Bloody Tubs

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Bloody Tubs
Founding locationBaltimore, Maryland
Years active1850s-1870
TerritoryBaltimore, Maryland
EthnicityNon-Irish American
Membership (est.)?
Criminal activitiesstreet fighting, knife fighting assault, murder, robbery, arson, rioting, election fraud
AlliesPlug Uglies, Rip Raps, Nativists, Dead Rabbits
RivalsBaltimore Irish American gangs

The Bloody Tubs (or Blood Tubs) were a nineteenth-century gang of opportunistic street thugs in Baltimore, Maryland and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania who worked primarily for Nativist Know Nothing politicians to commit election fraud.[1]

Formed in the mid-1850s, the gang became known as the Bloody Tubs for their method of dunking political opponents in slaughterhouse tubs. Other sources claim it was due to the "bloody oaths" members took upon joining the gang. The gang's violent tactics included blocking voting booths and attacking opposing voters, discouraging many people from the polls altogether.[2]

During the presidential election of 1860, the Blood Tubs reportedly planned to abduct, or possibly assassinate, then President-elect Abraham Lincoln when he visited Baltimore.[2] They did however also at various times champion the Union cause. After the infamous Pratt Street Riot, the Blood Tubs could be seen sailing up and down the harbor flying U.S. flags.[3]

The gang operated for more than a decade before their brutal acts caused so much public outrage that politicians were forced to withdraw their political support, and after 1870 the gang was eventually broken up by police "head smashers" or "strong arm squads" as were many other gangs of the era.[2]

References

  1. ^ Jensen, B. (1998). "Awl-Mighty Mobs" Archived February 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. The City Paper Online. Retrieved December 4, 2006.
  2. ^ a b c Sifakis, Carl. Encyclopedia of American Crime, New York, Facts on File Inc., 1982
  3. ^ Brave, R. (2001). "First Blood: Baltimore, the Civil War, and the Lasting Legacy of the Pratt Street Riots" Archived June 19, 2006, at the Wayback Machine The City Paper Online. Retrieved December 4, 2006.