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{{Short description|19th-century street gang in New York City}}
The '''Five Points Gang''' were a [[19th-century]] [[criminal organization]] based in the Sixth Ward ([[Five Points (Manhattan)|The Five Points]]) of [[New York City]].
{{more citations needed|date=July 2011}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2024}}
{{Infobox criminal organization
|name = Five Points Gang
|image = Fivepointsgang.jpg
|image_size = 350px
|caption = Members of the Five Points Gang of New York City
|founded =
|founder = [[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]]
|founding_location = [[Five Points, Manhattan]]
|years_active = 1890s–1920s
|territory = [[New York City]], mainly active in [[Lower Manhattan]], [[Harlem]] and [[Brooklyn]]
|ethnicity = Predominantly [[Irish people|Irish]] members and retained many Irish members. Throughout its existence, members were all immigrants or the first-generation sons of immigrants, and the gang eventually included many [[Italian-American]]s and Italian immigrants in its later iteration.
|leaders = [[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]]
|activities = [[Racketeering]], [[election fraud]], [[extortion]], [[street fighting]], [[illegal drug trade|drug trafficking]], [[pimping]], [[illegal gambling]], [[robbery]], [[fraud]], [[murder]], [[knife fighting]], [[shootout]]s, [[assaults]]
|allies = [[Tammany Hall]], [[Yakey Yakes]], [[Gopher Gang]], [[Hudson Dusters]], [[Whyos]], [[Morello crime family]], [[The Bugs and Meyer Mob|Bugs and Meyer Gang]]
|rivals = [[Eastman Gang]], [[White Hand Gang]], [[Batavia Street Gang]], [[Camorra in New York City|New York Camorra]], [[Lenox Avenue Gang]], [[New York City Police Department]]
|notable_members = {{hlist|[[Jack McManus (gangster)|Jack McManus]]|[[Johnny Spanish]]|[[Louis Pioggi]]|[[Johnny Torrio]]|[[Lucky Luciano]]|[[Al Capone]]|[[Frankie Yale]]|[[Meyer Lansky]]|[[Bugsy Siegel]]|[[James T. Ellison]]|[[Nathan Kaplan]]}}
}}


The '''Five Points Gang''' was a criminal street [[gang]] of primarily [[Irish-American]] origins, based in the [[Five Points, Manhattan|Five Points]] of [[Lower Manhattan]], [[New York City]], during the late 19th and early 20th century.<ref name="about">{{cite web|url=http://history1800s.about.com/od/urbanconditions/p/fivepointsnyc.htm|title=How the Five Points Became New York's Most Notorious Neighborhood|website=about.com|access-date=March 20, 2018|archive-date=March 4, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304042052/http://history1800s.about.com/od/urbanconditions/p/fivepointsnyc.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref>
==The Five Points==
In an area of [[Manhattan]] the [[wikt:carfax|carfax]] where five streets (Mulberry, Anthony (now Worth), Cross (now Park), Orange (now Baxter) and Little Water (extinct)) converged was known as "The Five Points". This area lay between [[Broadway]] and the [[Bowery]], and is roughly the northern part of today's downtown. By the 1820s this district was already starting to fall into disrepair and disrepute, and was even then considered as a slum area of the city. There were many [[gambling]] dens and "houses of ill repute" in the Five Points area, and it had a reputation as a dangerous place to travel, a place where many people had been [[mugged]], [[beating|beaten]] or [[shanghaied]], particularly after [[sunset|sundown]]. In 1842 [[Charles Dickens]] visited the area and was appalled at the horrendous living conditions he found there [http://urbanography.com/5_points/]. In that decade a movement to reform the district was undertaken by various church groups intent on helping the Five Points inhabitants. [[Abraham Lincoln]] also (reluctantly) visited the Five Points area in 1860.[http://www.irish-society.org/Hedgemaster%20Archives/five_points.htm] The Sixth Ward also had a reputation as being an area with a corrupt political process, particularly after the [[American Civil War]] (in one election, more ballots were counted than actual registered voters in the area).


