| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Monk Eastman |
 |
1880–1920 |
One of the last great gang chieftains who founded the Eastman Gang and feuded with Paul Kelly and the Five Points Gang over control of New York's underworld at the turn of the 20th century.[1] |
| Jack Zelig |
 |
1882–1912 |
A longtime member of the Eastmans, "Big Jack" Zelig took over the gang following the death of Kid Twist and was perhaps its last powerful leader prior to his murder by Red Phil Davidson in 1912. His murder, although never proven, was thought to have been motivated by his testimony as a star witness in the Charles Becker murder trial.[1] |
| Red Phil Davidson |
|
1882–? |
A criminal associate of the Five Points Gang who was supposedly involved with its leader Jack Sirocco to murder Jack Zelig the day before his testimony in the Becker-Rosenthal murder trial.[1] |
| Tommy Dyke |
|
|
Associate of Chick Tricker and manager of his Bowery dive bar. He was also a political organizer and head of the Lenny & Dyke Association.[1] |
| Richie Fitzpatrick |
|
1880–1905 |
Former lieutenant to Paul Kelly who defected from the Five Points Gang to join Monk Eastman during their gang war. Killed during a struggle for leadership of the Eastmans with Kid Twist. Invented a method of execution later used in the 1974 film The Godfather.[1][6] |
| Vach Lewis |
|
1882–1908 |
Former circus strongman known as "Cyclone Louis". A close associate of Kid Twist, he was employed as his bodyguard and was later ambushed and killed alongside Kid Twist by Five Points gunman Louis Pioggi.[1] |
| Charles Livin |
|
|
A veteran member and longtime lieutenant to Monk Eastman known as "Ike the Blood". He was ambushed and killed by several unknown members of the Gopher Gang at a dive bar at Seventh Avenue and Twenty-Eight Street.[1] |
| Chick Tricker |
|
|
Saloon keeper and lieutenant of Jack Zelig who, with Jack Sirocco, later fought Jack Zelig for control of the Eastman Gang. Among his many establishments, he owned a Park Row saloon which competed against Jack McManus's New Brighton dance hall with their underworld feud eventually resulting in McManus's death.[1] |
| Max Zwerbach |
 |
d. 1908 |
One of Paul Kelly's lieutenants known as "Kid Twist" who defected to Monk Eastman during the Eastman-Five Point gang war. He succeeded Eastman as leader of the gang after the murder of Richie Fitzpatrick, another rival for leadership, in 1905. He and Cyclone Louie were later gunned down by Louis Pioggi three years later.[1] |
| Kid Dahl |
|
|
A close associate of Kid Twist, he is believed to have killed Richie Fitzpatrick on his orders and later took over the East Side stuss game run by The Bottler.[1] |
| Jack Sirocco |
|
1882–1954 |
A lieutenant under Jack Zelig, he and Chick Tricker formed a separate faction and battled Zelig over leadership of the Eastman Gang.[1] |
| Chris Wallace |
 |
|
Young criminal associate of Monk Eastman who was arrested with Eastman for the infamous street mugging of which resulted in Eastman's 10 year imprisonment in Sing Sing.[1] |
| Charley Torti |
|
|
A criminal associate of Jack Sirocco, he attempted to kill Jack Zelig during the gang war against the Jack Sirocco-Chick Tricker faction.[1] |
| Julie Morrell |
|
d. 1911 |
Criminal associate of Jack Sirocco who was killed in a filed attempt to murder Jack Zelig.[1] |
| Diamond Charley |
|
|
Bowery drug peddler who organized and later monopolized the selling of chloral and morphine.[1] |
| Carroll Terry |
|
|
Coney Island dancing girl and girlfriend of Kid Twist.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Paul Kelly |
 |
1876–1936? |
Former pugilist and founder of the Five Points Gang, he was the longtime rival of Monk Eastman with whom he battled over control of New York's underworld at the turn of the 20th century. He ruled over the city for a brief time after Monk Eastman's downfall, but his power declined after a failed attempt on his life by Biff Ellison and Razor Riley in 1906 forced him to close the popular New Brighton Dance Hall.[1] |
| Nathan Kaplan |
|
1891–1923 |
A former member of the Five Pointers known as "Kid Dropper", he and Johnny Spanish formed a group of ex-Five Point gang members involved in labor racketeering. He and Spanish soon fell out however, their gang war becoming known as the second "Labor Slugger War", and controlled "labor slugging" until his murder by Louis Kushner.[1][6] |
| James T. Ellison |
 |
1862–? |
Former bouncer and criminal associate of Paul Kelly. In 1906, he and Razor Riley attempted to kill Paul Kelly at his New Brighton headquarters. Although they shot him three times, Kelly survived and Ellison was captured in 1910, imprisoned in Sing Sing, and eventually committed to an insane asylum where he died years later.[1] |
| Pat Hogan |
|
|
Criminal associate of Paul Kelly known as "Rough House Hogan". He was present with Kelly when Ellison and Riley attacked him and later testified against Ellison at his trial.[1] |
| Jack McManus |
|
d. 1905 |
Saloon keeper, pugilist and longtime bouncer known as "Eat 'Em Up" McManus. He was the "Sheriff of the New Brighton" and was killed in an underworld feud with Chick Tricker.[1] |
| Louis Pioggi |
 |
1889–? |
A young Five Points gang member known as "Louie the Lump" who gunned down Eastman leader Kid Twist and his bodyguard Cyclone Louie in a dispute over Coney Island dancing girl Carroll Terry in 1908.[1][3] |
| John McCarthy |
|
|
Criminal associate of the Five Point Gang involved in prostitution and running panel houses. In 1888, he was involved in a gunfight with Whyos lead Danny Driscoll over prostitute Beezy Garrity which resulted in her death.[1][4] |
| Bill Harrington |
|
d. 1908 |
Bodyguard of Paul Kelly, he was shot and killed by Razor Riley while protecting the gang leader during the failed attempt on his life.[1] |
| Joe Hickman |
|
|
Five Point gang member known as "Itsky Joe" who was known as the last leader of the gang before its breakup.[1] |
| Cora the Blonde |
|
|
Popular New Brighton showgirl and girlfriend of Bill Harrington, she was present with Harrington when Ellison and Riley attempted to kill Paul Kelly at the New Brighton dance hall in 1908.[1] |
| John Torrio |
|
1882–1957 |
Leader of the affiliated-James Street Gang, the group included future organized crime figures such as Al Capone, Frankie Yale and Charles Luciano.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Marty Brennan |
|
|
A high ranking leader of the Gophers, he and Newburgh Gallagher were among those convicted during the NYPD's campaign against the city's street gangs and eventually sent to Sing Sing.[1] |
| One Lung Curran |
|
d. 1917 |
An early member and later leader of the Gophers. He was well known in Hell's Kitchen for attacking policemen and stealing their uniforms, later becoming a popular trend in the underworld.[1][4] |
| Edward Egan |
|
|
A lieutenant under Owney Madden, he disappeared shortly after Madden's conviction for the murder of Patsy Doyle.[1] |
| Razor Riley |
|
|
