"Some coats have fur of rabbit, at Vassar sex appeal,
In Nebraska made of Airedale, in Chicago lined with steel."
-- Doin' the Raccoon
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Hymie Weiss (Chicago Police Dept.) |
Upon Deanie's death, the leading players in the North Side gang,
Moran, Drucci and Weiss ran an advertisement in the major newspapers
announcing that, in respect to their assassinated leader, they, the
survivors, would share the running of the organization as equals;
they signed the article, "Board of Governors". The city
was half shocked, yet amused by the gumption of gangsters posing so
brazenly as any group of legal businessmen. Chief of Police Morgan
Collins ranted at the absurdity; pretty much the rest of Chicago
smirked. |
The Torrio-Capone combine, however, read the real message behind
it, and did not laugh. Firstly, it had been directed at them, and
they knew it. And what it was really saying was, "All three of
us, Moran, Weiss and Drucci, will not rest till you, Johnny Torrio
and Alphonse Capone, are pushing daisies. As well, we think we know
who pressed the trigger on Dion O'Banion and they, too, will
die."
Spies covering City Hall for the North Side mob reported back to
them that the day after O'Banion's murder the police had detained
one of Capone's New York allies, Frankie Yale, in connection with
the killing. Yale, had been in the process of boarding the New York
Central bound for home. He had a good alibi for being in Chicago
that week – the funeral of a fellow Sicilian -- and was released.
But, Moran was convinced, as were his pals, that Yale had been one
of the torpedoes. Underground connections suggested that the other
two killers had been two of Capone's favorite henchmen, Alberto
Anselmi and John Scalise.
Moran and company struck back, like a hammer on an anvil. And
sparks flew. Their first attack came on the evening of January 12,
1925. Snow covered the city and temperatures had fallen below
freezing; most of Chicago was indoors. A black sedan carrying Al
Capone and a few of his gang members pulled up along the curb
outside Palermo's Restaurant on the South Side. The street was empty
as the passengers began to alight, so that is why the dark green
touring car, idling around the nearest curb with its lights off,
struck Capone's chauffeur as suspicious. "Watch it, watch
it!" he cried, and flopped down on the seat below the
dashboard. But, before he finished, the oncomers had cut loose with
a barrage from three machine guns. Capone and his escorts dropped to
the sidewalk behind the cover of the sedan and lay there listening
to the body of their car being assaulted by a tac-tac-tac of
bullets. Metal pinged, glass shattered, rubber burst; by the time
the deadly vehicle moved away, their own was an inoperable shell
rattling death through a hissing radiator. The driver, still
crouched below the steering wheel, had received only a flesh wound,
miraculously.
Capone lived and he had no doubt who had aimed those Thompson
guns. From that point on, he traveled only in armored limousines
that he had specially built. Throughout the rest of the 1920s, the
North Side gunsels would make his existence a virtual hell of pop
shots, threats and denunciations that, no matter how steely a front
he exhibited, wore him down mentally and physically. He moved
constantly in the midst of, at the least, fifteen bodyguards.
Despite friend Al's protestations, Johnny Torrio refused to
harness himself with a bodyguard; he enjoyed the maneuverability
without one. In fact, he rarely carried a gun. He most assuredly
wished he had one, though, on January 24, 1925, twelve days after
Al's near escape. He and his wife Anna had been shopping in the Loop
that afternoon when they returned home to 7011 South Clyde in the
wealthy South Shore neighborhood. Anna alit from their limo and went
inside, carrying a few of the smaller items they had just bought.
Torrio lingered behind helping their driver gather up the rest of
that day's purchases on the running board. Neither man had noticed
the three silhouettes in the gray auto across the street.
When a car door slammed behind him, Papa Johnny reflexively
glanced. In that instant, before the gun blast, he must have
recognized the two men walking toward him as Hymie Weiss and Bugs
Moran; Hymie toted a shotgun and Moran was reaching under his
suitcoat for, well, Torrio could guess what. Hymie shot and Torrio's
driver crumpled at the knees, wounded. Another charge blew the
windows of the car out, sending shards of glass across Papa Johnny's
overcoat. The consigliere tried to run, but reached his front
lawn when he heard another roar and felt his cheek brand red hot.
