The Black Hand

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The Black Hand Page 33

by Stephan Talty


  Paterson, New Jersey, 72–74, 87, 148, 171

  Patriotic Garibaldi, 216

  Pattison, John M., 95

  Pay or Die (film), 223

  pazienza, 5–6, 70, 114

  Peano (minister of the interior, Italy), 185

  Peconi, Salvatore, 52

  Pecoraro, Giovanni, 26–27, 195

  Pecorini, Alberto, 47, 48

  Pennsylvania, xvii, 83, 89, 147–49, 158. See also specific city and town names

  Pennypacker, Samuel W., 83, 95

  Petrosino, Adelina Bianca Giuseppina, 165, 173, 174, 175, 184, 190, 199

  Petrosino, Joseph

  Alfano and, 119–21

  “arrival” of, 65–66

  assassination of, 198–99, 229–30

  Bingham and, 102, 105, 166, 168–70, 171–73, 185, 190–91

  Bomb Squad and, 153–55

  Caruso and, 98–99

  Cascio Ferro and, 26, 27–28, 178–79, 182, 243–44

  child abductions and, xiv–xvi, xviii–xix, 32, 33, 34–35, 96–97, 98, 163

  conspiracy theories about death of, 217–18

  criticism of, 161–62

  danger to, 143–44

  daughter of (see Petrosino, Adelina Bianca Giuseppina)

  disguises of, xiv, 16–17, 20–21, 65, 73–74, 99, 122, 252 n

  early information on Black Hand, 29–30

  early life and family of, 1–3, 4–10

  eyes of, xiv, 252 n

  fake identities of, 174–75, 189, 191, 193

  as first Italian detective, 16–19

  frustration of, 42–43

  funeral of, 211–16, 246

  gangster disappearances and, 124–25

  insights into Black Hand Society, 142

  introduction to, xiii–xiv

  Italian immigrants and, xvii–xviii, 10–13, 22–23, 42–43, 80–81, 118, 132, 149, 245–46

  Italian police and, 184–85

  Italian Squad and (see Italian Squad)

  legacy of, 244–46

  Mannino case and, 32, 33, 34

  mission of, xvii–xviii

  mourners for, 208–11, 220–21

  music and opera loved by, xiv, xix, 24, 165–66, 252 n, 253 n

  niece of, 174

  NYPD joined by, 10–14

  NYPD’s indifference and, 37, 237

  NYPD’s treatment of, 63–66, 70

  organized resistance promoted by, 137

  photographic memory of, xiv, 252 n

  press and, 41–42

  reputation and legend of, 23–25

  secret mission to Italy, 172–73, 174–75, 177, 178–79, 182–88, 219

  Secret Service and (see under Secret Service, U.S.)

  in Sicily, 189–200

  Society’s warnings against contacting, 110, 130

  Theodore Roosevelt and, 16, 18, 201–2

  wife of (see Saulino, Adelina)