A well-known member of the Gophers who, with Biff Ellison, attempted to murder Paul Kelly and take over the Five Points Gang. Kelly survived the attempt however and Riley eventually died from pneumonia while hiding out in Chinatown.[1] |
| Newburg Gallagher |
|
|
He and Marty Brennan were leaders of the Gophers and among those arrested during the NYPD's campaign against the city's street gangs.[1] |
| Chick Hyland |
|
|
Another lieutenant to Owney Madden. He was later imprisoned for four years.[1] |
| Owney Madden |
 |
1892–1964 |
The last leader of the Gophers. He later became a successful bootlegger with Bill Dwyer during Prohibition and eventually retired to run the underworld resort in Hot Springs, Arkansas.[1][4] |
| Stumpy Malarkey |
|
|
A prominent member of the Gophers during the turn of the 20th century.[1] |
| Johnny McArdle |
|
|
He and Art Biedler killed Patsy Doyle. He was sentenced to thirteen years imprisonment for his role in the murder.[1] |
| Jack Mulraney |
|
|
Known as "Happy Jack" due to a facial disfigurement which made him appear to have a permanent smile. He later killed Paddy the Priest, a well-known Hell's Kitchen saloon keeper, for jokingly asking about his smile.[1][4] |
| Battle Annie |
|
|
Popularly known as "Queen of Hell's Kitchen", she led the female contingent known as the Lady Gophers during the 1870s.[1] |
| Art Biedler |
|
|
Veteran gunman who was convicted with Johnny McArdle of killing Patsy Doyle and sentenced to eighteen years imprisonment.[1] |
| William Mott |
|
|
Known as "Willie the Sailor". He was allegedly involved in planning the murder of Patsy Doyle and was present with girlfriend Margaret Everdeane when Doyle was murdered.[1] |
| Buck O'Brien |
|
|
Co-led the Gophers with Owney Madden, O'Brien controlling the area from Forty-Second Street to Fifty-Ninth and from Ninth Avenue to the Hudson River. He was an occasional rival of the Parlor Mob.[1] |
| Tony Romanello |
|
|
A close associate of Owney Madden, he was one of several members attacked by Patsy Doyle who was then attempting to take over the Gophers. Romanello was shot and stabbed after taunting Doyle of losing his girlfriend Freda Horner to Owney Madden.[1] |
| Bill Tammany |
|
|
A third lieutenant of Owney Madden. He was eventually sent to Sing Sing to serve a 15 year prison sentence.[1] |
| Margaret Everdeane |
|
|
Associate of the Gophers and girlfriend of William Mott. She and Freda Horner were later accused of setting up Patsy Doyle to be killed by Owney Madden, but later testified against the gang leader resulting in his conviction.[1][4] |
| Freda Horner |
|
|
Associte of the Gophers and girlfriend of Owney Madden. Freda had previously been seeing Patsy Doyle and agreed to lure him to a saloon where Owney Madden ambushed and killed him. She and Margaret Everdeane later testified against Owney Madden at the trial for Doyle's murder.[1][4] |
| Ida The Goose |
|
fl. 1900–1910 |
Manhattan showgirl subject to a brief gang war between the Gophers and the Eastman Gang known as the "Ida the Goose War".[1] |
| Paddy the Priest |
|
d. 1911 |
Well-known Hell's Kitchen saloonkeeper and criminal associate of the Gophers. He was killed by "Happy" Jack Mulraney for supposedly making a comment regarding his facial disfigurement.[1][4] |
| Patsy Doyle |
|
d. 1914 |
A minor member of the Gophers who attempted to take over the Gophers from Owney Madden, then still recovering from an attempt on his life, and was later killed by Madden after being lured to a saloon by former girlfriend Freda Horner.[1][4] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| George Leonidas Leslie |
|
1840–1878 |
Architect turned bank robber, Leslie was one of the great criminal masterminds of the mid-to late 19th century. His burglary gang was responsible for some of the most notorious bank robberies in the United States.[1][2] |
| Abe Coakley |
|
|
A close associate of Leslie, he was involved in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution.[1][2][9] |
| Jimmy Hope |
 |
1836–1905 |
Bank robber involved in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution.[1] |
| Johnny Hope |
 |
1856–1906 |
Son of "Old Jimmy" Hope. Bank robber sent to Sing Sing for his supposed role in the Manhattan Savings Institution.[1] |
| Bill Kelly |
|
|
Bank robber involved in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution. |
| Red Leary |
 |
1840–1888 |
Bank robber involved in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution. |
| Johnny Dobbs |
 |
1835–1892 |
River pirate and burglar associated with the Daybreak Boys and later Marm Mandelbaum and George Leslie. He reportedly handled over $2,000,000 in stolen money as a criminal fence but died in poverty.[1] |
| Pete Emerson |
 |
1845–? |
Bank robber known as "Banjo Pete". He was involved in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution and a suspect in George Leslie's murder in 1884.[1] |
| Sam Perris |
 |
1840–? |
Bank robber known as "Worcester Sam". He was involved in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution and a suspect in the murder of George Leslie in 1884.[1] |
| Patrick Shevlin |
|
1808–? |
A crimine associate of Leslie known as "Patty" Shevlin. He was a participant in the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution, Leslie obtaining a job for him in the bank months before the robbery.[1] |
| Gilbert Yost |
|
d. 1886 |
Burglar and bank robber. In 1870, Yost was imprisoned for two years after he and Leslie were caught robbing a jewelry store in Norristown, Pennsylvania.[1] |
| John Nugent |
|
d. 1904 |
Police officer associated with Leslie's gang. He was one of the participants of the 1878 robbery of the Manhattan Savings Institution.[1] |
| Ed Goodie |
 |
1848–? |
Burglar and butcher cart thief associated with Leslie and Marm Mandelbaum during the 1870s and 80s.[1] |
| Babe Irving |
|
|
Sister of Johnny Irving and girlfriend of George Leslie.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Joe Baker |
|
|
East Side Gang leader involved in a gang war with Joe Morello and the Morello crime family.[1] |
| Big Nose Bunker |
|
|
Gang leader who ran a dive bar near Johnny Camphine's saloon. Involved in a fight with a waterfront thug, he was stabbed six times in the stomach and four of his fingers were chopped off. He arrived at a nearby police station where he asked for a surgeon to reattach his fingers but died from blood loss before an ambulance could arrive.[1] |
| Ralph Daniello |
|
d. 1925 |
Labor racketeer known as "Ralph the Barber", he was allied with Philip Paul during the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Benjamin Fein |
|
|
Underworld figure who, with Joseph Rosenzweig, controlled "labor slugging" and labor racketeering in New York until the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Abie Fisher |
|
|
Gang leader and labor racketeer allied with Philip Paul during the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Porkie Flaherty |
|
|
Gang leader and labor racketeer active in the Lower East Side. He was one of several men allied with Philip Paul during the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Jimmy Haggerty |
