Morbid

The 1916 Jersey Shore Shark Attacks (Part 1)

Mar 9, 2026
A retelling of the frantic summer of 1916 when multiple violent shark attacks terrorized the Jersey Shore. The conversation traces specific beach incidents, the frantic public response, and the organized hunts and precautions that followed. It also examines how a single summer reshaped cultural fear of sharks and spurred sensational media coverage.
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INSIGHT

Splashing And Dogs Amplify Shark Attraction

  • The shark likely used long-range sensory cues: splashing and distress noises drew it miles from deeper water.
  • George Burgess notes dogs' irregular paddling creates especially attractive surface commotion for sharks.
INSIGHT

How Great Whites Hunt Near Shore

  • Great whites can detect heartbeat and target vigorous splashing as signs of distressed prey, making nearshore swimmers vulnerable.
  • Attackers may inflict a crippling first bite then wait nearby for the victim to weaken before returning.
ANECDOTE

Bruder's Public Swimming Show Ends In Attack

  • Charles Bruder publicly swam to show off at Spring Lake and was struck from behind; the shark removed both his legs and tore a chunk from his abdomen.
  • Lifeguards rescued him into a boat where he described "a big gray fellow" before dying from his wounds.
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