Dizzy, tumbling across the sidewalk, he noticed blood spurt from his
face where, he would learn later, Hymie's missile had torn away part
of his jawbone. Immobile, the world topsy-turvy, he remained
conscious a few moments before passing out – conscious long enough
to see Bugs Moran lean over him to flatten the open barrel of his
automatic against his temple. "Coup de grace,
compliments of Deanie," Moran said, and Torrio cringed. A click
– that's all. Moran cursed. The Mick slammed the cylinder with his
other palm and aimed again. Another hollow click. The last Torrio
remembered was Moran fumbling at the gun while that gray car across
the street began to bleat its horn wildly.
Drucci, at the wheel, didn't like the developing scene. People
were looking out their windows, and cars at the end of the block
were pausing to gawk. It was only a matter of minutes before the
police would show up. "C'mon! let’s scram!" he
shouted, a cry Hymie Weiss took up as he tugged at Moran's shoulder.
Unable to complete the send-off he would have liked, Moran resigned
himself to the fact that at least they hadn't missed this time.
Hymie's shotgun had done its work. Papa Johnny's eyes glazed
lifeless in the shadow of the crumpled brim of his expensive
Hamburg, cockeyed on his head. Al's buddy was dead, next time Al
himself!
But, Al's buddy did not die. He regained consciousness,
jostled back by the insistent shaking of his driver and the screams
of Anna. The gray automobile had fled the street and now the
clanging of police cars came nearer. An emergency operation saved
his life and, when interviewed days later by the police, all Torrio
had to say, accompanied with a wave of his Sicilian hand, was,
"I know who they were. It’s my business. I've got nothing to
tell you."
Moran was picked up as the man who tried to deliver the final
shot, based on a neighbor's description, but, in the end, Torrio
refused to press charges, adhering to the strict code of omerta:
Keep your mouth shut and get even in time. Frankly, he had had
enough and if there was any payback to be done, he'd leave that job
to Al. For that matter, Torrio decided to leave everything to
Al – the paybacks, the headaches, the bullet dodging, the
abberations, the nightmares, the legal hassles that were all part of
playing the big league in Chicago.
|
Anthony Genna's car |
After he left the hospital, Torrio was moved to Cook County Jail
to serve his nine-month sentence for violation of the Volstead Act,
imposed on him for being found on site at the Sieben Brewery the day
of O'Banion's joke-playing. Incarcerated, he read the newspapers to
keep abreast of daily activities. Edition after edition recorded the
growing hostilities taking place on Chicago streets. He read how one
by one the Gennas and their cumpari, suspiciously everyone
who had one time crossed Deanie O'Banion, were dying from shots
fired by "persons unknown". Angelo Genna expired after
three men in a car chased his auto down Hudson Avenue, ending when
Angelo crashed into a lamppost, then being shot to death behind the
wheel, trapped. Mike Genna, then Tony Genna expired. Giuseppe
"The Cavalier" Nerone, a Genna ally, succumbed to a hail
of bullets, to be followed by a Genna backer, Unione Siciliane
chieftan Sal "Samoots" Ammatuna, riddled while getting a
shave in a barber's chair. In every instance, Moran, Weiss or Drucci
was suspected. |
Torrio retired. "Not unmindful of the ongoing bloodshed in
Chicago...Johnny Torrio gave his own situation careful
thought," pens Curt Johnson, author of Wicked City.
"The Genna deaths were only a preclude, (for) Weiss and Moran
would not give up trying to exact full revenge...until, finally,
someone subjugated or destroyed all the others...(Torrio)
transferred all his Chicago properties to Capone... The Torrios took
a train to New York City, where they took a luxury liner to
Naples."
Al Capone was now in charge, elated to be in the driver's seat,
but scalding with vengeance. Now it was his turn to get even.
Full gang war erupted.
