With resentment toward Europeans at an all-time high,
Chinese triads reach their peak numbering over 3,600 although many of the groups are limited to local villages or clans.[1]
Early
Cantonese criminals, who will eventually form the first of the New York
Tongs, soon began arriving in the city after the success of the Cantonese gambler
Wah Kee, who had been operating illegal gambling parlors and
opium dens since the 1870s, in the New York district of what will later be known as
Chinatown. The Chinese population steadily begins to climb to several hundred, compared to only 12 as of 1872, as the predominantly German and smaller Irish population slowly become driven out of the neighborhoods of
Doyers,
Mott, and
Pell Streets as a result of the large immigration of Chinese immigrants which by 1910 will number more than 10,000.[2]
January 13 -
Robert Suffrage, a 19-year-old carpenter and member of the
Stable Gang, is sentenced to two years and three months imprisonment at
New York State Prison for stealing the gold watch of a
Dennis McGuinness the previous October. While being taken to
The Tombs, Suffrage attacked the arresting officer and was immediately taken back to the courtroom where he was indicted of assault in less than ten minutes.[3]
February 10 –
Edward and
John Brady (criminal), leaders of the
Brady Gang, are arrested along with four others including
Hugh Brady (or John Osborne) and
Thomas Brady (or Thomas Halligan), Edward Carrol, Michael Hammel and Harmond Clark (the latter two suspected of running moonshine from New York to the Palisades) and for operating an illegal distillery. With the exception of Clark who was acquitted due to lack of evidence, the remaining members were convicted and given a suspended sentence as they had been held in custody for the past ten months.[4]
February 29 – New York police officer Thomas M. Stone is severely beaten by members of the
Smoky Hollow Gang while attempting to arrest a gang member loitering on
Columbia Street. Surrounded by several gang members, Stone was relieved of his billy club and repeatedly kicked and assaulted, with some of the members going so far as to jump on his body after the officer had lost consciousness, until bystanders interfered after one member was stopped from attempting to use a heavy piece of paving stone to crush the officers skull in. Although later apprehended and held at
Raymond Street Jail, Stone later died of his injuries while at
Long Island College Hospital on the evening of April 1 and was speculated in the press that the gang members would receive leniency due to their political connections to Democratic politicians in the Brooklyn's Sixth Ward.[5]
April 26 – Several weeks after the death of police officer Thomas Stone, a Sgt. Walsh is attacked by members of the Smoky Hollow Gang while attempting to arrest
Edward Glynn for
disorderly conduct. While initially outnumbered, several bystanders including his uncle Frank Walsh came to his assistance and arrested another of his assailants
John Mungerford. Mungerford, a brother of the gang member officer Stone had attempted to arrest, was charged as an accomplice in the patrolman's murder.[6]
May 5 –
John "Little Andy" Anderson, a former member of the
Dutch Mob, is arrested by a police detective on the corner of Prince Street and The
Bowery. Although he attempted to fire a revolver at the arresting officer, he was disarmed and taken into custody on suspicion of a recent robbery which had taken place at the Michell, Myers & Co. on
Second Avenue six days earlier. While over $1,500 in jewellery is found in his possession, he denied his involvement in the robbery claiming the jewelry had been given to him and is released under a $5,000 bail following his arraignment at the
Tombs Police Court. The money and jewelry which had claimed was his property including a diamond pin, an amethyst ring, $65 in cash and his revolver were returned to him upon his release.[7]
July 5 – Months after his arrival in
New Orleans from
Sicily,
Black Hand leader
Giuseppe Esposito is quickly arrested by Police Chief
David C. Hennessy and his cousin Detective Mike Hennessy. Esposito, wanted by Italian authorities on a number of murder and kidnapping charges, is soon deported to
Italy. Esposito's organization is brought under control of
Charles and Antonio Matranga.