  Petrosino, Prospero, 2, 5

  Petrosino, Vincent, 5

  Petrosino, Vincenzo, 5, 186–87, 188

  Pettaco, Arrigo, 40–41, 229

  Petto, Tomasso “the Ox,” 26

  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 88, 89, 158

  Phillips, David Graham, 167

  picciotto, 140

  Pinkerton Detective Agency, 87, 148–49, 171–72

  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 148

  Pittsburgh Post, 160

  Pizano, Paulina, 233–34

  Pocantico Hills, New York, 159

  Poli, Lieutenant (Italian police officer), 192–93

  Pozzuoli prison, 244

  Profaci, Giuseppe, 172–73

  Prohibition, 243, 277 n

  prostitution rings, 122

  Pulitzer, Joseph, 16, 37, 41

  Q

  Quarnstrom, Oscar, 17–18

  R

  racism, 4, 13, 14, 17, 160–61

  Raimo, Joseph, 233–34

  Rea, Phillip, 148

  Redmond, Commissioner, 169

  Reeds Station, Kentucky, 158

  Regina d’Italia (steamship), 225

  Reid, Sidney, 69

  Republican League headquarters, 209–10, 212

  Riis, Jacob, 15–16

  Rockefeller, John D., 158–59, 167–68, 207

  Rockland County, New York, 155

  Rome, Italy

  Alfano and, 118

  corruption in, 111–12

  government in, 37, 73, 74

  leaders in, 191

  Petrosino in, 183–84, 185

  police in, 47

  Trivisonno brought from, 156

  Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 102–3

  Roosevelt, Theodore

  assassination plans, 193–94

  Bingham compared to, 101–2

  missing child and, 86

  NYPD reform and, 15–16

  Petrosino’s assassination and, 201–2

  Petrosino’s reputation and, 18

  police brutality and, 123

  in White House, xvii, 41, 73, 75, 100

  Rotolo, Nicolo, 237, 238

  Rucker, George Napoleon “Nap,” 145–46

  S

  Sacco, Nicola, 245

  San Francisco Call, 161

  Santoro, Salvatore, 221

  Sartorio, Enrico, 82

  Saulino, Adelina

  Joseph’s death and, 203, 205, 208, 209–10, 211, 212, 213–14, 216, 221–23

  Joseph’s falling in love with, 106–8

  Joseph’s marriage to, 150–52

  Joseph’s trip to Italy and, 173, 174, 175, 178, 184, 190, 192, 199

  Saulino, Vincenzo, 105–6, 107, 108, 150

  Saulino’s (restaurant), 105–8

  Schiff, Jacob Henry, 205

  Sirocco, Jack (gang of), 234

  Scranton, Pennsylvania, 157

  Seaman, Arthur and Grace, 155

  Searcy, C. D., 168

  Sebastian, Saint, 216

  secret service (Bingham’s), 166–75, 204

  Secret Service, U.S.

