The Heroic Gangster_The Story of Monk Eastman, From the Streets of New York to the Battlefields of Europe and Back

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The Heroic Gangster_The Story of Monk Eastman, From the Streets of New York to the Battlefields of Europe and Back Page 36

by Neil Hanson


  Among the many very helpful NARA staff I encountered, special thanks to William G. Seibert, R. Reed Whitaker, Kimberlee Ried, and Timothy Rives. My thanks also to Eli Paul, museum director, and James M. Barkley, education program coordinator, at the National World War I Museum in Kansas City, Missouri; and to Ed Tracy, executive director of the Taiwani Foundation, and Colonel James Pritzker and the staff of the excellent Pritzker Military Library in Chicago. Walter Bradford of the U.S. Army Center for Military History provided much useful information, and my thanks also to Martin Gedra, archivist at NARA; Mitchell Yockelson, investigative archivist, Office of the Inspector General at NARA and author of the excellent Borrowed Soldiers; and Lori Miller, for hunting down material held in the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis, Missouri. My sincere thanks also to Coreen Hallenbeck for her meticulous additional research work for me in the New York State Archives in Albany, and to Sean McCrohon for his enthusiastic, indefatigable, and invaluable work for me at NARA in Washington, D.C., College Park, and elsewhere. My special thanks are due also to the late Edith Evans Asbury, to Barbara Ross of the New York Daily News, and to Roch Dunin-Wasowicz, for their collective help in enabling me to consult the papers of the late Herbert Asbury, which had lain undisturbed in a Manhattan basement since Mr. Asbury’s death in 1963.

  As ever, I’m indebted to my British agent, Mark Lucas, and to Alice Saunders at Lucas Alexander Whitley in London, and to Kim Wither-spoon, David Forrer, and Rose Marie Morse at Inkwell Management in New York. I’m also very grateful to Barry Fast for his help and his insights into New York, the manuscript, and—most vital of all—where to go for dinner in Manhattan.

  Particular thanks are due to my editor, Andrew Miller, and to Andrew Carlson at Alfred A. Knopf in New York, whose thoughtful and insightful critiques of the early drafts of the book were invaluable to me. I’m also grateful to Maria Massey, Sara Eagle, and the rest of the team at Knopf and Vintage, including the legendary and now honorably retired Ashbel Green.

  Finally, my thanks to the Royal Literary Fund for the Fellowship awarded to me in 2007–2009, and to the fellowship officer, Steve Cook, for his help and support. I also acknowledge with great gratitude a grant toward the costs of my American research from the Authors’ Foundation at the Society of Authors in London.

  Every effort has been made to contact copyright holders and the author will be pleased to hear from the descendants or administrators of any copyright holders he has been unable to trace.

  Glossary

  all-sorts drink also known as “dog’s-nose” or “swipes,” made from wringing out the cloths used to wipe the counters in dives and low groggeries

  amusers operators who threw snuff or pepper in victims’ eyes; under the pretext of offering help, an accomplice then robbed them

  anglers petty thieves who used hooked sticks or fishing lines through mailboxes or open windows to steal property or keys

  badger man who, after his woman accomplice had lured a victim to her room for sex, would burst in posing as an irate husband and confront the victim, but then allow himself to be mollified with cash

  bag of nails total confusion, like a shaken-up bag of nails

  ballum-rancum ball at which all the dancers were criminals or prostitutes

  barrel-boarder lowest kind of drunken sot (because they often slept draped over a barrel or on bare wooden boards)

  bat streetwalker who worked at night (also known as an owl)

  bedizened dressed in gaudy fashion

  betting his eyes a punter who watches a game but doesn’t bet

  Billingsgate swearing (after the foul language of the porters at London’s Billingsgate fish market)

  billy club or bludgeon

  blind pig; blind tiger illegal bar concealed behind an innocuous-looking storefront

  blink shut your eyes to what is going on around you

  boardinghouse the Tombs, or any prison

  booster shoplifter

  bounce evict with violence

  bucket shop worst type of bar; a dive where beer was sold by the bucket

  bufe dog

  bufe-napper dog thief; rogue

  bull cop

  bull traps thieves who impersonated cops

  bundle woman; girlfriend

  bundle thief robber specializing in targeting women

  cab brothel

  cadet recruiter of prostitutes; pimp

  cant thieves’ argot (also known as flash)

