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This 1928 account of city life begins, "The first of the gangs which terrorized New York at frequent intervals for almost a century were spawned in the dismal tenements that squatted in the miasmal purlieus of the Five Points area of the Bloody Ould Sixth Ward, which comprised, roughly, the territory bounded by Broadway, Canal street, the Bowery and Park Row, formerly Chatham street." As can be expected, the anti-Irish bias of the book continues throughout in lurid prose. There are many references to newspapers of the time period, and few to actual statistics. This is perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the book for historians. The narrative is by no means chronological; it skips from an 1838 description of Lower Manhattan -- the Five Points area, the Tombs and the Criminal Courts, to the Slave Plot of 1741 to a description of the Collect Pond. What Asbury did was to shift the narrative because he kept the book thematic. For the reader, this presents the challenge of turning over pages and makes the book somewhat hard to follow.
Both the Negro mammy peddling hot yams and the Hot Corn girl made an appearance, and the description of the area and people became explicit when he depicted the change for the worse dating to the 1820s: "Many of the old tenements began to crumble or sink into the imperfectly drained swamp, and became unsafe for occupancy; and the malarial odors and vapors arising from the marsh lands made the whole area dangerous to health. The respectable families abandoned the clapboarded monstrosities for other parts of Manhattan Island, and their places were taken, for the most part, by freed Negro slaves and low-class Irish, who had swarmed into New York on the first great wave of immigration which followed the Revolution and the establishment of the Republic." This was the first white flight to take place in New York.
Asbury traced the genesis of the gangs to the Paradise Square green-grocery speakeasies of the 1820s. The Forty Thieves was the first of these mobs, followed by the Kerryonians, the Chichesters, the Roach Guards, the Plug Uglies, the Shirt Tails, and the Dead Rabbits. By 1835, the Bowery had become an entertainment mecca, with dance halls, playhouses, concert halls, huge beer-gardens, and other houses of entertainment; the Bowery Boys, the True Blue Americans, the American Guards, the O'Connell Guards, and the Atlantic Guards had a "membership that was principally Irish, but they do not appear to have been as criminal or as ferocious as their brethren of the Five Points, although many of them were gifted brawlers." That gift had them fighting over whose privilege it was to fight the fires of the time, as many of the gangs were the city's original volunteer firemen; William Marcy Tweed was counted in their number. Later gangs were the Whyos of Mulberry Bend, the Hartley Mob, who employed a hearse to keep Five Pointers off-guard, the Dutch Mob, the Rag Gang, and the Hell's Kitchen Gang, which absorbed the Tenth Avenue Gang, and were quite possibly the forerunners of the Westies.
Asbury depicts city government as "quick to see the practical value of the gangsters, and to realize the advisability of providing them with meeting and hiding places, that their favor might be curried and their peculiar talents employed on election day to assure government of, by and for Tammany." In other words, Tammany Hall not only embezzled money from the citizenry of New York, but enabled the gangs to flourish. The city's Draft Riots takes up two chapters and excoriates the Irish, who became the target of the daily newspapers, with the exception of Horace Greeley's New York Tribune, which advocated more jobs to suppress the mobs. The riots lasted four days and left an estimated 2,000 killed, with 8,000 wounded. Archbishop Hughes came in for criticism; even though he was so ill with rheumatism that he had to sit on a balcony, he addressed the rioters, urging them to cease the riot. Critics said the speech was too little and too late.
Many of the works cited in the book are newspapers of the times; however, Asbury does include a bibliography citing books published before 1927, including "Valentine's Manual of Old New York, 1866 to 1927." This was a primary source of statistics published every year. Interestingly, he also includes a glossary entitled "Slang of the Early Gangsters," which lists the term "City College" as "The Tombs." The author states in an introduction that the text is not to be read as a sociological text, but as "an attempt to chronicle the more spectacular exploits of the refractory citizen who was a dangerous nuisance in New York for almost a hundred years." He then, inaccurately of course, proclaims gang activity in the city as extinct. Colorful? Yes. Sensational? Absolutely. Detailed? Too much so. Please do not read "Gangs of New York" as history. It is, however, entertaining, with lithographs and pictures throughout. If nothing else, the book is a good starting point for research.
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