A Look Back Nearly 94 Years Ago
As we take a look back nearly 94 years ago, the quiet town of East Brunswick found itself in the headlines for reasons both shocking and deeply tragic. On the evening of July 12, 1931, a domestic dispute between father and son ended with shattered glass, bloodshed, and a serious accusation — all revolving around a common household item: a beer pitcher.
A Family Argument Turns Violent
Alfred Williamson, a 28-year-old resident of Summit Road, East Brunswick Township, was left in critical condition after suffering a deep wound just below his heart. The cause? A jagged shard from a broken beer pitcher, allegedly wielded by his father, Ben Williamson, during a heated family altercation.
The injury, nearly twelve inches long, required over twenty stitches. According to police, Alfred lost a significant amount of blood and was rushed to St. Peter’s Hospital in New Brunswick. His condition was labeled serious, and doctors warned that infection could turn fatal.
The Beer Dispute at the Heart of It All
Police reports and court records reveal that the fight began over — quite literally — a pitcher of beer. Ben Williamson, 50, had returned from visiting relatives in Long Island City when a disagreement broke out at home. The elder Williamson claimed that Alfred had taken a pitcher of beer from the table and hurled it into a shed.
What followed was a dramatic and violent response. Ben reportedly attempted to retrieve another beer pitcher and was stopped by his son, sparking a physical struggle. During the scuffle, Ben is accused of grabbing a glass beer pitcher, breaking it, and slashing Alfred in the chest. Chief Frank Warnsdorfer of the East Brunswick Township Police, upon receiving a report, had the elder Williamson arrested after his wife, Grace, ran for help.
“He Slipped in the Garden”
Despite the serious nature of the wound, Alfred later insisted the injury was accidental. From his hospital bed, he told investigators that he had been “fooling around in the garden” when he slipped and fell onto a broken pitcher. He even claimed to have slept well the night before, though he complained of chest pain and expressed concern over his hospital stay.
Still, the police weren’t convinced. Mrs. Grace Williamson, Alfred’s mother, had run to the East Brunswick police headquarters to report the attack, adding urgency and credibility to the claims.
A Community in Disbelief
Ben Williamson, a gardener by trade, was no stranger to the township police court, having appeared several times on minor charges. However, according to Recorder William R. Smith, he was “not a drinking man” — making the beer pitcher dispute all the more puzzling.
The younger Williamson, by contrast, was described as a well-liked man with a solid reputation in the community. He worked for the National Materials Company and was known to be close with his mother. According to some, it was his attempt to protect her during the argument that sparked his father’s rage.
Prohibition and the Hidden Tensions Behind the Beer
It’s worth noting that this entire incident took place during Prohibition, a time when the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages were illegal across the United States (1920–1933). That fact makes the beer pitcher at the center of the argument not just a household item — but contraband.
Whether the beer was homemade, bootlegged, or bought on the black market, it likely represented more than just a drink. In homes across America, alcohol became a flashpoint for family tension, secrecy, and even shame. In the Williamson household, the dispute over beer may have carried added weight — not just as a disagreement over alcohol, but as a reflection of deeper frustrations in a time of economic hardship, legal anxiety, and strained domestic roles.
East Brunswick, like many towns, had residents who quietly resisted the national ban. This story, buried in the archives, offers a rare glimpse into how the Prohibition era’s social pressures could ignite violence even in small-town New Jersey.
Reflections Nearly a Century Later
In the midst of the Great Depression, tensions in households were not uncommon. Yet, this particular case stands out in East Brunswick history for its disturbing mix of family conflict and violent escalation — all triggered by something as seemingly ordinary as a beer pitcher.
Today, the “Beer Pitcher Incident” of 1931 serves as both a sobering historical snapshot and a timeless cautionary tale about anger, impulse, and the fragile nature of domestic peace.
While the ultimate outcome of the case is lost to time, its memory lingers — preserved in the yellowed pages of The Central New Jersey Home News and in the town’s collective past.