July 16 – New Orleans hoodlum
Anthony Labrusio (or Labruzzo) is killed by Black Hand assassin
Giutano Ardota on behalf of Sicilian fugitive Giuseppe Esposito, on whom Labrusio has been informing.[11]
Although various Triad-based groups had been in existence following the
California Gold Rush, the first modern day Chinese-American
Tongs are formed by Chinese immigrants for mutual protection in response to the
Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
March 1 – Two members of the
Whyos, recently sentenced to six months imprisonment for vagrancy, escape from
Hart's Island after swimming to a boat anchored in the Sound. Suspicious of the circumstances surrounding their escape, two prison guards are dismissed from their posts.[13]
July 22 – New York fence
Marm Mandelbaum is charged with several counts of grand larceny and receiving stolen goods by the recently appointed District Attorney
Peter B. Olney. While the trial was scheduled in December, Mandelbaum skipped bail, fleeing to Canada where she would reside for the rest of her life.[15]
October 21 –
James Reilly, along with his Whyos accomplices
John Belfield and
James Brown, are tried and convicted of assaulting and robbing an Englishman, Henry Stanley, of $26 after Reilly lured him to a
Pell Street saloon.[16]
October 26 – Suspected members of the
Mulberry Street Gang including
James McCardell,
John Lary,
Charles McManus and ex-con George Lee are taken into custody by police officers of the Sixth Precinct Station House after August Lenk and John Burke reported being assaulted on the corner of
Grand and
Mulberry Streets by unidentified assailants who stole their gold watches. During their trial at the
Tombs Police Court One of those charged, James McCardell, was identified by Lenk as one of his attackers while Burke claimed to recognize George Lee as the who had distracted him while the other two men attacked. McCardell is held in custody at $1,000 bail; the others were remanded.[17]
December 25 –
Dennis Cocoran, formerly of the New Orleans City Hall Department of Improvements and leader of the
Poydras Market Gang, stabbed Deputy Sheriff
Daniel Haugherty on the corner of
Poydras and Liberty Streets after an altercation only hours before. Taken to Charity Hospital, he died of his wounds at around one o'clock the following morning.[18]
July 4 – John Kelly and John Clinton, members of the
Whyos, are tried at
Essex Market Street Court and convicted of assaulting Naty Glashiem and stealing his gold watch and chain.[19]
August 10 – Several members of the
74th Street Gang, including William "Red" Carroll, James Fitzpatrick, James Beatty, Louis Gavious (or Fitzpatrick) and John "Noble" Hughes, are arrested by a Capt. Gunner of the 28th Precinct after the death of one of their victims, Nawclaw Kalat, who dies of his injuries earlier that day. Kalat, who had been fighting with another Bohemian immigrant on
Avenue A, had been severely injured when members of the gang joined in the fight.[20]
November 26 – Patrick O'Brien and Michael Flannagan, both members of the Whyos, are arrested and charged with the assault and robbery of fireman William Clark on the night of November 25. O'Brien's brother, having been present at the court house at the time of Patrick O'Brien's arrest, left with another gang member to get a lawyer for his brother. However, in an attempt to raise enough money for a lawyer, he was caught attempting to steal a gold watch from a visiting businessman Ebenezer S. Willis. As he was being brought into custody, he assaulted an acquaintance John Gagin who had agreed to testify against O'Brien having witnessed the theft.[21]
October 2 – After an altercation at Bill Swan's Fireproof Coffee House saloon,
Matt O'Brian wounds his brother and fellow co-leader of the
Live Oak Boys,
Hugh O'Brian, on
Gallatin Street. Arrested for the assault, despite Hugh fleeing
New Orleans in an effort to avoid testifying against his brother, Matt O'Brian is convicted of "assault less than mayhem" and imprisoned, ending the
Live Oak Boys' presence in the New Orleans' underworld.
September 29 -
Michael Hennessy, American law enforcement officer
1887
Events
Chinese triads the
Big Sword Society and the
Shandong-based
White Lotus Society are suspected of instigating attacks on
Christian missionaries (including
Chinese converts) and foreigners. By the end of the decade they have more than 1,000 followers carrying out attacks on isolated missions and trading posts.
August 13 – Daniel Lyons, who succeeded
Danny Driscoll as leader of the
Whyos, suffers a gunshot wound to the head by saloon keeper David Murphy and died the following day while at
Chambers Street Hospital. Lyons, not to be confused with former leader
Danny Lyons, had been tearing up Murphy's saloon along with the nephew of
Jerry Hartigan when Murphy shot him. Although immediately turning himself over to police claiming self-defense, he was held in custody at
The Tombs.[26]
Frank Lyons, a member of the
Yellow Henry Gang, escapes from prison and reorganizes the gang before being recaptured later that year.
January 23 –
Danny Driscoll, co-leader of the
Whyos street gang, is executed for the death of New York prostitute Breezy Garrity during a gunfight between Driscoll and Five Points Gang member Johnny McCarthy.