As a backlash for the Gennas, Capone's gunners caught Moran and
Drucci driving on Congress Avenue one afternoon and poured machine
gun fire into their auto. Drucci, at the wheel, swerved the car to
escape the spray, and in doing so lost control. When it hopped over
a curb and slammed into a building, the two North Siders abandoned
their vehicle for the sanctuary of the nearest doorway. Wounded and
bleeding, but firing backwards at their pursuers, they ran through
the building, out to the other street, and didn't stop until they
reached a doctor's office several blocks away. They were soon back
in action.
This was the first of many an ambush by Capone to prove that he
could spit out what he had been forced to ingest. Two attempts on
Weiss' and Drucci's lives followed in 1926 – both led by Louis
Barko, a Sicilian bodyguard aiming for higher things. Both incidents
occurred on busy Michigan Avenue in the middle of a work-a-day crowd
a week apart. Both sizzled – and fizzled.
The first affair happened on August 10. Weiss and Drucci were
passing the Standard Oil Building en route to political boss
Morris Eller's office to make a payoff when Barko and company opened
fire from a car. As the bricks of the building behind them chinked
by the splatter of dum-dum bullets, and dozens of citizens hit the
dirt in terror, the two targets crawled behind parked autos until
the shootists rolled out of sight. No one was hurt, but the police
were enraged by such public display.
Five days later, when the same pair encountered the same
torpedoes, same location, they were ready. This time, Drucci and
Weiss whipped their revolvers from their vests and began popping
back. What followed was something of a Dodge City showdown replayed
on a day-lit artery of a modern city. Innocent drivers, caught in
the melee, careened into haphazard paths to avoid crossfire; Drucci
snaked around their autos to maneuver closer to the enemy, loading
and reloading the whole time. Barko's driver panicked when he
realized Drucci had reached his running board and, jerking the car
onto the sidewalk to escape, simultaneously unloaded the snarling
baggage onto the pavement. Drucci, cut and bruised from the fall,
limped after the evaders sending bullets across the span of the
Michigan Avenue Bridge.
|
Vincent Drucci (Chicago Police Dept.) |
By the time police squads managed to break through the resulting
traffic jam, Drucci told them he was merely trying to chase some
thieves who tried to steal his wallet. The best they could do was
charge him with creating a public disturbance.
The lalapalooza was yet to come; the queen mother of impudence in
the face of the law, the most careless and outlandish symbol of the
Roaring Twenties up to that time, perpetrated by Chicago mobsters.
It took place in Cicero, but it reeked of Chicago. |
"Big Bill" Thompson, Chicago's gangster-friendly mayor,
had surprisingly lost to reforming Democrat William Dever in 1923,
forcing the then Torrio/Capone regime temporarily out of the city.
Requiring a safe-haven during Dever's term in office, Capone forces
took over the already corrupt government of Cicero, moving mob
headquarters from the Metropole Hotel in the heart of the Loop to
the Hawthorne Hotel in that little village just west of Chicago. Not
much changed, except location. As he had done at the Metropole,
Capone now held court in the three-story brick suburban hostelry,
doing business as usual and away from Dever's annoying restoration.
Between business, Scarface leisured over one of the many gaming
tables in Cicero, placed horse bets with a bookie in Anton's Hotel
next door, chatted with his crones in the Hawthorne Smoke Shop or
dined in the hotel's homey restaurant where he slipped waitresses
$20 tips with a wink. It was there, while enjoying lunch on the
afternoon of September 20, 1926, that the North Siders came close to
eradicating Big Al for good.
Richard Lindberg's Return to the Scene of the Crime –
Chicago describes the action: "A caravan of six
automobiles, coming from the west, proceeded slowly down 22nd
Street. Only the barrels of the machine guns poking through the
curtained windows of the cars were visible to eyewitnesses. The lead
car, equipped with an alarm bell on the front, resembled a police
flivver.
