The Gangs of New York

A look beyond the movie

Once a forgotten part of American history, Martin Scorsese's "Gangs of New York" has helped pique interest in the Civil War-era Irish gangs which were the precursors to modern American organized crime. "Gangs of New York" takes a historically fictitious look at the Dead Rabbits Gang and the others which followed and made the Bowery such a dangerous place in the mid 1800s. The film's climax recounts the immigrant-led Draft Riots of 1863 which helped bring about social and political change far beyond the Bowery Slums.

But while Scorsese's film paints a romantic and patriotic ouvere of the time -- and to be fair the film does not shy away from the era's truly violent nature -- the gangs of New York were often little interested in social progress.

One of the more violent New York gangs was the Jewish Eastmans, led by Monk Eastman. Monk was an ugly rough-and-tumble failed shop-owner who loved fighting and hurting people more than almost anything else. "I like to hand out a beating now and then," he was quoted as saying. "It keeps my hand in." About the only things Monk liked more than fighting were pigeons and cats. He reportedly owned 100 cats and 500 pigeons and was rarely seen without a cat or two in tow.


His favorite weapon was his wooden club which he would notch following a successful beating or killing. Legend has it that Monk made his 50th notch one evening in a Brooklyn saloon by whacking an innocent patron over the head. When asked why he did it, he stated that while noticing his club had 49 marks, "I just wanted to make it an even 50."

His face bore the scars of numerous battles which contributed to his nickname, "Monk" -- short for Monkey. Eastman was born Edward Osterman and was recorded as having the aliases Eddie Delaney, Bill Delaney, Joe Marvin and Joe Morris.

The Eastman gang at its peak had more than 1,000 members and was in cahoots with the political machine led by William Marcy Tweek, better known as Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall. The Eastmans provided a variety of services for Tammany Hall, including the usual protection rackets and beatings. But the most important service Monk and the gang provided for Tweed was his "get out the vote drive." Come election day, the Eastmans were out early making sure the good citizens of the city were going to the polls -- and of course helping them select "the right" candidates.

Long after Tweed fell to the muckraking journalists of the time, Eastman continued to flourish. His time came, as it does to all bosses, when an up-and-coming Italian named Paul Kelly took control of the vicious gang known as the Five Pointers and declared all-out war on the Eastmans. Despite his nom de guerre, Kelly was as Irish as Enrico Caruso and chose the name in the tradition of prizefighters of the day who all boxed under Irish names.


In 1901 Eastman was ambushed by a group of Five Pointers and shot, but managed to survive. From that point, the war between the gangs was hot and not a night passed in the Bowery without bloodshed between the two gangs. In 1904, Eastman and Kelly squared off in the ring to settle their differences and boxed to a standoff.

The writing, however, was on the wall, and when Eastman mugged the son of a prominent New Yorker, Tammany washed its hands of him. He served a 10-year term in Sing Sing and returned to the Bowery a powerless has-been. He enlisted in the Army, served in France in World War I and was discovered dead in a Bowery alley with five gunshot wounds in 1920.

http://organizedcrime.about.com/library/weekly/aa010203a.htm

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