|
d. 1871 |
Philadelphia gang leader and bank robber. "Wild Jimmy" Haggerty was killed in a barroom brawl by Reddy the Blacksmith in 1871.[1] |
| Pickles Laydon |
|
|
Gang leader allied with Philip Paul during the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Benjamin Levinsky |
|
1893–1922 |
Gang leader and labor racketeer. Killed by rival William Lipshitz in 1922.[1] |
| Billy Lustig |
|
d. 1913 |
Gang leader and labor racketeer allied with Philip Paul during the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Punk Madden |
|
|
Gang leader and labor racketeer allied with Philip Paul during the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Albert Rooney |
|
1892–? |
Founder and leader of the Fourteenth Street Gang. He was one of the last gang captains of the "Gangs of New York" period and was one of the high-profile underworld figures to be convicted during the NYPD's campaign against the city's street gang from 1911 to 1914.[1] |
| Joseph Rosenzweig |
|
|
Organized crime figure who controlled labor racketeering with Benjamin Fein prior to the first "Labor Slugger War".[1] |
| Philip Paul |
|
d. 1914 |
Gang leader and labor racketeer known as "Pinchy Paul". He led a coalition of independent gang leaders against Joseph Rosenzweig and Benjamin Fein during the first "Labor Slugger War" until his murder in 1914.[1] |
| Joseph Quinn |
|
1861–1887 |
Alleged gangster and rival of Whyos leader Danny Lyons who was killed in a dispute over prostitute Kitty McGowan.[1][4] |
| Abe Roch |
|
|
Independent gang leader and labor racketeer known as "Little Rhody". He was involved in the first Labor Slugger War as an ally of Philip Paul and later testified at the trial of Joseph Rosenzweig.[1] |
| Frank Salvatore |
|
|
Former bootblack and Tammany Hall political organizer known as "Mike the Dago". Around the turn of the 20th century, he founded the Young Chuck Conners Association and displaced Conners as the political boss of Chinatown.[1] |
| Benjamin Snyder |
|
|
Labor racketeer under Joseph Rosenzweig who murdered rival Philip Paul. He eventually agreed to become a witness for the state resulting in the conviction of Rosenzweig and other "labor sluggers" operating in the city.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| The Bottler |
|
d. 1908 |
A Five Points gambler who was forced by Kid Twist to make Kid Dahl, a member of the Eastman Gang, a partner is his Suffolk Street stuss parlor.[1][8] |
| William Busteed |
|
1848–1924 |
Owner of a popular Broadway gambling resort and a chief competitor of "Honest" John Kelly.[1] |
| Richard Canfield |
|
1855–1914 |
Longtime sportsman and gambler who, as the successor of John Morrissey, owned a number of prominent establishments and gambling spots including Morrissey's resort at Saratoga Springs. His gambling house at Forty-Fourth Street was considered the most popular gaming resort in the United States until its close in 1902.[1][7][16] |
| John Daly |
|
1838–1906 |
Owner of a popular Broadway gambling resort and a rival of John Kelly.[1] |
| Dinky Davis |
|
|
Owner of a popular Broadway gambling resort and a rival of John Kelly.[1] |
| Sam Emery |
|
|
Owner of a popular Broadway gambling resort and a rival of John Kelly.[1] |
| Pat Hearne |
|
d. 1859 |
Herne was an associate of Reuben Parsons who owned a successful Broadway gambling house during the 1840s and 50s. He himself was an avid gambler and, on more than one occasion, he supposedly gambled away an entire night's takings and his own place.[1][14] |
| Kid Jigger |
|
|
A former gunmen-turned-gambler, Kid Jigger operated one of the most successful stuss parlors in Manhattan's East Side. Johnny Spanish attempted to murder Kid Jigger after a failed extortion attempt but instead killed an eight-year-old girl during the gunfight and was forced to flee the city for a time.[1][8] |
| Davy Johnson |
|
d. 1911 |
Owner of a Broadway gambling resort, The Roseben, and a rival competitor of John Kelly.[1] |
| Reuben Parsons |
|
|
A native New Englander who controlled New York's illegal gambling and policy banks during the mid-19th century. He was commonly known as the "Great American Faro Banker" in the city's underworld.[1][14] |
| Sam Paul |
|
1874–1927 |
An associate of Charles Becker, he and Bridgie Webber ran the popular Sans Souci Music Hall in addition to illegal gambling.[1][16] |
| Jack Rose |
|
1875–1947 |
A gambler known as "Bald Jack" who was one of several men who ran second-rate gambling houses for Jack Zelig, he later testified against Charles Becker during the Becker-Rosenthal trial.[1][3][14][16] |
| Herman Rosenthal |
|
1883–1912 |
An underworld bookmaker and part-time gambler who was forced to make Detective Charles Becker a partner in his gambling operation. He was later murdered by the Lenox Avenue Gang on orders from Becker when he threatened to reveal Becker's role as an underworld figure.[1][16] |
| Sam Schepps |
|
|
Schepps ran gambling houses for Jack Zelig and later testified at the Becker-Rosenthal trial.[1][16] |
| Harry Vallon |
 |
|
Vallon was another associate involved in illegal gambling for Jack Zelig and later testified at the Becker-Rosenthal trial.[1][16] |
| Wah Kee |
|
|
The first major underworld figure to arrive in Chinatown, Wah Kee ran illegal gambling and an opium den from the room above his Pell Street grocery store. His shop became popular among residents in the Bowery and Chatham Square. His success encouraged other Cantonese, particularly Chinese Tongs, to settle in Chinatown during the next several decades.[1] |
| Bridgie Webber |
|
1877–1936 |
An associate of Charles Becker, he and Sam Paul ran the Sans Souci Music Hall together. Webber also ran illegal gambling houses for Jack Zelig.[1][1][16] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Captain Anthony J. Allaire |
 |
1820–1903 |
Head of the Eighteenth police precinct, overseeing the area between Houston and Fifth Street, he was responsible for driving out and breaking up the Dutch Mob in 1877.[1] |
| Detective Charles Becker |
 |
1869–1915 |
Police detective who, as head of the Gambling Squad, used strong arm tactics to extort illegal gamblers. His role as an underworld figure was revealed when he was convicted and executed for ordering members of the Lenox Avenue Gang to murder gambler Herman Rosenthal.[1] |
| Inspector Thomas F. Byrnes |
 |
1842–1910 |
Police chief and head of the NYPD Detective Bureau from 1880 until 1895. During his career, he was responsible for the arrests of countless gang leaders and other criminals of the era. He was also the detective in charge of the murder investigation of Bowery prostitute and supposed Jack the Ripper victim Old Shakespeare.[1] |
| Daniel D. Conover |
|
1822–1896 |
Civil servant whose appointment by Governor John King as the city street commissioner was blocked by the Mayor of New York Fernando Wood in favor Charles Devlin. The position was said to have been bought for the sum of $50,000 and resulted in the Police Riot of 1857.[1] |
| Sergeant John D. Coughlin |
|
1874–1951 |