"The streets were crowded when the shooting started outside
of Anton's Hotel. Machine gun fire raked the windows of Angelo
Gurdi's barbershop, where Capone received his daily shave; a
delicatessen; a laundry; and the Hawthorne Restaurant. In a final,
murderous volley, a man dressed in khaki overalls stepped from the
running board of one of the cars and approached the main entrance of
the Hawthorne Hotel. With the machine gun resting on his knee. He
sprayed the interior lobby the way a gardener might aim the nozzle
of a hose at a dry lawn. Then the attack cars sped off, crossing the
city limits back into Chicago."
Police later estimated that over one-thousand shots had been
fired.
Frankie Rio, Capone's personal bodyguard, had yanked his boss to
the floor when the shooting began. The coffee they had been drinking
spilled on them, and they were covered with broken glass and slivers
of wood from the window frame by the time the fusillade ended, but
they were thankfully alive. Louis Barko, the gunsel who had caused
Weiss and Drucci double trouble on Michigan Avenue a month earlier,
had been slightly wounded. The only civilian injury was a Mrs.
Freeman, who suffered a piece of glass in her eye. There would have
been more had not the first barrage fired from the convoy been
merely blanks designed to clear the streets of pedestrians.
Chicago historians believe that the attack had been designed by
Moran and Weiss as a scare tactic, not necessarily as a murder
attempt. They wanted to show their might and their belligerence. It
worked. This time, Al was shaken. Because the man in the overalls
had been identified by Capone allies as Pete Gusenberg, the North
Side triggerman, Capone sent out word to O'Banion's avenging angels
that they had made their point, and now it was time for a truce.
A peace meeting was held on October 4 at the Hotel Sherman in
downtown Chicago. Capone wanted it simple, just one man representing
his and the North Siders' interests; Tony Lombardo, head of the
local Unione Siciliane, served as Capone's proxy and Hymie
Weiss attended for his gang. Weiss was blunt: He and Moran would lay
down arms on one condition and one condition only – that Capone
turn over to them the two hitmen Scalise and Anselmi who had killed
O'Banion. When Lombardo phoned in Weiss' request, Big Al grunted.
"Why, you tell Weiss I wouldn't do that to a dog!" The
dove had failed, and it was back to war-hawk tactics.
They came quickly. Exactly a week later, Hymie Weiss was shot to
pieces.
That morning, October 11, 1926, Weiss had been observing trial
proceedings for Joe Saltis, a South Side gangster accused of murder;
it was later revealed that Weiss and Moran were pulling their
influence with the courts to have him acquitted in return for his
alliance against the Capone faction. After court adjourned for the
day, Weiss left with an entourage who would return with him to the
North Side headquarters above Schofield's Flower Shop to talk over
the Saltis matter. These included William O'Brien (Saltis'
attorney), Benjamin Jacobs (an alderman), Patrick Murray (Weiss'
bodyguard) and Sam Peller (Weiss' bodyguard).
|
Holy Name Cathedral |
Parking on Superior, katty-corner from the flower shop, the group
rounded the curb onto State in front of Holy Name Cathedral and
proceeded directly towards the shop across the street. That's when
two Thompson guns opened up from an upstairs window in a lodging
house next to Schofield's. Hymie was killed instantly, as was
Murray. The rest, wounded, managed to stagger from view back onto
Superior Street. Bullets had blasphemously pockmarked Holy Name's façade;
the cornerstone, in the line of fire had been so badly abused that
entire words of its carved epitaph were obliterated. Instead of
reading, "AD 1874 – At the Name of Jesus Every Knee Should
Bow – Those That Are In Heaven and Those On Earth," it now
read, " Every Knee Should
Heaven And On Earth".
That the slayers had had the nerve – and the opportunity -- to
place their gunners' nest in a building less than twenty feet from
Schofield's front door chilled Moran and Drucci, who suddenly found
themselves minus another friend – and lieutenant. One by one the
lads of Kilgubbin were dying on their home ground.
The surviving leaders determined that the Behemoth needed to be
dethroned – somehow, any way -- before the local yokels
began to sing: "Who holds the 42nd and 43rd Wards? CAPONE in
his pistol pockets!"
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