"TEP
What possible rational would there be to take his furniture and personal belongings in addition to foreclosing on his home, especially considering the circumstances at the time? The country was in a severe depression and extraordinary measures were put in place to prevent foreclosures, much less taking everything. At the time in NJ they gave the defaulting owner an additional two years to make good before the home would be sold. Did Tilly go into default in the Spring of 1936, when supposedly the house was sold, or did he go into default two years prior? That question is not addressed in Phil's story."
Tom:
What possible rational would there be to take his furniture and personal belongings in addition to foreclosing on his home?
The rationale is the failure of a homeowner or property owner to pay debts such as mortgage payments and taxes owed. What eventually results from that is a lien, in this case a tax lien on real or personal property that can and does result in foreclosure and sale of the property to satisfy the government taxes owed. Anyone with some valid equitable interest in real or personal property can record that interest on the title of real property to protect their equitable right of redemption in that property. That's why homeowners record their equitable interest in real property as do mortgage lenders (mortgagees). Tax liens almost always trump other recorded encumbrances on property such as mortgages. The latter is why most all mortgage lenders escrow tax payments on property from a mortgagor (borrower).
The true story of what happened to Tillinghast's Harrington Park house in 1936 is not going to be correctly answered by your contention that those were tough times and Tillinghast's house could not possibly have been foreclosed on. I don't even know where Harrington Park is or even what kind of taxes Tillinghast owed (federal or local real estate taxes) but I can probably guarantee you that the entire proceedings of what happened back then in 1936 is all recorded on what is known as the Title and the title run on that property. To determine that all one needs to do is go to the Recorder of Deeds probably at the Harrington Park county seat, look up that particular property's history and it would all be right there-----all the former owners, all the former encumbrances, mortgages, liens, tax liens, foreclosure proceedings, auction and sale, the name of the new owner etc etc. This is what a Title Report is all about that most any buyer and their mortgage lenders require before the settlement on real property to be sure the particular property is not in some way encumbered by someone's right of equitable redemption. This is also why most all buyers and lenders require and buy title insurance (to protect themselves and their equitable interest against the rights of redemption of someone or something with an equitable claim on the real property in question).
I'm certainly not going to go do that but if one did, that is the best way to determine what precisely happened and when and how to Tillinghast's house and property in Harrington Park.
If someone bothered to do all that and it squared with Phil Young's and the Tillinghast family story of what happened to Tilly's Harrington Park property in 1936 and you still said it makes no sense to you and could not have happened, well then, Tom MacWood, I'm afraid I really wouldn't have much idea what to say to you or about you and your ability to analyze and discuss these kinds of things on this website, other than it's pretty much all fruitless and futile.