  cap name; join in or assist with a job

  capper confederate, especially one who makes false winning bets at cards to encourage victims to play

  cherry young girl

  chopped up stolen goods divided into smaller lots and hidden in different places

  City College the Tombs

  cold pig victim robbed of his clothes; a dead body

  cop policeman (from the copper badges worn by the first police under Mayor Fernando Wood)

  courtisans shyster lawyers, especially at the Tombs

  cramped killed; murdered; hanged

  crimps seamen’s boardinghouses, run by corrupt owners who would drug or blackjack their victims and sell them as crewmen to the captains of outward-bound ships

  crow sentry

  cut up turned out to be

  cut up very fat turned out to be very rich

  daylights eyes

  dip, dipper pickpocket

  dog’s-nose see all-sorts

  doorman lookout

  doubler a punch hard enough to make someone double up

  drab disreputable woman; hag

  dropper operator; part of a wallet-dropping gang

  dustman dead man

  earth-bath grave

  elbow turn corner; get out of sight

  facer brim-full glass; person who blocked pursuers of a criminal

  fence receiver of stolen goods

  flash, the thieves’ argot (also known as cant)

  flat sucker; mark

  floorer knockout punch

  four-flusher a cheat, a bluffer (from a poker player who lays down four cards of the same suit, keeping his other card of a different suit half-hidden in the hope of persuading the other players that he has a flush)

  Friday-face dismal (executions originally took place on Fridays)

  gat gun

  glim, glimmer eye

  goads cappers

  goo-goos reformers (derisive contraction of “good government”)

  gorilla, guerilla enforcer, gang member

  grafter con man; thief

  groaners church and funeral thieves

  groggery bar; dive

  gropers blind men

  gun pickpocket; thief (probably derived from the Yiddish gonif)

  gun-moll woman pickpocket

  hard metal

  heeler operator, part of pocketbook gang, who trod on the heels of the victim to draw his attention to the dropped wallet that was the bait in the scam

  high tide plenty of money

  hog in armor blustering officeholder

  hog in togs well-dressed idler

  hoist steal by climbing through window

  hook pickpocket; thief

  hush-stuff bribe paid to a witness to buy silence

  Island, the Blackwell’s (now Roosevelt) Island, especially the penitentiary

  jammed killed; murdered; hanged

  Jersey justice rough justice

  jinglers coins

  kettle pocket watch

  kidsman a Fagin

  kiting restless; on Wall Street, wild speculation

  knockout drops chloral hydrate, or any drug that rendered the victim unconscious

  knucks brass knuckles; pickpockets

  lamp eye

  layout faro or stuss term; the oilcloth or green baize on which one of each card, ace to king, is pasted; players placed their bets on the card of their choice before the pack was turned over

  leather wallet

  leg bail absconding while on bail
r />   lighthouse lookout

  long large price

  low tide nearly broke

  lush drink; a drunk

  lush-roller, lush-worker thief preying on drunks

  mab whore

  mack pimp

  moll woman

  moll-buzzer pickpocket specializing in targeting women

  moon month (usually describing imprisonment, e.g., “He’s gone to the Island for a moon”)

  mosh eat and leave without paying

  mount give false testimony

  mounter one who gives false testimony

  mugwump do-gooder

  my uncle pawnbroker

  nailed arrested

  nippers tool used by hotel thieves for turning keys from outside

  nook-and-corner men thieves lurking in the shadows or obscure hiding places

  office nonverbal signal or information

  officer one giving nonverbal signals or information

  on a/the string sending someone on a fool’s errand; flirting with or luring a sucker

  on it easy and dishonest living, e.g., as a prostitute

  owl night streetwalker (also known as a bat)

  panel-crib place fitted with a sliding panel, false wardrobe, or other concealed opening or door for the robbery of a victim occupied with a prostitute

