In the interim period between the 1964 Supreme Court decision Reynolds v. Sims which required the creation of state legislature districts to be made as equal in population as possible, and the 1973 creation of the 40-district map, the 11th District consisted of all of Essex County. Because of its large population, the 11th Senate District elected multiple people to the State Senate at-large. It was further divided into six Assembly districts in 1967 and 1969, and five in 1971; in all cases, each district elected two people to serve in the General Assembly. The members elected to the Senate from this district are as follows:
Session
Senators elected
1966–1967
4
Nicholas Fernicola
Maclyn Goldman
John J. Giblin
Hutchins F. Inge
1968–1969
6
Michael Giuliano
Gerardo Del Tufo
Alexander Matturri
James Wallwork
Milton Waldor
David W. Dowd
1970–1971
6
Michael Giuliano
Gerardo Del Tufo
Alexander Matturri
James Wallwork
Milton Waldor
David W. Dowd
1970–1971
6
Michael Giuliano
Gerardo Del Tufo
Alexander Matturri
James Wallwork
Milton Waldor
Charles DeMarco
1972–1973
5
Michael Giuliano
Ralph DeRose
James Wallwork
Frank J. Dodd
Wynona Lipman
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The members elected to the General Assembly from the 11th Senate District are as follows:
Session
District 11A
District 11B
District 11C
District 11D
District 11E
District 11F
1968–1969
George C. Richardson
Paul Policastro
Ralph R. Caputo
Kenneth T. Wilson
Herbert Rinaldi
Philip D. Kaltenbacher
1968–1969
Walter J. Vohdin
Ronald Owens
C. Richard Fiore
Frank J. Dodd
John N. Dennis
Thomas Kean
1970–1971
Paul Policastro
George C. Richardson
Ralph R. Caputo
Herbert Rinaldi
Kenneth T. Wilson
Thomas Kean
1970–1971
James Lordi
Ronald Owens
C. Richard Fiore
David Goldfarb
John N. Dennis
Philip D. Kaltenbacher
1972–1973
George C. Richardson
Anthony Imperiale
Carl Orechio
Eldridge Hawkins
Thomas Kean
District eliminated
1972–1973
Ronald Owens
Frank Megaro
John N. Dennis
Peter G. Stewart
Philip D. Kaltenbacher
District eliminated
District composition since 1973
When the 40-district state legislature apportionment was created in 1973, the 11th District consisted of central Monmouth County suburban townships including Freehold, Howell, Colts Neck, Manalapan, Marlboro, Holmdel, and Hazlet with a spur from Tinton Falls to Sea Bright, and continuing up the Atlantic coastline to Highlands and Atlantic Highlands. In the 1981 redistricting, the district hugged the Monmouth County municipalities along the coastline from Manasquan to Atlantic Highlands inclusive of other inland townships and boroughs including Wall Township, Neptune Township, Ocean Township, and Oceanport. The 1990s iteration of the district remained largely the same with the exception of coastline municipalities south of South Belmar shifting to the 10th and the addition of Eatontown, Fair Haven, Rumson, and West Long Branch. Following the 2001 redistricting, most of the boroughs shifted to the 10th in the 1991 redistricting returned to the 11th while Fair Haven and Oceanport were shifted to the 12th.
Election history
Described by NJ.com as "perhaps the biggest upset of the night", Republican Jennifer Beck lost her bid for re-election to the Senate in 2017 to Democratic challenger Vin Gopal, in what was the third-most expensive of the 120 legislative races statewide, with total spending in excess of $4 million. The district had been represented only by Republicans since 1992. With the addition of heavily Democratic communities like Asbury Park in the 2011 apportionment, Democrats gained a 32%-23% margin over Republicans in numbers of registered voters. Democrats Joann Downey and Eric Houghtaling won the two Assembly seats in 2015 and Gopal's 2017 win over Beck, combined with holds by Assembly incumbents Downey and Houghtaling, put all three District 11 seats in the hands of Democrats.