[[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]], born Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, was an Italian American who founded the Five Points Gang. It included some who later became prominent criminals in their own right, including [[Johnny Torrio]], [[Al Capone]], and [[Lucky Luciano]].
==Origins==
By the 1870s a wave of Italian and Jewish immigrants were settling into the area as criminal gangs were beginning to vie for control of the money to be made from illicit activities. Gangs such as the [[Whyos]], replacing the [[Dead Rabbits]] and the [[Plug Uglies]], were composed mainly of Irish members and they fought with the predominantly Jewish gangs such as the Monk [[Eastman Gang]], who were also terrorizing New York neighborhoods, but in the Five Points area a thug named Paolo Antonini Vaccareli, a.k.a. '''[[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]]''', was forming a gang of his own, which he called The Five Points Gang. This group would become the most significant street gang in American history and ultimately change the way criminal groups operated in America. During the gang's later years, Kelly's second in command was a brutal criminal named [[Johnny Torrio]], who would help form a national crime syndicate in the United States. The Five Points Gang had a well-earned reputation for brutality, and in battles with rival gangs they would often fight to the death. Kelly and Torrio recruited members from other gangs in New York to join the Five Points organization, looking for the most capable and brutal members from rival gangs to join their own. From the James Street Gang came another notable recruit in 1899, [[Al Capone]], later to become the most notorious criminal in the country. It was Johnny Torrio who initially sent for Capone to come to Chicago to help him with racketeering he had established there. The man who would later become the most powerful criminal in the country, [[Lucky Luciano|Charles "Lucky" Luciano]], also joined the Five Points crew.


== Five Points ==
As the Five Points Gang became more experienced and organized, Kelly and his lieutenants saw the money that could be made by supporting corrupt politicians in their election bids. By threatening voters, falsifying voter lists and stuffing ballot boxes, the gang helped corrupt city officials of the infamous [[Tammany Hall]] era retain power. At the turn of the century the only real opposition to the Five Pointers was from Monk Eastmans' gang. The rivals were disputing a strip of the lower east side of Manhattan, both laying claim to the right to carry on their criminal conduct there. In 1901 a Five Pointer shot Eastman in the stomach, but Eastman survived the attack. Soon after, a Five Pointer was shot and killed by a member of the Eastman crew. By 1903 the feud came to a head and there was an all out gang war between the two groups. In one incident Kelly, Torrio and fifty Five Pointers were in a gun battle with a similarly sized force of Eastmans' gang. Police were called to the scene but had to retreat due to the severity of the battle, which went on for several hours. Three men were killed outright and many were wounded in the battle, and when the police finally gained control of the situation, Monk Eastman was arrested. He spent only a few hours in jail, however, as a "Tammany"-controlled judge released him after Eastman swore he was only an innocent passerby when the battle broke out. Due to the general public anger at this battle in the streets of New York, a Tammany Hall deputy named Tom Foley brought Kelly and Eastman together and told them that neither would enjoy any political protection if they did not resolve the border dispute. The gang leaders shook hands on the deal and peace was restored, but not for long. Within two months the war was raging again, and once more the leaders of the rival gangs were brought together for a meeting. At this time, however, it was determined that the two men should meet each other in a boxing match, with the winner's gang receiving the disputed territory and the acknowledgment that they were the "Top Crew" in the city.
{{main|Five Points, Manhattan}}
[[File:Paul Kelly-2.jpg|thumb|[[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]], founder of the Five Points Gang]]
[[File:Leslie five points new york 1885 3c22660v.jpg|thumb|right|A slum tour through the Five Points in an 1885 sketch]]
The area of Manhattan where four streets – [[Worth Street|Anthony (now Worth)]], Cross (now Mosco), Orange (now Baxter), and Little Water (now nonexistent) – converged was known as the "Five Points".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/amapple/5630172156/|title=A Map of "The Five Points" neighborhood in New York City and its relationship to today's streets and the old Collect Pond.|website=flickr.com|date=January 18, 2014|access-date=March 20, 2018}}</ref> [[Mulberry Street (Manhattan)|Mulberry]], notorious for slum tenements, was one street down from the Five Points. This area, now the present-day location of [[Chinatown, Manhattan|Chinatown]], lay between [[Broadway (Manhattan)|Broadway]] and the [[Bowery]]. By the 1820s, this district had been a center of settlement for poor immigrants and was considered a [[slum]] area of run-down wood frame and brick dwellings, warehouses and commercial enterprises dating from the late 18th century and early 19th century, populated by mostly poor English and Scots-Irish with increasing waves of [[German people|German]], [[Welsh people|Welsh]] and Irish refugees by the 1840s.<ref name="about" />