Police inspector involved during Chinatown's Tong wars. He was charged with the protection of Chinese comic Ah Hoon prior to his murder by the Hip Sing Tong.[1] |
| Captain Timothy J. Creedon |
|
1840–? |
Police official implicated in police corruption investigations during the 1890s. Admitted that he had paid $15,000 to "fixers" for Tammany Hall in exchange for his position.[1] |
| Captain William S. Devery |
 |
1854–1919 |
The last superintendent of the New York City Police Department police commission, "Big Bill" Devery was later appointed its first police chief.[1][7] |
| Detective Joseph M. Dorcy |
|
|
Police detective who pursued and captured a number of high-profile criminals, most notably, Whyos gang member Johnny Dolan in 1875 and embezzler Leon L.J. Bernard in 1876.[1] |
| Deputy Commissioner George Samuel Dougherty |
|
1865–1931 |
Police official who led detective squads in numerous raids during the NYPD's first campaign against New York's street gangs resulting in the arrests of over one hundred gang members.[1] |
| Commissioner Simeon Draper |
|
1804–1866 |
Police commissioner during the Police Riot of 1857 and later Collector of the Port of New York during the American Civil War.[1] |
| Commissioner Richard Edward Enright |
|
1871–1953 |
Police commissioner from 1918 to 1922. He investigated Tammany Hall's "Honest" John Kelly and his links into illegal gambling including having his Vendome Club under surveillance.[1] |
| Inspector Joseph A. Faurot |
|
1872–1942 |
Police detective and fingerprint expert involved in the Becker-Rosenthal trial. He convinced the widowed Becker to remove the silver plate, placed on the coffin itself, which claimed that Governor Whitman had murdered her husband and would likely be prosecuted for criminal libel.[1] |
| Captain George W. Gastlin |
|
d. 1895 |
First leader of the "Steamboat Squad" which eventually cleared out the waterfront area of river pirates, including breaking up the Hook Gang, by 1890.[1] |
| Captain William H. "Big Bill" Hodgins |
|
1856–1912 |
Head of the Elizabeth Street Station. He and a group of Chinese-American merchants helped negotiate a truce between Four Brothers, Hip Sing and On Leong Tongs during the Tong wars.[1] |
| Chief George Washington Matsell |
|
1811–1877 |
Police chief who battled river pirates in the Fourth Ward and later the area between the Seventh Ward and Corlears' Hook during the 1850s. His force of detectives and volunteer civilians were eventually able to breakup the area's biggest gang the Daybreak Boys.[1][17] |
| Inspector George W. McClusky |
|
1861–1912 |
Police official who led the NYPD Detectives Bureau and was involved in the Becker-Rosenthal trial.[1] |
| Captain John H. McCullagh |
 |
1842–1893 |
Police official who closed down a number of well known panel houses including Shang Draper's operation which led to the breakup of his criminal gang.[1] |
| Captain Charles McDonnell |
|
1841–1888 |
Police official who investigated vice districts, especially forced prostitution and white slavery, and arrested procuress "Jane the Grabber".[1] |
| Commissioner Douglas I. McKay |
|
1879–1962 |
Senior police official who organized and led the NYPD's first campaign to rid the city of street gangs. Supported by reform Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, he also instituted police reforms.[1] |
| Sergeant John J. O'Connell |
|
1884–1946 |
Police detective assigned to the District Attory's office. He led a police squad against Owney Madden and Tanner Smith arresting the gang leaders after a gun battle.[1] |
| Inspector Joseph Petrosino |
 |
1860–1909 |
Police detective and first chief of the NYPD's "Italian Squad". He was one of the earliest law enforcement officers to investigate organized crime and was later murdered in Palermo, Sicily while tracking down Black Hand extortionists.[1] |
| Captain Max F. Schmittberger |
 |
1850–1917 |
Police official implicated during investigations into police corruption. Testified that, as a police sergeant in the Tenderloin district, he collected payments from saloons, illegal gambling houses and other establishments and delivered to then precinct captain William Devery.[1] |
| Patrolman Dennis Sullivan |
|
|
Police officer assigned to the Charles Street police station who waged one man war against the Hudson Dusters. He was successful in arresting ten gang members single-handed before he was ambushed and brutally attacked by a group of the gang. A poem mocking the incident was later composed by its leader One Lung Curran and remained a popular underworld verse for a number of years.[1] |
| Inspector Alexander S. Williams |
 |
1839–1917 |
Police detective known as "Clubber Williams" who oversaw the Tenderloin and Gas House districts. In 1871, he led a "strong arm squad" into the district and was successful in breaking up the Gas House Gang.[1] |
| Captain Cornelius Willemse |
|
1872–1942 |
Police detective who patrolled the Lower East Side, Chinatown and the Tenderloin district as well as briefly heading the NYPD Homicide Division.[1] |
| Commissioner Arthur Woods |
 |
1870–1942 |
Senior police official who succeeded Douglas McCay as police commissioner and continued the NYPD's campaign against the city's street gangs.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Military |
| Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton |
 |
1814–1869 |
Overall commander of military forces in New York, Stanton authorized five regiments from Gettysburg to assist the New York Police Department in putting an end to the riots.[1] |
| Provost Marshal James Fry |
 |
1827–1894 |
Provost Marshal who organized and was charged with enforcing conscription in New York City along with assistant Provost Marshal Colonel Robert Nugent.[1] |
| Brigadier General Harvey Brown |
 |
1795–1874 |
Commanding officer of regular Union Army forces in New York City, including reinforcements sent from Gettysburg, and directed military forces from police commissioner Thomas Action's office.[1] |
| Major General C.W. Sandford |
|
1796–1878 |
Veteran of the Police Riots of 1857, he was a senior officer under Brigadier General Harvey Brown and organized the defense of the arsenal on Seventh Avenue.[1] |
| Colonel Thaddeus P. Mott |
 |
1831–1894 |
Commanding a troop of cavalry and howitzers, he engaged a mob of rioters who had reportedly hung three African-Americans in the area of Thirty-Second Street and Eighth Avenue and successfully dispersed with artillery fire.[1] |
| Colonel H. J. O'Brien |
|
d. 1863 |
Commander of the 11th New York Volunteers, who rushed to support police at the battle over the Seventh Avenue arsenal. He later visited his nearby home to visit his family, whom he discovered had left to stay with relatives in Brooklyn, he was caught by a local mob and slowly tortured to death.[1] |
| Colonel Cleveland Winslow |
 |
1836–1864 |
Senior officer who led a large military force with Major Robinson and Colonel Jardine against rioters on First Avenue but were forced to flee after suffering a large number of casualties.[1] |
| Colonel Robert Nugent |
|
1824–1901 |