  Bresci investigation, 73

  Petrosino’s appeal to, 72, 77–79, 85–86, 137

  Petrosino’s assassination and, 204, 230

  Petrosino’s history with, 72, 75, 76–77

  Petrosino’s trip to Italy and, 193

  selective protection by, 85–86, 87, 157

  suggestion to investigate Sullivans, 170

  Sellaro, Vincenzo, 109–12, 114, 215–16

  Seminara, Salvatore, 194–95

  sequestrazione, 141

  Sherman, William Tecumseh, 212

  Sibiria (steamship), 52

  Sicily and Sicilians

  Alfano and, 115–16

  Black Hand recruitment and, 71

  Cascio Ferro in, 178–82, 195, 196, 197, 219, 229, 230

  Catholic Church in, 182

  earthquake in, 206

  immigrants from, 36, 57, 82, 146

  Irish and, 10

  language of, 13, 45

  Mafia and, 206, 219–20, 244

  monetary value of lives of, 82

  murder rate in, 179

  Muslims in, 179

  northern Italians vs., 115, 146

  Operation Husky (World War II), 244

  Palizzolo and, 125

  Petrosino disguised as, 17

  Petrosino in, 189–200

  Petrosino’s assassination and, 206

  Petrosino’s detective work and, 26, 27, 28

  police and, 11–12, 40

  Sellaro and, 110–11

  Sibiria crew, 52

  Vachris and Crowley in, 224–25

  in White Hand Society, 146

  See also Palermo, Sicily

  Silva, George, 45

  Simonetti, Agent (in Naples), 116–17

  Sineni (murderer), 17–18

  Sing Sing, 18, 19–20, 22, 233

  Siragossa, Antonio, 238–40, 241

  Slavonia (steamship), 207–8

  smallpox, 2, 21

  socialism, 179

  Society for the
Protection of Italian Immigrants, 42, 112–13, 204

  Society of the Black Hand

  Abate and, 132–34

  about, xii–xiii

  advertising, 121

  aldermen and, 170

  backlash inspired by, 36–37, 157–64

  believed to be myth, xiii, 37, 251 n

  Bingham’s appointment and, 102, 105

  bombings in 1908, 152–55

  Bozzuffi and, 128–32

  child abductions, xiii–xv, 31–35, 234, 235–41

  Corrao and, 113

  courts and, 41

  early members of, 19

  early reports on, 29–30

  evolution of, 58–62

  “Executive Committee,” 71

  as fad, 51

  fighting back by citizens, 134–35

  government control by, xiii, 93–95

  indifference to NYPD, 168

  initiation ceremony, 140

  Italian immigrants and, xiii, xv, xviii, 29, 47–48, 83, 146–49

  Italian police and, 218–19

  Italian Squad’s battle against (see Italian Squad)

  lingering of, 243

  locations of, xvi

  mobsters targeted by, 135–37

  in 1915, 233–35

  numbers in New York, 47

  NYPD indifference to, 37, 71, 157

  NYPD secret mission and, 173, 187

  out in the open, 30–31

  Palizzolo and, 125

  Petrosino’s assassination and war against, 203–5, 211, 213, 221, 225–26, 227, 228

  Petrosino’s battle against, xvii–xviii, 28, 37–38, 40, 41, 43, 49, 114, 121–22, 124–25, 127, 152, 155