With resentment toward Europeans at an all-time high,
Chinese triads reach their peak numbering over 3,600 although many of the groups are limited to local villages or clans.[1]
Early
Cantonese criminals, who will eventually form the first of the New York
Tongs, soon began arriving in the city after the success of the Cantonese gambler
Wah Kee, who had been operating illegal gambling parlors and
opium dens since the 1870s, in the New York district of what will later be known as
Chinatown. The Chinese population steadily begins to climb to several hundred, compared to only 12 as of 1872, as the predominantly German and smaller Irish population slowly become driven out of the neighborhoods of
Doyers,
Mott, and
Pell Streets as a result of the large immigration of Chinese immigrants which by 1910 will number more than 10,000.[2]
January 13 -
Robert Suffrage, a 19-year-old carpenter and member of the
Stable Gang, is sentenced to two years and three months imprisonment at
New York State Prison for stealing the gold watch of a
Dennis McGuinness the previous October. While being taken to
The Tombs, Suffrage attacked the arresting officer and was immediately taken back to the courtroom where he was indicted of assault in less than ten minutes.[3]
February 10 –
Edward and
John Brady (criminal), leaders of the
Brady Gang, are arrested along with four others including
Hugh Brady (or John Osborne) and
Thomas Brady (or Thomas Halligan), Edward Carrol, Michael Hammel and Harmond Clark (the latter two suspected of running moonshine from New York to the Palisades) and for operating an illegal distillery. With the exception of Clark who was acquitted due to lack of evidence, the remaining members were convicted and given a suspended sentence as they had been held in custody for the past ten months.[4]
February 29 – New York police officer Thomas M. Stone is severely beaten by members of the
Smoky Hollow Gang while attempting to arrest a gang member loitering on
Columbia Street. Surrounded by several gang members, Stone was relieved of his billy club and repeatedly kicked and assaulted, with some of the members going so far as to jump on his body after the officer had lost consciousness, until bystanders interfered after one member was stopped from attempting to use a heavy piece of paving stone to crush the officers skull in. Although later apprehended and held at
Raymond Street Jail, Stone later died of his injuries while at
Long Island College Hospital on the evening of April 1 and was speculated in the press that the gang members would receive leniency due to their political connections to Democratic politicians in the Brooklyn's Sixth Ward.[5]
April 26 – Several weeks after the death of police officer Thomas Stone, a Sgt. Walsh is attacked by members of the Smoky Hollow Gang while attempting to arrest
Edward Glynn for
disorderly conduct. While initially outnumbered, several bystanders including his uncle Frank Walsh came to his assistance and arrested another of his assailants
John Mungerford. Mungerford, a brother of the gang member officer Stone had attempted to arrest, was charged as an accomplice in the patrolman's murder.[6]
May 5 –
John "Little Andy" Anderson, a former member of the
Dutch Mob, is arrested by a police detective on the corner of Prince Street and The
Bowery. Although he attempted to fire a revolver at the arresting officer, he was disarmed and taken into custody on suspicion of a recent robbery which had taken place at the Michell, Myers & Co. on
Second Avenue six days earlier. While over $1,500 in jewellery is found in his possession, he denied his involvement in the robbery claiming the jewelry had been given to him and is released under a $5,000 bail following his arraignment at the
Tombs Police Court. The money and jewelry which had claimed was his property including a diamond pin, an amethyst ring, $65 in cash and his revolver were returned to him upon his release.[7]
July 5 – Months after his arrival in
New Orleans from
Sicily,
Black Hand leader
Giuseppe Esposito is quickly arrested by Police Chief
David C. Hennessy and his cousin Detective Mike Hennessy. Esposito, wanted by Italian authorities on a number of murder and kidnapping charges, is soon deported to
Italy. Esposito's organization is brought under control of
Charles and Antonio Matranga.