[[Gambling]] dens and [[brothels]] were numerous in the Five Points area, which was considered a dangerous destination, where many people had been [[mugged]], particularly at night. In 1842, famous British author [[Charles Dickens]] visited the area and was appalled at the poor living conditions and substandard housing.<ref name="about" />
On the appointed day, hundreds of men from both gangs met at an abandoned warehouse in the [[Bronx]] section of New York. Eastman and Kelly fought each other for two solid hours, each determined to show he was the better man. Kelly had been a boxer in his younger days, and was said to make a better showing in the earlier rounds, but Eastman was a larger man and fought ferociously. At the end of the match, neither man had been knocked out, and the match was declared a draw. The gang leaders told their men that they were still at war. At this point the Tammany Hall bosses decided to back the Five Points crew, and to withdraw any legal or political help to Eastman and his gang. In 1904 Eastman was beaten unconscious by a policeman who had foiled a robbery while it was taking place, and Eastman was convicted of the crime and sentenced to a ten-year term in [[Sing Sing]]. His gang was taken over by a man known as [[Kid Twist]], but this man was murdered by members of the Five Points Gang, and the Eastman crew began to crumble.


In the pre–civil war era, Catholic immigrants often dealt with ethnic prejudice and class discrimination from [[Nativism (politics)|Nativist]] [[White Anglo-Saxon Protestants]]. As a result, many Irish immigrants formed local street gangs such as the [[Kerryonians]], the [[Forty Thieves (New York gang)|Forty Thieves]], the [[Shirt Tails]], and the [[Chichesters]], to rebel against their low social status. These street gang members soon turned to crime.
Kelly survived an attempt on his own life, shot three times by two of his own lieutenants, [[James T. Ellington|James T. "Biff" Ellington]] and [[Razor Riley]], in a gun battle inside one of his own nightclubs. Pressure from Tammany Hall forced him to keep a lower profile after this incident. He subsequently became more involved in the nascent labor union rackets and he ended up dying of natural causes in 1936.


Shortly before the American Civil War, these gangs began to dissipate, with remaining members joining powerful gangs such as the [[Dead Rabbits]] and the [[Whyos]].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6tszDwAAQBAJ&q=how+did+irish+gangs+form+in+the+pre-civil+war+era&pg=PT62|title = The Crooked Ladder: Gangsters, Ethnicity and the American Dream|isbn = 9781351484237|last1 = O'Kane|first1 = James M.|date = September 4, 2017| publisher=Routledge }}</ref> Eventually the influence and numbers of these Irish gangs started to wane.
After Monk Eastman was finally released in 1909, he was never able to regain the leadership of the criminal organization he had started, and fell into a life of petty crime and numerous jail terms. Within a few years, Eastman joined the army as a 44-year-old man to fight in [[World War I]], and had a distinguished military record fighting in combat as fearlessly as he had on the streets of New York. He received an honorable discharge in 1919, but a year later was shot 5 times and killed by a [[Prohibition]] agent. He was given a funeral with full military honors.[http://glasgowcrew.tripod.com/fivepoints.html]


By the 1870s a new wave of Italian and Eastern European Jewish immigrants were settling into the area. Criminal gangs of Irish, Jewish and Italian criminals began competing for control of the territory, rackets and revenue to be made from illicit activities. [[Monk Eastman]]'s [[Eastman Gang|Eastman Coin Collectors]] originally had many Irish members before becoming predominantly Jewish.


==Origins==
The rackets and criminal activities that the Five Points Gang had established were taken over by the [[Mafia]] gangs that were becoming more powerful in the first twenty years of the century. Former Five Pointers like Torrio, Capone and Luciano became the new leadership of these groups and expanded their operations on a national and international basis. With the [[18th Amendment]] and the [[Volstead Act]], profits from bootlegged liquor became a huge earner for these groups, and what had been the Five Points Gang were absorbed into these Mafia families.
Italian American [[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]] (born Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli), formed the Five Points Gang, then made up mostly of Italians. The Five Points Gang had a reputation for brutality and in battles with rival gangs they often fought to the death. The gang would then gain more power and members when Kelly recruited the remaining members of other Five Points gangs, such as the [[Dead Rabbits]] and [[Whyos]], into his growing gang.