Under Provost Marshal Colonel James Fry, Nugent was involved in overseeing the enforcement of the draft. Although considered a war hero of the original Irish Brigade, he later became a target during the riots as his home was attacked and looted by a mob.[1] |
| Colonel E.E. Jardine |
|
1828–1893 |
Commander of Hawkins' Zouaves, he served as a senior artillery officer to Colonel Cleveland Winslow and other military officers during the riots.[1] |
| Captain Joel B. Erhardt |
|
1838–1909 |
Provost Marshal assigned to the Ninth District and was attacked by several men as he attempted to collect names at a building on Broadway and Liberty Street. He battled the men for three hours, armed only with a pistol, before forced to return to headquarters without the names.[1] |
| Captain John H. Howell |
|
|
Senior artillery officer under Colonel Thaddeus Mott and participant in the battle for the Seventh Avenue arsenal.[1] |
| Captain Henry F. Putnam |
|
|
Senior artillery officer under Brigadier General Harvey Brown. He led a detachment to Second Avenue where he relieved twenty-five soldiers and policemen trapped by rioters in Jackson's Foundry.[1] |
| Lieutenant Eagleson |
|
|
Senior artillery officer under Colonel H.J. O'Brien and participant in the battle for the Seventh Avenue arsenal.[1] |
| Police |
| Superintendent John A. Kennedy |
 |
1803–1873 |
Police chief of the NYPD, he assisted Colonel Robert Nugent in the organization and enforcement of the draft. He was attacked by a mob during an inspection of draft offices, unaware of early rioting, and was severely injured by a mob after leaving his carriage to investigate smoke coming from the Provost Marshal's office on Third Avenue. Rescued by John Eagan, who was able to convince the crowd he was dead, Kennedy was taken to police headquarters and then to a hospital where he remained for the duration of the riots.[1] |
| Commissioner Thomas Coxon Acton |
|
1823–1898 |
Senior police official who held joint command over police with Commissioner John Bergen after the attack on Superintendent John Kennedy. A prominent Republican politician, he was one of the founders of the Union League Club.[1] |
| Commissioner John G. Bergen |
|
1814–1867 |
Senior police official and commander of police forces with Commissioner Thomas Acton. Bergen oversaw police operations in Staten Island and Brooklyn while Acton took charge in Manhattan.[1] |
| Inspector Daniel C. Carpenter |
|
1816–1866 |
Police detective who led squads against rioters in Broadway, the Fourth Ward, Second Avenue and other areas.[1] |
| Inspector John S. Folk |
 |
1811–1885 |
Police detective who led one hundred patrolman against rioters in Uptown Manhattan and co-led a large group of policemen with Inspector Daniel Carpenter against rioters in City Hall Park then fleeing after a failed attack on the New York Tribune. Folk later returned to Brooklyn where he was involved in suppressing rioting during the next few days and similarly saved the Brooklyn Eagle.[1] |
| Captain James Z. Bogart |
|
1821–1881 |
Led the "Broadway Squad" and reserve members of the Thirty-First Precinct against rioters looting the home of J.S. Gibbons, cousin of Horace Greeley, at Lamartine Place.[1] |
| Captain Samuel Brower |
|
|
Police official who led a police detachment to cut down African Americans who had been hung from lamp posts.[1] |
| Captain John Cameron |
|
1807–1873 |
Commander of the Eighteenth Precinct. He organized the defense of the State Armory and other buildings in the area.[1] |
| Captain John F. Dickson |
|
1821–1880 |
Co-led a police force with drill officer Theron Copeland who defeated rioters in Clarkston Street and chased off mobs attacking African Africans. His men discovered the body of William Jones who had been tied to a tree and tortured to death.[1] |
| Captain George W. Dilks |
|
1826–1901 |
Led a force of two hundred officers into Second Avenue and recaptured the Union Steam Works, then being used as a headquarters and rallying point for rioters along the East Side Manhattan, after fierce hand-to-hand fighting against roughly five hundred rioters.[1] |
| Captain A.P. Devoursney |
|
|
One of the officers who defended the New York Tribune during the New York draft riots.[1] |
| Captain John Jourdan |
 |
1831–1870 |
Led group of sixty men from the Sixth Precinct which battled rioters for over five hours while patrolling African American settlements north and east of the Five Points district during the first day of rioting.[1] |
| Captain Galen T. Porter |
|
1807–1883 |
Police official under Superintendent Kennedy involved in organizing police detachments against rioters. During the first hours, he sent sixty patrolmen to reinforce police against rioters on Third Avenue.[1] |
| Captain Francis C. Speight |
|
1816–1877 |
Commanded police forces guarding the Broadway draft office. A number of his officers, including Sergeants Wade, Mangin, McCredie and Wolfe, later participated in fighting rioters at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street.[1] |
| Captain Johannes C. Slott |
|
|
He and Captain George Walling led an advanced guard into Ninth Avenue but forced to retreat under heavy fire from rioters.[1] |
| Captain Thomas S. Steers |
|
1804–1884 |
Attempted to make a last stand at Thirty-Fifth Street but whose force was one of many overwhelmed by rioters. Father of Henry V. Steers, longtime precinct captain of New York City Hall.[1] |
| Captain Thomas Woolsey Thorne |
|
1823–1885 |
Police official who commanded the Twenty-Sixth Precinct, operating from the basement of City Hall, and organized the defense of the New York Tribune. He was also a participant in the Police Riot of 1857.[1] |
| Captain George W. Walling |
|
1823–1891 |
Police official who organized the first "Strong Arm Squad" which was responsible for breaking up the Honeymoon Gang in 1853. Sided with Mayor Fernando Wood during the Police Riot of 1857 but later served a warrant for the mayor's arrest. He played a major role during the draft riots breaking up several large mobs in the Bowery and other nearby districts.[1] |
| Captain Jacob B. Warlow |
|
1818–1890 |
Led detachment from the First Precinct against rioters in the waterfront area and later took part in the defense of the New York Tribune.[1] |
| Sergeant Francis J. Banfield |
|
1827–1883 |
Officer in charge of the State Armory at Second Avenue and Twenty-First Street. He was also a member of the "Steamboat Squad" later in his career.[1] |
| Sergeant Cornelius Burdick |
|
|
He led thirty-two police officers of the "Broadway Squad", and also included Roundsmen Ferris and Sherwood, who relieved relieved Sergeant Francis Banfield and his men who were defending state armory.[1] |
| Sergeant Theron S. Copeland |
|
1831–1905 |
Drill officer who co-led a police force with Captain John Dickson against rioters in Clarkston Street who were attacking local African Africans residents. It was their detachment which discovered the body of William Jones who had been tied to a tree and tortured to death.[1] |
| Sergeant Frederick Ellison |
|
|