  panel-thief one carrying out robberies in a panel-crib

  peached turned police informer; squealed

  penny-weighter sneak thief specializing in switching fake gems for real ones

  picker-up roper-in, drawer of suckers to gambling dens, saloons, or brothels

  piker one who bets very small amounts

  pipe fiend opium smoker

  poke pocketbook

  prospecting looking for a victim or something to steal

  rabbit rowdy person

  rabbit-sucker young slummer

  rag-water drink of all kinds, sometimes literally the wringings from the cloth used to wipe the bar

  red gold; a cent

  right bower right-hand man, derived from the name for the jack of trumps, the second-highest card in the game of euchre

  rocked in a stone cradle born in prison

  roped led on; led astray; tricked

  roper-in drawer of suckers to gambling dens, saloons, or brothels

  rounder one who hangs around stuss games but does not play

  running through not allowing a sucker to win even a single bet

  sachem Tammany boss (from a Native American term for a wise man or chief)

  school gang of thieves

  scratch cash; roll of bills not carried in a pocketbook; also, a line drawn in the middle of a boxing ring—anyone not “up to scratch” at the start of a round was ruled to have lost

  second-story men men who broke into buildings through second-floor windows; the term could also carry an implication of cowardice: second-story men were too scared to climb higher, and too frightened of a confrontation with a house-owner to break in on the first floor

  shady glim dark lantern

  shanty black eye

  sheeny Jewish thief; low thief

  sheriff bouncer

  side pocket saloon in out-of-the-way or unexpected place

  sifting going through a purse or pocketbook

  skin purse

  skull head of the house; boss

  slap down cash price of admission

  slungshot type of blackjack; heavy weight contained in a leather or cloth sling

  smoke lies told to conceal the truth

  snake sly thief; one who hides in a building to let in his accomplices after dark

  spit out free; remove

  stalls accomplices who would get in the way of pursuers

  stargazers prostitutes (because they spent most of their time on their backs)

  start, old start the Tombs

  stiff a corpse; but also anything printed

  stun cheat

  stuss also known as “Jewish faro,” a card game in which cards were dealt from a metal box, faceup, and placed on the “layout,” where the bets had been laid by gamblers betting on which card would be turned over next

  swaddler “The End Is Nigh” type of street-corner speaker who drew a crowd so that his pickpocket accomplices could go to work

  swipes see all-sorts

  take the shine out lower someone’s self-esteem

  tooth music enjoying a meal; good food

  touch theft; proceeds of theft

  trinkets knife and revolver

  turf racecourse

  up the spout pawned (from the spout or chute through which bulkier items were sent to a different floor of the pawnshop)

  vampire blackmailer preying on “respectable” men who patronized prostitutes

  Venus curse venereal disease

  waxy light-fingered

  weeding taking part of money or goods, but leaving enough to avoid arousing suspicion

  whipped cheated; beaten

  white slave trade prostitution

  wind money

  wire pickpocket

  working the rattler carrying out robberies on streetcars

  yegg burglar; safecracker

  NOTES

  ABBREVIATIONS

  A.E.F.—American Expeditionary Force

  AMHI—American Military History Unit

  NARA—National Archives and Records Administration; unless otherwise specified, NARA refers to records held at the National Archives at College Park, Maryland

  Prologue A LOT OF LITTLE WARS

  1 FIVE FOOT SEVEN B0100, Physician’s Register, Sing Sing Prison.

  2 “THE AFTERMATH OF SMALLPOX” and “AN ODD DANDIFIED TOUCH” Rich Cohen, Tough Jews, 44.

  3 “A LOT OF LITTLE WARS” Herbert Asbury, The Gangs of New York, 256.

  4 ONE NAVAL OFFICER New York Times, December 29, 1920.

  1 THE HALL OF TEARS

  1 OSTERMAN Herbert Asbury, The Gangs of New York, 256.

  2 BORN IN DECEMBER 1873 Census of the United States, New York (Manhattan), New York City, Greater New York, roll T9_896; page 389.1000, ED 610, image 0781; Census of the United States, New York (Manhattan), New York City, Greater New York, roll T623 1092; page 5B, ED 240; Sing Sing Admissions Register, April 23, 1904, NY State Archives, B0 143, page 157, vol. 36, box 14; State of New York, Certificate and Record of Marriage 4106, February 8, 1911.

  3 SAMUEL HAD BEEN BORN, ANGLO-SAXON ORIGINS, and A METHODIST PASTOR Borough of Manhattan, death certificates 33332, 29833; New York Times, December 31, 1920.