As time went on, Jewish, Polish and Eastern European immigrants would also be brought within the ranks of the Five Points Gang, making them even more powerful and influential. [[Al Capone]] came from the James Street gang and would later lead the [[Chicago Outfit]]. [[Lucky Luciano|Charles "Lucky" Luciano]] also joined the Five Points Gang in his younger years and was later considered the most powerful criminal in the country.
== External links ==


==Rise to power==
*http://www.irish-society.org/Hedgemaster%20Archives/five_points.htm
[[Image:Ellison.JPG|thumb|[[James T. Ellison|Biff Ellison]], a former member and would-be leader of the Five Points Gang.]]
*http://glasgowcrew.tripod.com/fivepoints.html
As the Five Points Gang became more experienced, Kelly and his lieutenants saw the money to be made by supporting corrupt politicians in their election bids. By threatening voters, falsifying voter lists and stuffing ballot boxes, the gang aided city officials of the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] political machine [[Tammany Hall]] to retain power. At the turn of the 20th century, the only competitors to the Five Pointers were from [[Monk Eastman]]'s gang.
*http://www.gripe4rkids.org/his.html
*http://urbanography.com/5_points/


The rivals disputed claims to a strip of territory of the [[Lower East Side, Manhattan|Lower East Side]] in [[Manhattan]]. In 1901, a Five Pointer shot Eastman in the stomach, but he survived. Soon after, one of his crew killed a Five Pointer in retaliation. By 1903 the feud escalated, and the two gangs openly engaged in warfare. In one incident, Kelly, Torrio and 50 Five Pointers were in a gun battle with a similarly sized force of Eastman's gang. City Police called to the scene had to retreat from the battle, which lasted several hours. Three men were killed, and many were wounded in the battle. When the police finally gained control of the situation, they arrested Eastman, but he spent only a few hours in jail. A Tammany-controlled judge released him after Eastman swore that he was innocent.
[[Category:Historical gangs of New York City]]


The general public was angered about warfare in the streets. A Tammany Hall deputy named Tom Foley brought Kelly and Eastman together and told them that neither would receive any political protection if they did not resolve the border dispute. They restored peace for a short time, but within two months, violence had risen again. Officials brought together the two leaders, but asked them to take on each other in a boxing match with the winner's gang to take the disputed territory. [[Image:Kellys-club.jpg|thumb|The New Brighton/Little Naples Cafe, main clubhouse of Paul Kelly's Five Pointers gang.]]
[[de:Five Points Gang]]

On the appointed day, hundreds of men from both sides met at an abandoned house in the [[Bronx]]. Eastman and Kelly fought each other viciously. Kelly had been a boxer in his younger days, and was said to make a better showing in the earlier rounds, but Eastman was a larger man and fought ferociously. The fight lasted two hours and by the end of the match, both had suffered heavy punishment, but neither man had been knocked out and the match was declared a draw. The gang leaders told their men that they were still at war.

At this point, the Tammany Hall bosses decided to back the Five Points crew and to withdraw any legal or political help for Eastman and his gang. In 1904 Eastman was beaten unconscious by a policeman who had foiled a robbery in progress. Eastman was convicted of the crime and sentenced to a 10-year term in [[Sing Sing]] prison (Ossining Correctional Facility) in [[Ossining (town), New York|Ossining, New York]].

==Ascendancy==
Eastman's imprisonment meant the Five Points Gang had no effective rival for control of organized crime activities in the Lower East Side. During that time, Kelly's organization expanded into other parts of Manhattan and parts of New Jersey. The Eastman crew was largely eclipsed when Eastman's successor [[Max Zwerbach|Max "Kid Twist" Zwerbach]], a former member of the Five Points Gang until he defected to the Eastman Gang, was murdered in 1908 by [[contract killing|hitmen]] of the Five Points Gang, allegedly at the behest of Paul Kelly.

Kelly brought a more businesslike approach to his gang activities. He opened the New Brighton Athletic Club, a two-story cafe and dance hall at 57 Great Jones Street (between Lafayette and Bowery), where he charmed socialites and other prominent citizens who frequented his club. Always well dressed, Kelly spoke French, Italian, and Spanish fluently, and appreciated fine art and classical music. His educated and sophisticated persona impressed many of New York's elite.