Patrolman who led one of the first detachments against rioters, he was cut off from his men during the fighting at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street and severely beaten by a mob. He remained unconscious throughout the fighting and was not rescued until the arrival of Sergeant Wade several hours later.[1] |
| Sergeant John Mangin |
 |
1828–1897 |
Officer in command of a police detachment with fellow Sergeant S.B. Smith. Their later arrival eventually resulted in the defeat of rioters at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street.[1] |
| Sergeant Robert A. McCredie |
|
|
Known as "Fighting Mac", he participated in the fighting at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street. He and Sergeant Wolfe spearheaded an attack against rioters as police were slowly being driven down Third Avenue. McCredie forced the rioters back to Forty-Fifth Street but were eventually overwhelmed.[1] |
| Sergeant Stephen B. Smith |
|
|
He and Sergeant John Mangin led a detachment of police officers who helped Sergeant Wade defeat rioters at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street.[1] |
| Sergeant Van Orden |
|
|
Officer who defended the State Arsenal at Seventh Avenue and Thirty-Fifth Street against rioters during the first day of rioting. He had been ordered by Superintendent Kennedy to protect the building after reports that members of the Knights of the Golden Circle would attempt to capture the arsenal.[1] |
| Sergeant Wade |
|
|
Officer who commanded police during the fighting at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street. Although the rioters initially forced police to retreat, he regrouped the remaining patrolman and managed to disperse the mob with the later arrival of Sergeants John Mangin and S.B. Smith.[1] |
| Sergeant Wolfe |
|
|
A participant in the fighting against rioters at Third Avenue and Forty-Fourth Street, he and Sergeant Robert McCredie forced the rioters back to Forty-Fifth Street but were eventually overwhelmed by the thousands of advancing rioters.[1] |
| Others |
| John Decker |
 |
1823–1892 |
Chief Engineer of the New York Fire Department.[1] |
| Joe Howard, Jr. |
 |
1833–1908 |
Journalist and author of a hoax document published in the New York World and the Journal of Commerce which falsely claimed that President Abraham Lincoln had issued a proclamation to conscript 400,000 men into the Union Army. This caused a minor riot when, in May 1864, a mob threatened to storm the Journal of Commerce. Howard was eventually arrested by detectives and escorted under a military armed guard where he was held at Fort Lafayette.[1] |
| Henry J. Raymond |
 |
1820–1869 |
Journalist and writer for the New York Times who extensively covered the New York Draft Riots.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Peter Cooper |
 |
1791–1883 |
|
| Richard Croker |
 |
1843–1922 |
Succeeded John Kelly as leader of Tammany Hall and remained a dominant influence in the city's politics up until the turn of the 20th century. Croker had a long history of receiving kickbacks and bribes from saloons, brothels and gambling dens throughout his political career but was cleared by the Lexow Committee. He was involved in bare-knuckle boxing and alleged to have been involved in the leader of the Fourth Avenue Tunnel Gang during his youth.[1] |
| Thomas F. Foley |
|
1852–1925 |
Saloon keeper and political organizer for Tammany Hall, "Big Tom" Foley employed Monk Eastman and his gang to commit election fraud on behalf of the political organization. He later served as a mediator between Eastman and Paul Kelly during the gang war between the Eastmans and the Five Points Gang.[1] |
| Warren W. Foster |
|
1859–? |
Attorney, judge and secretary for Tammany Hall. He was involved in the sentencing of many underworld figures between 1910 and 1915.[1] |
| William J. Gaynor |
 |
1849–1913 |
One-time Mayor of New York who publicly remanded the NYPD of police brutality after a meeting with gang leader Tanner Smith who claimed had been beaten by police when he and Owney Madden had been playing cards. He later passed Order No. 7 which prohibited an officer from using his club unless he could prove his life was in danger.[1] |
| Hugh J. Grant |
 |
1857–1910 |
Tammany Hall candidate who defeated Abram Hewitt to become Mayor of New York in 1888. His election was a result of a split between the Democrat-affiliated Tammany Hall and New York County Democracy parties. Although the formerly closed saloons, dive bars and other establishments resumed operations, few were able to recover from Hewitt's reforms and much of the traditional vice district of Sixth Avenue shifted to the old Tenth Ward by 1890.[1] |
| Abram Stevens Hewitt |
 |
1822–1903 |
Although Tammany Hall had supported Hewitt in his election campaign, Hewitt attacked Tammany political organizers by closing down a number of illegal establishments including those owned by Billy McGlory, Frank Stephenson, Harry Hill and Theodore Allen. He also shut down underworld saloons and dive bars in Satan's Circus and other such vice districts. Became mayor in 1886 amid charges of election fraud by Henry George supporters.[1] |
| Max Hochstein |
 |
|
Attorney and political "fixer" for Charles "Silver Dollar Smith" Solomon.[1] |
| Bill Howe |
|
1828–1902 |
Founder of the Howe and Hummel law firm who represented a number of underworld figures with his partner Abe Hummel throughout the 19th century.[1][7] |
| Abe Hummel |
|
1849–1926 |
Co-founder of the successful law firm Howe and Hummel with Bill Howe with whom they represented many of the city's criminal figures up until the turn of the 20th century. Five years after the death of Bill Howe, "Little Abe" Hummel was convicted of suborning perjury and sentenced to one year imprisonment.[1] |
| John Kelly |
 |
1822–1886 |
Longtime leader of Tammany Hall during the mid-to late 19th century. Known as "Honest John" Kelly, he was involved in graft and illegal gambling.[1][7] |
| Dan Kerrigan |
|
1843–1880 |
Tammany Hall political organizer, saloon keeper and noted pugilist who once fought Australian Kelly in a three and a half hour bout.[1] |
| George Law |
|
1806–1881 |
A leader of the Know Nothing movement, he lent the NYPD use of his clipper yacht the Grapeshot to apprehend Lew Baker and bring him back to New York to stand trial for the murder of William "Bill the Butcher" Poole.[1] |
| John Purroy Mitchel |
 |
1879-1818 |
Reform candidate who defeated William J. Gaynor to become Mayor of New York. He rescinded Order No. 7 and worked with the NYPD to launch the city's first major campaign against the New York underworld from 1910 to 1914.[1] |
| George Opdyke |
 |
1805–1880 |
Succeeded Fernando Wood as Mayor of New York. During the New York draft riots, he worked with both the NYPD and the military to restore order in the city. His home was targeted by rioters but were turned back by a fifty-man citizen guard.[1] |
| Charles A. Perkins |
|
1869–1930 |
District Attorney who battled against labor racketeering in New York during the first "Labor Slugger War". He also helped prosecute many of the city's notorious criminals during the NYPD's campaign against the street gangs in New York from 1911 to 1914.[1] |