July 16 – New Orleans hoodlum
Anthony Labrusio (or Labruzzo) is killed by Black Hand assassin
Giutano Ardota on behalf of Sicilian fugitive Giuseppe Esposito, on whom Labrusio has been informing.[11]
Although various Triad-based groups had been in existence following the
California Gold Rush, the first modern day Chinese-American
Tongs are formed by Chinese immigrants for mutual protection in response to the
Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
March 1 – Two members of the
Whyos, recently sentenced to six months imprisonment for vagrancy, escape from
Hart's Island after swimming to a boat anchored in the Sound. Suspicious of the circumstances surrounding their escape, two prison guards are dismissed from their posts.[13]
July 22 – New York fence
Marm Mandelbaum is charged with several counts of grand larceny and receiving stolen goods by the recently appointed District Attorney
Peter B. Olney. While the trial was scheduled in December, Mandelbaum skipped bail, fleeing to Canada where she would reside for the rest of her life.[15]
October 21 –
James Reilly, along with his Whyos accomplices
John Belfield and
James Brown, are tried and convicted of assaulting and robbing an Englishman, Henry Stanley, of $26 after Reilly lured him to a
Pell Street saloon.[16]
October 26 – Suspected members of the
Mulberry Street Gang including
James McCardell,
John Lary,
Charles McManus and ex-con George Lee are taken into custody by police officers of the Sixth Precinct Station House after August Lenk and John Burke reported being assaulted on the corner of
Grand and
Mulberry Streets by unidentified assailants who stole their gold watches. During their trial at the
Tombs Police Court One of those charged, James McCardell, was identified by Lenk as one of his attackers while Burke claimed to recognize George Lee as the who had distracted him while the other two men attacked. McCardell is held in custody at $1,000 bail; the others were remanded.[17]
December 25 –
Dennis Cocoran, formerly of the New Orleans City Hall Department of Improvements and leader of the
Poydras Market Gang, stabbed Deputy Sheriff
Daniel Haugherty on the corner of
Poydras and Liberty Streets after an altercation only hours before. Taken to Charity Hospital, he died of his wounds at around one o'clock the following morning.[18]
July 4 – John Kelly and John Clinton, members of the
Whyos, are tried at
Essex Market Street Court and convicted of assaulting Naty Glashiem and stealing his gold watch and chain.[19]
August 10 – Several members of the
74th Street Gang, including William "Red" Carroll, James Fitzpatrick, James Beatty, Louis Gavious (or Fitzpatrick) and John "Noble" Hughes, are arrested by a Capt. Gunner of the 28th Precinct after the death of one of their victims, Nawclaw Kalat, who dies of his injuries earlier that day. Kalat, who had been fighting with another Bohemian immigrant on
Avenue A, had been severely injured when members of the gang joined in the fight.[20]
November 26 – Patrick O'Brien and Michael Flannagan, both members of the Whyos, are arrested and charged with the assault and robbery of fireman William Clark on the night of November 25. O'Brien's brother, having been present at the court house at the time of Patrick O'Brien's arrest, left with another gang member to get a lawyer for his brother. However, in an attempt to raise enough money for a lawyer, he was caught attempting to steal a gold watch from a visiting businessman Ebenezer S. Willis. As he was being brought into custody, he assaulted an acquaintance John Gagin who had agreed to testify against O'Brien having witnessed the theft.[21]
October 2 – After an altercation at Bill Swan's Fireproof Coffee House saloon,
Matt O'Brian wounds his brother and fellow co-leader of the
Live Oak Boys,
Hugh O'Brian, on
Gallatin Street. Arrested for the assault, despite Hugh fleeing
New Orleans in an effort to avoid testifying against his brother, Matt O'Brian is convicted of "assault less than mayhem" and imprisoned, ending the
Live Oak Boys' presence in the New Orleans' underworld.
September 29 -
Michael Hennessy, American law enforcement officer
1887
Events
Chinese triads the
Big Sword Society and the
Shandong-based
White Lotus Society are suspected of instigating attacks on
Christian missionaries (including
Chinese converts) and foreigners. By the end of the decade they have more than 1,000 followers carrying out attacks on isolated missions and trading posts.
August 13 – Daniel Lyons, who succeeded
Danny Driscoll as leader of the
Whyos, suffers a gunshot wound to the head by saloon keeper David Murphy and died the following day while at
Chambers Street Hospital. Lyons, not to be confused with former leader
Danny Lyons, had been tearing up Murphy's saloon along with the nephew of
Jerry Hartigan when Murphy shot him. Although immediately turning himself over to police claiming self-defense, he was held in custody at
The Tombs.[26]
Frank Lyons, a member of the
Yellow Henry Gang, escapes from prison and reorganizes the gang before being recaptured later that year.
January 23 –
Danny Driscoll, co-leader of the
Whyos street gang, is executed for the death of New York prostitute Breezy Garrity during a gunfight between Driscoll and Five Points Gang member Johnny McCarthy.