==Decline and final years==
Paolo Vaccarelli/Paul Kelly survived an attempt on his life, after being shot three times by two of his former lieutenants, [[James T. Ellison|James T. "Biff" Ellison]] and Pat "Razor" Riley, in a gun battle inside the New Brighton in 1905. [[Tammany Hall]] pressure made him keep a lower profile after this incident, while New York Police Commissioner William McAdoo closed the New Brighton for the protection of its socialite regulars. This failed assassination began the decline of Kelly's dominance in the New York underworld.<ref>Jay Robert Nash, ''The Great Pictorial History of World Crime, Volume 2'', Scarecrow Press, 2004, p.474</ref>

Kelly and his gang did not, however, disappear. After Kelly closed the New Brighton, he moved operations to the Italian immigrant communities in [[Harlem]] and [[Brooklyn]], while also retaining ties to his old neighborhood, becoming a vice president of the [[International Longshoremen's Association]] (ILA) under his Americanized birth name of Paul Vaccarelli. He was based in the Chelsea area.

Kelly/Vaccarelli was expelled from the ILA in 1919, but returned to it later that year. He took leadership of a spontaneous port-wide strike begun in protest against a wage increase of only five cents an hour, which management had agreed to. With the support of Mayor John F. Hylan, Kelly was appointed to a commission to resolve the strike. He ended it but did not achieve any concessions for the strikers.<ref name=strike>Brenner, Aaron, Day, Benjamin and Ness, Immanuel. ''The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History''. Routledge, 2009, p. 557. {{ISBN|0765613301}}</ref>

Kelly subsequently became a labor racketeer, providing muscle in labor disputes during the 1920s.{{Citation needed|date=January 2022}} Kelly died of natural causes in 1936.

Gradually the [[Italian-American Mafia|Mafia]] gangs took over the rackets and criminal activities formerly controlled by the Five Points Gang. Former Five Pointers such as Torrio, Capone, Lansky and Luciano became the leaders of the new groups and, with mentoring from influential businessman and criminal genius [[Arnold Rothstein]], expanded their operations on a national and international basis. With the [[Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|18th Amendment]] and the [[Volstead Act]] establishing Prohibition in 1920, profits from bootlegged liquor became a huge source of revenue for the Mafia families.

Kelly's second-in-command [[John Torrio]] was the first to establish his style of racketeering in Chicago, recruiting Capone to join him there. Torrio later helped form a [[National Crime Syndicate]] in the United States, following the demise of the Five Points Gang and after Capone replaced him in Chicago, in coordination with Luciano and Lansky.

==See also==
* [[List of identities in The Gangs of New York (book)]]

==References==
{{reflist}}

{{Organized crime groups in New York City}}

[[Category:Five Points Gang| ]]
[[Category:1890s establishments in New York City]]
[[Category:Organizations established in the 1890s]]
[[Category:1920s disestablishments in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Organizations disestablished in the 1920s]]
[[Category:Secret societies related to organized crime]]
[[Category:Tammany Hall]]

Latest revision as of 08:38, 12 June 2024

Five Points Gang
Members of the Five Points Gang of New York City
FounderPaul Kelly
Founding locationFive Points, Manhattan
Years active1890s–1920s
TerritoryNew York City, mainly active in Lower Manhattan, Harlem and Brooklyn
EthnicityPredominantly Irish members and retained many Irish members. Throughout its existence, members were all immigrants or the first-generation sons of immigrants, and the gang eventually included many Italian-Americans and Italian immigrants in its later iteration.
Leader(s)Paul Kelly
ActivitiesRacketeering, election fraud, extortion, street fighting, drug trafficking, pimping, illegal gambling, robbery, fraud, murder, knife fighting, shootouts, assaults
AlliesTammany Hall, Yakey Yakes, Gopher Gang, Hudson Dusters, Whyos, Morello crime family, Bugs and Meyer Gang
RivalsEastman Gang, White Hand Gang, Batavia Street Gang, New York Camorra, Lenox Avenue Gang, New York City Police Department
Notable members

The Five Points Gang was a criminal street gang of primarily Irish-American origins, based in the Five Points of Lower Manhattan, New York City, during the late 19th and early 20th century.[1]

Paul Kelly, born Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, was an Italian American who founded the Five Points Gang. It included some who later became prominent criminals in their own right, including Johnny Torrio, Al Capone, and Lucky Luciano.