| Horatio Seymour |
 |
1810–1886 |
Governor of New York. During the New York draft riots, he and Mayor George Opdyke were able to convince Archbishop John Hughes to address the rioters to disband.[1] |
| Alfred E. Smith |
 |
1873–1944 |
A powerful member of Tammany Hall from the turn of the 20th century up until the Second World War. Democratic candidate during the United States presidential election of 1928, he was the first Irish Catholic to run for the presidency of the United States.[1] |
| Charles S. Solomon |
|
1843–1899 |
Tammany Hall political organizer known as "Silver Dollar Smith". Solomon was the political boss of the old Tenth Ward district and owner of the Silver Dollar Saloon in Essex Street across the street from Market Street Court.[1] |
| Tim Sullivan |
 |
1862–1913 |
Was perhaps one of the most influential and powerful political figures in Tammany Hall during the turn of the 20th century. "Big Tim" Sullivan was also the first politician to form relationships with organized crime figures such as Monk Eastman and Paul Kelly.[1] |
| Tim Sullivan |
|
1869–1909 |
Younger cousin of Tim Sullivan known as "Little Tim".[1] |
| Edward Swann |
|
1862–1945 |
District Attorney who succeeded Charles Perkins and continued efforts to prosecute labor racketeers during the "Labor Slugger War" period. He was unable, however, to gain enough evidence against many of those charged by Perkins and forced to dismiss indictments for a number of union officials and organized crime figures in 1917.[1] |
| Robert Van Wyck |
 |
1849–1918 |
The first Mayor of New York after the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Richmond were merged with Manhattan. He was a longtime ally and supporter of NYPD Police Chief William Devery despite Rev. Charles Parkhurst's evidence of his corrupt administration.[1] |
| Charles S. Whitman |
 |
1868–1947 |
District Attorney who prosecuted a number of high-profile criminals and underworld figures, most notably, police detective Charles Becker and the Lenox Avenue Gang for the 1912 murder of gambler Herman Rosenthal.[1] |
| Fernando Wood |
 |
1812–1881 |
One of the city's most colorful political figures, he was an early member of Tammany Hall and served as the Mayor of New York during the 1850s and early 1860s.[1] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| Rev. A.C. Arnold |
|
|
Founder of the Howard Mission and, with several members of his congregation, stormed John Allen's notorious Fourth Ward dive bar and held a prayer meeting in 1868.[1][7] |
| Jacob Brown |
|
|
Civil servant and city street commissioner who unsuccessfully proposed that the drainage area known as "the Collect" be drained and filled.[1] |
| Daniel Drew |
|
1797–1879 |
One-time industrialist who was part of the committee which negotiated the purchase of the Old Brewery district on behalf of the Missionary Society in 1852.[1] |
| Oliver Dyer |
|
1824–1907 |
Journalist for Packard's Monthly from which he criticized a number of saloons, clubs and other immoral establishments. Among these were John Allen and was the first to refer to him as "the wickedest man in New York". He was also one of the signatories of the Walter Street "street preaching" document which described attempts by religious leaders to convince saloon keepers and other criminal figures to abandon crime as a way of life.[1][7] |
| James W. Gerard |
 |
1867–1951 |
Journalist who studied the London police force and later published a series of articles on police reform among these including the introduction of a permanent uniform. He was also one of the civilian volunteers who joined Police Chief George Washington Matsell in protecting the waterfront from river pirates.[1] |
| John W. Goff |
|
1865–1924 |
Judge and later member of the Supreme Court. While a recorder in his early career, he was the first judge to sentence Jack Zelig to prison. A member of the Lexow Committee.[1] |
| Jonathan H. Green |
|
1813–1887 |
Reformed gambler and agent for the New York Association for the Suppression of Gambling. In 1850, he conducted an exhaustive report detailing illegal gambling operations active in the city.[1] |
| Henry Hilton |
|
1824–1899 |
Attorney for the widow of Alexander T. Stewart. He was involved in the burial and in the initial negotiations with grave robber Henry G. Romaine for the return of Stewart's body.[1] |
| Archbishop John Hughes |
 |
1797–1864 |
The first Roman Catholic archbishop appointed in New York City, he was one of the many religious leaders who attempted to call for reforms against crime and corruption. He later appealed to mobs during the New York Draft Riots on the final day of the rioting.[1] |
| Patrick H. Jones |
 |
1830–1900 |
Lawyer and postmaster general who was involved with police Superintendent George Walling in the investigation and later negotiations with the grave robbers who had stolen and held for random the body of Alexander T. Stewart.[1] |
| William Travers Jerome |
 |
1859–1934 |
District Attorney responsible for the conviction of Abe Hummel in 1905 and ordered raids on a number of illegal gambling resorts forcing many gamblers to leave the city, most notably, Richard Canfield.[1] |
| Huie Kim |
|
|
Chinese-born Christian missionary and founder of the Morning Star Mission. He spoke out against criminal figures in Chinatown and publicly condemned the Tong wars.[1] |
| Jerry McAuley |
 |
1839–1884 |
A reformed gambler and alcoholic, he was the founder of McAuley's Mission which served free meals to the homeless on Water Street. It was originally opened as The Cremourne, the name of the popular dive bar next door, and was often confused by its patrons who often entered his place instead. He was supposed to have locked the front doors and not allow these customers to leave until they had listened to one of his sermons.[1] |
| Frank Moss |
 |
1860–1920 |
Lawyer who served as council for Rev. Charles Henry Parkhurst and an assistant to District Attorney Charles S. Whitman.[1] |
| Rev. Charles Henry Parkhurst |
 |
1842–1933 |
Leader of the New York Society for the Prevention of Crime, a civic organization which protested against vice districts and police corruption, and whose campaign eventually revealed the "Tenderloin" police district and resulted in the resignations of Inspector Alexander S. Williams and Captain William S. Devery. The organization also provided evidence of graft and political corruption to the Lexow and Mazet Committee.[1][7] |
| Rev. Lewis Morris Pease |
|
1818–1897 |
First Christian missionary to arrive in the Five Points district at the behest of the Ladies' Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1850. He and his wife set up a room on Cross Street and later started a mission near the Old Brewery district from where they conducted humanitarian efforts including setting up schools for adults and children as well as providing legitimate employment by supervising garment work for local clothing manufacturers.[1] |