  4–5 THOMAS MCSPEDON and VIOLENCE, CRUELTY Census of the United States, New York Ward 19, District 2, New York, New York, roll M653_815; page 0, image 600; Ninth Census of the United States, New York Ward 13, District 3, New York, New York, roll M593_1031; page 70, image 140; T; New York Times, November 24, 1877.

  6 1880 CENSUS, DIED OP CONSUMPTION, and DESCRIBING HERSELF AS A WIDOW Census of the United States, New York (Manhattan), New York City, Greater New York, roll T9_896; family history film: 1254896; page 389.1000, ED 610, image 0781; New York Death Certificate 29833; Trow’s New York City Directory, 1878, 1880; Trow’s New York City Directory, 1887.

  7 93 SOUTH THIRD STREET and ALLEGED THAT MONK’S PARENTS Lain’s Brooklyn City Directory, 1883–1899; Asbury, The Gangs of New York, 256.

  8 TIMOTHY EASTMAN Census of the United States, New York Ward 19, District 9, New York, New York, roll M593_1042; page 230, image 463; Ninth Census of the United States, New York Ward 19, District 21, New York, New York, roll M593 1005; page 408, image 251; New York Times, January 19, 1859, October 13, 1893.

  9 “CHOSE FOR HIS SCHOOL” New York Daily Tribune, December 27, 1920.

  10 “TRIUMPH OF MECHANICS” and “A SPARKLING GEM” Sydney Brooks, “London and New York,” 297; Edward K. Spann, The New Metropolis, 137.

  11 BANDIT’S ROOST and “SOME FORM OF CREEPER” Luc Sante, Introduction to Jacob A. Riis, How the Other Half Lives, xvii, 17; Geoffrey Moorhouse, Imperial City, 82.

&n
bsp; 12 “JEW BREAD,” “AN ENGLISH WORD,” and “THE PIG MARKET” Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, 30; Jacob A. Riis, How the Other Half Lives, 91, 89.

  13 “WITH RARE IMPARTIALITY” Henry Collins Brown, ed., Valentine’s Manual of Old New York, 16–17.

  14 “THE KIND OF DIRTY PEOPLE” and “THE SCUM OF IMMIGRATION” Methodist Bishop James Cannon, quoted in Stephen Fox, Blood and Power, 14; Eliot Lord et al., The Italian in America, 190–91.

  15 ONE IN SEVEN EAST SIDE and “ONE FINDS THE BLACKEST” Walter Scott Andrews, “A Study of the East Side Courts,” 23, 22; Charles Gardner, The Doctor and the Devil, 41.

  16 “THE SUICIDE WARD,” INFANT MORTALITY RATES, and “THE RICH FLED” Justin Kaplan, Lincoln Steffens, 61; Riis, How the Other Half Lives, 53, 85, 133, and note, 228; Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States, 213.

  17 “TREAD IT EVER SO” and “THE TRACK OF A TORNADO” Riis, How the Other Half Lives, 11.

  18 “IN THE COMMON TRENCH” Ibid., 132–33.

  19 “OLD HAGS” Helen Campbell, Thomas W. Knox, and Thomas F. Byrnes, Darkness and Daylight, 364, 374, 371.

  20 FIFTY THOUSAND INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS and “A SIGN WOULD GO UP” Zinn, A People’s History of the United States, 317–19.

  21 “TAINTED MEAT” and “FRAGMENTS OF BREAD” Campbell, Knox, and Byrnes, Darkness and Daylight, 402–3; Ezra R. Pulling, “Report of the Fourth Sanitary District,” 16.

  22 “PAPER WASN’T WORTH MUCH” Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, 5.

  23 “278 JUVENILE PRISONERS” and “FRIGHTFUL WHISKEY” Jacob A. Riis, A Ten Years’ War, 155–56; Asbury, The Gangs of New York, 225.

  24–25 “WILD AS HAWKS,” TWO HUNDRED FOUNDLINGS, and “AN ODD COINCIDENCE” Campbell, Knox, and Byrnes, Darkness and Daylight, 154, 517; Riis, How the Other Half Lives, 141, 143, 134.

 

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