Five Points[edit]

Paul Kelly, founder of the Five Points Gang
A slum tour through the Five Points in an 1885 sketch

The area of Manhattan where four streets – Anthony (now Worth), Cross (now Mosco), Orange (now Baxter), and Little Water (now nonexistent) – converged was known as the "Five Points".[2] Mulberry, notorious for slum tenements, was one street down from the Five Points. This area, now the present-day location of Chinatown, lay between Broadway and the Bowery. By the 1820s, this district had been a center of settlement for poor immigrants and was considered a slum area of run-down wood frame and brick dwellings, warehouses and commercial enterprises dating from the late 18th century and early 19th century, populated by mostly poor English and Scots-Irish with increasing waves of German, Welsh and Irish refugees by the 1840s.[1]

Gambling dens and brothels were numerous in the Five Points area, which was considered a dangerous destination, where many people had been mugged, particularly at night. In 1842, famous British author Charles Dickens visited the area and was appalled at the poor living conditions and substandard housing.[1]

In the pre–civil war era, Catholic immigrants often dealt with ethnic prejudice and class discrimination from Nativist White Anglo-Saxon Protestants. As a result, many Irish immigrants formed local street gangs such as the Kerryonians, the Forty Thieves, the Shirt Tails, and the Chichesters, to rebel against their low social status. These street gang members soon turned to crime.

Shortly before the American Civil War, these gangs began to dissipate, with remaining members joining powerful gangs such as the Dead Rabbits and the Whyos.[3] Eventually the influence and numbers of these Irish gangs started to wane.

By the 1870s a new wave of Italian and Eastern European Jewish immigrants were settling into the area. Criminal gangs of Irish, Jewish and Italian criminals began competing for control of the territory, rackets and revenue to be made from illicit activities. Monk Eastman's Eastman Coin Collectors originally had many Irish members before becoming predominantly Jewish.

Origins[edit]

Italian American Paul Kelly (born Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli), formed the Five Points Gang, then made up mostly of Italians. The Five Points Gang had a reputation for brutality and in battles with rival gangs they often fought to the death. The gang would then gain more power and members when Kelly recruited the remaining members of other Five Points gangs, such as the Dead Rabbits and Whyos, into his growing gang.

As time went on, Jewish, Polish and Eastern European immigrants would also be brought within the ranks of the Five Points Gang, making them even more powerful and influential. Al Capone came from the James Street gang and would later lead the Chicago Outfit. Charles "Lucky" Luciano also joined the Five Points Gang in his younger years and was later considered the most powerful criminal in the country.

Rise to power[edit]

Biff Ellison, a former member and would-be leader of the Five Points Gang.

As the Five Points Gang became more experienced, Kelly and his lieutenants saw the money to be made by supporting corrupt politicians in their election bids. By threatening voters, falsifying voter lists and stuffing ballot boxes, the gang aided city officials of the Democratic Party political machine Tammany Hall to retain power. At the turn of the 20th century, the only competitors to the Five Pointers were from Monk Eastman's gang.

The rivals disputed claims to a strip of territory of the Lower East Side in Manhattan. In 1901, a Five Pointer shot Eastman in the stomach, but he survived. Soon after, one of his crew killed a Five Pointer in retaliation. By 1903 the feud escalated, and the two gangs openly engaged in warfare. In one incident, Kelly, Torrio and 50 Five Pointers were in a gun battle with a similarly sized force of Eastman's gang. City Police called to the scene had to retreat from the battle, which lasted several hours. Three men were killed, and many were wounded in the battle. When the police finally gained control of the situation, they arrested Eastman, but he spent only a few hours in jail. A Tammany-controlled judge released him after Eastman swore that he was innocent.

The general public was angered about warfare in the streets. A Tammany Hall deputy named Tom Foley brought Kelly and Eastman together and told them that neither would receive any political protection if they did not resolve the border dispute. They restored peace for a short time, but within two months, violence had risen again. Officials brought together the two leaders, but asked them to take on each other in a boxing match with the winner's gang to take the disputed territory.

The New Brighton/Little Naples Cafe, main clubhouse of Paul Kelly's Five Pointers gang.

