Allan May
Allan May has been
interested in organized crime since he saw his first episode of the
old “Untouchables” television series in the early 1960s. An
admirer of Eliot Ness for years, in 1997, May initiated the movement
which resulted in the spreading of Ness’s ashes, along with his
third wife’s and adopted son’s, at a memorial service in
Cleveland’s historic Lake View Cemetery.
In addition, May teaches
classes on the history of organized crime for Cuyahoga Community
College and Lakewood Adult Education. He also lectures at libraries
in the Cuyahoga County system. May’s personal library on organized
crime contains over 500 volumes.
May is the historian at Lake
View Cemetery and on the speaker’s bureau. Working through a grant
funded by The Cleveland Foundation he wrote the “Who’s Who of
Lake View Cemetery” which includes biographies on over 440 noted
personalities buried there. In the past he has written a monthly
historical column for the Cleveland Plain Dealer Sunday
Magazine.
Allan
May has also published a book Mob Stories which is a
collection of short stories from around the United States on
organized crime, including events and personalities on both sides of
the law. In this book May attempts to present a human side by
showing how families were affected by the careers, and in many
cases, the demise of its participants. Mob Stories is
available through
Barnes
& Noble's online bookstore
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