| Rev. T. De Witt Talmage |
 |
1832–1902 |
Longtime street preacher who regularly spoke at the Brooklyn Tabernacle during the 1870s and, with Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, visited vice districts in Manhattan Island where they conducted street sermons in areas which he often referred to as "the modern Gomorrah".[1] |
| Lewis Tappan |
 |
1788–1873 |
Abolitionist whose home was attacked by a mobs during rioting between Tammany Hall and the Know Nothings in 1834.[1][7] |
| Name |
Portrait |
Life |
Comments |
| John Allen |
|
1830–1870 |
John Allen's infamous Forth Ward dance hall operated as a brothel and was a popular underworld hangout during the 1850s and 60s. Known as "the wickedest man in New York", he and other saloon keepers battled reformers such as Oliver Dyer and Rev. A.C. Arnold who wished to rid the city of "immoral" establishments.[1][7] |
| Theodore Allen |
 |
1833–? |
Born to a prominent Methodist family, Allen was a criminal figure and underworld fence known as "The Dive Keeper" or simply "The Allen" who financed a number of illegal gambling operations and similar establishments. Owner of The American Mabille, a high-class Broadway club, his brother John ran a gambling house while three other brothers were professional burglars.[1][7] |
| Burley Bohan |
|
1860–? |
Owner of The Doctor's, a popular hangout for panhandlers and professional beggars popularly known as the "Bowery Bums".[1] |
| Boiled Oysters Malloy |
|
|
Bowery thief and saloon keeper who ran a popular Centre Street basement bar known as The Ruins. Malloy was also a criminal associate of Patsy Conroy and his gang.[1][2] |
| Tom Bray |
|
|
Owner of a Thompson Street dive bar from which he operated as a criminal fence for thieves and confidence men for over forty years, Bray was reputed to be worth between $200,000 and $350,000 at the time of his death.[1][2] |
| Johnny Camphine |
|
|
Camphine ran one of the most infamous dive bars in the city, often serving colored camphine or rectified turpentine oil in place of whiskey, and was said to have caused insanity and delirium tremens of least 100 patrons.[1] |
| Ed Coffee |
|
|
A well-known sportsman, Coffee was the owner of the high-class Sixth Avenue Star and Garter. The bar was one of the most popular nightspots when it originally opened in 1878 and featured Billy Patterson as its head bartender.[1] |
| Dan The Dude |
|
fl. 1900–1910 |
Saloon keeper, political "fixer" and underworld figure involved in illegal gambling.[1][16][18] |
| Shang Draper |
 |
1839–1883 |
Saloon keeper and underworld figure simetimes associated with George Leonidas Leslie and his gang.[1] |
| Barney Flynn |
|
|
Chatham Square saloon keeper whose Doyers Street saloon, located across the street from the famed Callahan's Dance Hall, was a popular drinking establishment among Irish-Americans during the turn of the 20th century.[1][3] |
| Owney Geogheghan |
 |
1840–1885 |
Owner of a Bowery dive bar, located next to the high-class Winsor Palace, and was the scene of violence and muggings by "lush workers", blackjack artists and pickpockets.[1] |
| Kate Flannery |
|
|
A female bouncer who worked for "One-Armed" Charley Monell's Hole-in-the-Wall saloon along with Gallus Mag.[1][2][5][19] |
| Harry Hill |
|
1827–1896 |
British-born sportsman and gambler whose West Houston Street gambling resort remained one of the most popular places in the city for over three decades until its close in 1886.[1][20] |
| Jimmy Kelly |
|
|
Owner of a Bowery dive bar and was a criminal associate of the Eastman Gang.[1] |
| Jimmy Lee |
|
|
Owner of The Dump with Slim Reynolds, a popular Bowery hangout for panhanders, confidence men and other members of the underworld.[1] |
| Gallus Mag |
|
fl. 1850–1870 |
English-born street mugger and thief. She worked as a female bouncer for "One-Armed" Charley Monell in his Hole-in-the-Wall saloon with Kate Flannery. She is said to have kept a collection of human ears, bitten off during fights with unruly customers and waterfront criminals, which she displayed in pickled jars on the saloon's bar.[1][2][4][5][7][12][18][19] |
| Billy McGlory |
|
1853–? |
Five Points saloon keeper and owner of a number of popular establishments throughout the city. A criminal associate of the Forty Thieves and the Chichesters in his youth, McGlory's Armory Hall on Hester Street remained a popular Bowery hangout for members of the underworld in the Forth and Sixth Wards during the 1870s and 80s.[1][2][3][9][21] |
| Mallet Murphy |
|
|
A popular Bowery saloon keeper, his nickname was attributed to his use of a wooden mallet as a weapon against unruly customers and to defend his bar against criminals. His Battle Row saloon was used as the headquarters of the Gopher Gang during the turn of the 20th century.[1][4][21][22] |
| Mersher Miller |
|
|
Saloon keeper known as "Mersher The Strong Arm" who owned a Norfolk Street beer house at the turn of the 20th century. His bar was later the scene of a gunbattle when Johnny Spanish attempted to rob the bar and the patrons.[1][5] |
| Peter Mitchell |
|
|
Owner of a saloon at Wooster and Prince Streets, he quickly amassed a small fortune of $350,000 within two years. Finding religion in his later years, he eventually committed suicide by hanging himself to a whiskey tap out of guilt for the way he had acquired his wealth.[1][2] |
| Charley Monell |
|
|
Known as "One Armed Charlie", Monell was the longtime owner of the Dover Street saloon the Hole-in-the-Wall where Kate Flannery and Gallus Mag were employed as bouncers.[1][5] |
| Billy Patterson |
|
|
A popular bartender widely regarded as the "finest drink mixer in the city", Patterson's mysterious assault while working at the Star and Garter gave rise to an early urban legend and inspired the phrase "Who struck Billy Patterson?" which became a common phrase used to describe an unsolved crime.[1] |
| Jack Pioggi |
|
|
Owner of a Doyers Street drinking den, near Chinatown's infamous Bloody Angle, and was later a business associate of Chick Tricker. He was also the older brother of Louis "Louie the Lump" Poggi.[1] |
| Slim Reynolds |
|
|
He and fellow saloon keeper Jimmy Lee ran a popular Bowery hangout and meeting place for members of the underworld, particularly panhandlers, known as The Dump.[1] |
| Mush Riley |
|
fl. 1870–1878 |
Acquiring his particular nickname for his fondness of corn meal mush dipped in hot brandy, Riley was the owner of a Center Street dive bar and criminal associate of many underworld figures.[1][2][12] |
| Mike Salter |
|
1868–1922 |
Owner of a popular Pell Street resort, the Pelham, Irving Berlin worked there as a singing waiter prior to becoming a professional ragtime musician and later performed at the club during his early career.[1][23] |
| Frank Stephenson |
|
|
Bowery saloon keeper and owner of the Bleecker Street basement bar The Black and Tan. One of the first saloons to cater to African-Americans, it competed directly against neighboring establishments such as Harry Hill's gambling resort and Billy McGlory's Armory Hall among others.[1][9][12] |