On the appointed day, hundreds of men from both sides met at an abandoned house in the Bronx. Eastman and Kelly fought each other viciously. Kelly had been a boxer in his younger days, and was said to make a better showing in the earlier rounds, but Eastman was a larger man and fought ferociously. The fight lasted two hours and by the end of the match, both had suffered heavy punishment, but neither man had been knocked out and the match was declared a draw. The gang leaders told their men that they were still at war.

At this point, the Tammany Hall bosses decided to back the Five Points crew and to withdraw any legal or political help for Eastman and his gang. In 1904 Eastman was beaten unconscious by a policeman who had foiled a robbery in progress. Eastman was convicted of the crime and sentenced to a 10-year term in Sing Sing prison (Ossining Correctional Facility) in Ossining, New York.

Ascendancy[edit]

Eastman's imprisonment meant the Five Points Gang had no effective rival for control of organized crime activities in the Lower East Side. During that time, Kelly's organization expanded into other parts of Manhattan and parts of New Jersey. The Eastman crew was largely eclipsed when Eastman's successor Max "Kid Twist" Zwerbach, a former member of the Five Points Gang until he defected to the Eastman Gang, was murdered in 1908 by hitmen of the Five Points Gang, allegedly at the behest of Paul Kelly.

Kelly brought a more businesslike approach to his gang activities. He opened the New Brighton Athletic Club, a two-story cafe and dance hall at 57 Great Jones Street (between Lafayette and Bowery), where he charmed socialites and other prominent citizens who frequented his club. Always well dressed, Kelly spoke French, Italian, and Spanish fluently, and appreciated fine art and classical music. His educated and sophisticated persona impressed many of New York's elite.

Decline and final years[edit]

Paolo Vaccarelli/Paul Kelly survived an attempt on his life, after being shot three times by two of his former lieutenants, James T. "Biff" Ellison and Pat "Razor" Riley, in a gun battle inside the New Brighton in 1905. Tammany Hall pressure made him keep a lower profile after this incident, while New York Police Commissioner William McAdoo closed the New Brighton for the protection of its socialite regulars. This failed assassination began the decline of Kelly's dominance in the New York underworld.[4]

Kelly and his gang did not, however, disappear. After Kelly closed the New Brighton, he moved operations to the Italian immigrant communities in Harlem and Brooklyn, while also retaining ties to his old neighborhood, becoming a vice president of the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) under his Americanized birth name of Paul Vaccarelli. He was based in the Chelsea area.

Kelly/Vaccarelli was expelled from the ILA in 1919, but returned to it later that year. He took leadership of a spontaneous port-wide strike begun in protest against a wage increase of only five cents an hour, which management had agreed to. With the support of Mayor John F. Hylan, Kelly was appointed to a commission to resolve the strike. He ended it but did not achieve any concessions for the strikers.[5]

Kelly subsequently became a labor racketeer, providing muscle in labor disputes during the 1920s.[citation needed] Kelly died of natural causes in 1936.

Gradually the Mafia gangs took over the rackets and criminal activities formerly controlled by the Five Points Gang. Former Five Pointers such as Torrio, Capone, Lansky and Luciano became the leaders of the new groups and, with mentoring from influential businessman and criminal genius Arnold Rothstein, expanded their operations on a national and international basis. With the 18th Amendment and the Volstead Act establishing Prohibition in 1920, profits from bootlegged liquor became a huge source of revenue for the Mafia families.

Kelly's second-in-command John Torrio was the first to establish his style of racketeering in Chicago, recruiting Capone to join him there. Torrio later helped form a National Crime Syndicate in the United States, following the demise of the Five Points Gang and after Capone replaced him in Chicago, in coordination with Luciano and Lansky.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "How the Five Points Became New York's Most Notorious Neighborhood". about.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  2. ^ "A Map of "The Five Points" neighborhood in New York City and its relationship to today's streets and the old Collect Pond". flickr.com. January 18, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  3. ^ O'Kane, James M. (September 4, 2017). The Crooked Ladder: Gangsters, Ethnicity and the American Dream. Routledge. ISBN 9781351484237.
  4. ^ Jay Robert Nash, The Great Pictorial History of World Crime, Volume 2, Scarecrow Press, 2004, p.474
  5. ^ Brenner, Aaron, Day, Benjamin and Ness, Immanuel. The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History. Routledge, 2009, p. 557. ISBN 0765613301