the Peace W. Carlisle Hobensack, at Doylestown. William D. Mock, said to reside on the farm was also arrested.

The Federal agents conducted the second raid at Kay's other farm on West Trenton Avenue, Morrisville, on the old Lincoln Highway. A man, who said his name was Tito Bono, of Hudson Street, Trenton, was held in $3,000 bail at a hearing before United States Commissioner Walker in Philadelphia. Agents said they found a 1,000-gallon still, 350 gallons of alleged alcohol and 1,000 gallons of supposed wine.

Kay denied all knowledge of the still being on the Wrightstown farm.

Liquor operation at Kay's Morrisville farm
Dominick Kay was held on $11,000 bail to await Federal Grand Jury action. Kay admitted that he knew the stills were on his property, but said that he had leased the building to "a red-headed man."

A few months later, Kay pled guilty and received the heaviest penalty imposed in a Philadelphia court since prohibition repeal. He was sentenced to serve two years in the Federal Penitentiary at Lewisburg and to pay a $3,000 fine. Federal agents testified that Kay owned 16 farms in Pennsylvania and 3 in New Jersey and had purchased $100,000 worth of real estate in the last 2 years.

In December, Kay's friends made a plea to have him paroled by the Federal court. They argued that his garbage contract wasn't worth what they said it was, and that he didn't own nearly the amount of real estate that they claimed. It is unclear whether or not the plea worked, but by 1936 he was back on the streets.

Dominick Kay seemed to change his ways, as in 1943 we see him offer up a 30-acre tract for a "Victory Garden", which were promoted by the government during World War II.
Dominick Kay, building material dealer and contracting wrecker, today offered a tract of about 30 acres on his property on West Trenton Avenue at the Morrisville boundary line for use as Victory Gardens
His Invitation was extended to anyone in Morrisville, or in the general Trenton area, for that matter, who chose to work the land. He can be reached for arrangements by a visit to his establishment or by telephone. Apr 28, 1943 Trenton Times
 

If there were any ill feelings towards Kay they must have subsided, because by 1945 he once again had the garbage contract for Morrisville. This time he had a new method of collection and requested that all refuse be placed in metal covered containers. It was the first time unwrapped garbage would be collected in Morrisville. 

Dominick Kay died in April of 1947, aged 59. He was born in Poland and lived in Morrisville for 36 years. An old timer in my neighborhood said that Dominick Kay was involved with the Booze Truck Bridge Collapse, that I wrote about previously. 

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