  in popular culture, 92–93

  schemes of, 56–58

  Secret Service and, 76–79

  Sellaro and, 109–10, 112, 114

  Theodore Roosevelt and, 193–94

  as terror franchise, 140

  victims of, xvi–xvii, 1, 42–43, 48, 84–91

  White, Frank Marshall, on, 219

  White Hand Society and, 146–48

  Woods’s approach to, 235, 237–43

  Sons of Italy. See Order of the Sons of Italy

  Speranza, Gino, 112–13, 204

  Spinella, Salvatore, 67–68, 253 n

  Springfield, Massachusetts, 84

  Stevenson, Robert Louis, 140

  St. Joseph’s Italian Society, 157

  St. Louis, Missouri, 48, 82, 83, 90, 132

  St. Louis Dispatch, 32

  stokers on steamships, 114–15

  St. Patrick’s Cathedral, 151, 165, 173, 213, 216

  St. Peter’s, Rome, 184

  Straus, Oscar, 170

  Strong Arm Squad, 242

  subway tunnel deaths, 112

  Sullivan, Big Tim, 103–5, 167, 170, 225, 245

  Sullivan, Little Tim

  Bingham and, 168–69, 170

  NYPD and, 103, 104, 105, 171

  Petrosino’s assassination and, 204, 205

  Tammany Hall and, 103, 104, 167

  T

  Taft, William Howard, 201, 208

  Tammany Hall

  Baker and, 226

  Bingham and, 99, 225

  Hearst and, 187

  Italian immigrants and, 10, 39

  judge in Carbone case, 19

  McAdoo and, 39, 99

  Petrosino and, 5

  Society and, 242

  Sullivans and, 103–4, 167

  Tassarelli, James, 157

  Taxae cancellariae et penitentiarieae romanae, 11

  Terrio, John “the Immune,” 136–37

  Times-Union (Jacksonville, FL), 164

  Tisza, István, 87

  Tombs (detention center), 51, 122

  Tomoso, Nicolo, 35

  Train, Arthur, 22, 252 n, 253 n

  Trivisonno, Godfrey, 156

  troppa bircca, 141

  Truglio, Frank, 215

  Trunk Murder, 210, 257 n

  U

  Umberto I, King, 72, 74, 95, 191

  United Bootblack Protective League, 215

  United States government

  House of Representatives, 84

  Petrosino’s request for help from, 72, 77–79

  See also McKinley, William; Roosevelt, Theodore; Taft, William Howard

  uomo di rispetto, 115–16, 181

  U.S. Steel Corporation, 148

  V

  Vachris, Anthony, 96, 162, 173, 175, 223–28

  Valentino, Rudolph, 212

  Valpetroso, Baroness Clorinda Peritelli di, 180

  Vanzetti, Bartolomeo, 245

  Vazanini, Giuseppe, 83

  Verdi, Giuseppe, xix, 214–15

  Vetere, Giacento, 209

  Victor Emmanuel III, King, xvii, 37, 117–18, 206–7, 222–23

  Vigilance League, 42, 137

  Virginia, 160

  Volini, Carlo, 156

  Volpe (police informant in Palermo), 194–95

  W

  Walston, Pennsylvania, 83

  War of Italian Unification (1859), 106

  Washington Post, 37, 54, 60–61, 62, 64, 73, 85, 91, 142–43, 204, 206–7, 218–19, 242

  Washington Square Association, 170–71

  Washington Times, 36

  watch of death, 141

  Weisbard, Meyer, 210

  Wellsville, Ohio, 243

  Wenzler, Ignace, 87

  Wesson, Daniel B., 85–86

  Westchester County, New York, 60–61, 83, 89, 134–35, 140, 159

  West Virginia, 81, 113, 147, 156, 157–58, 159

  White, Frank Marshall, 41, 47–48, 76, 219, 234, 241

  White Hand Society, 146–48, 156–57, 161

  white wingers, 7, 8

  Williams, Aleck “Clubber,” 7–8, 10, 14, 41, 123, 174

  Woods, Arthur

  Italian Squad and, 103

  Mule and, 154

  as NYPD commissioner, 231–33, 234–35, 237–43

  Petrosino’s assassination and, 218

  Petrosino’s letter to Bingham and, 185

  Petrosino’s wedding and, 151

  Progressive movement and, 102–3

  Vachris and, 227

  World War I, 233, 245

  World War II, 244

  Z

  Zarcone brothers, 237

  Zarillo, Donato, 140

  Introduction

  IN THE MIDDLE of the snowless English winter of 1944, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Allied commander overseeing the forthcoming invasion of Europe, was anxious to get the hell out of London. It was January, less than six months before D-Day, and it seemed to him that every Allied officer and VIP in the capital felt personally entitled to barge into his bustling office and bend his ear. The visitors never stopped, interrupting him and his staff, whose typewriters and footsteps and male voices created a constant, purposeful buzz in the rooms at 20 Grosvenor Square. The American ambassador, John Winant, was forever knocking on his door. Churchill was incorrigible. Today—he glanced down at his appointment book—Noel Wild of Ops (b) was due in, the head of an obscure sector in Eisenhower’s sprawling command: deception.

  The general had been an early skeptic of deception, the shadow bureau of spies running around the Continent claiming they could fool Hitler and turn the tide of war. General George S. Patton, who much to his own disgust had been drafted into the effort as head of an imaginary one-million-man army called FUSAG, summed up the initial feelings of Eisenhower—and the current attitude of many other military and political leaders: “This damned secrecy thing is rather annoying,” he wrote, “particularly as I doubt if it fools anyone.”

  Eisenhower had changed his mind about deception after witnessing its effectiveness firsthand in the Mediterranean. But in January 1944 he had many actual objects to worry about: destroyers and French railroads and the landing vessels called LSTs, which were maddeningly scarce and threatened to sink the invasion before it began. These very real and important things, not espionage, were what consumed his d
ays.

  As he strode through his headquarters, bald, handsome and electric with physical vigor, Eisenhower appeared confident, “a living dynamo of energy, good humor, amazing memory for details, and amazing courage for the future.” His staff loved his relentless optimism, but inwardly and in his private letters to Mamie, the general agonized about what was about to happen. He was smoking four packs of Camels a day, and a journalist would later describe him as “bowed down with worry . . . as though each of the stars on either shoulder weighed four tons.”

 

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