- Castellammarese War
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict = Castellammarese War
partof =
caption =
date =1929 -September 10 ,1931
place =New York City
casus =Murder of Masseria ally,Gaetano Reina .
result = Formation of theFive Families of New York City,Capo di tutti capi rank dropped, and formation of The Commission.combatant1 = Masseria Faction
combatant2 = Maranzano Faction
commander1 =
Joe Masseria †Alphonse Capone Charlie Luciano Albert Anastasia Vito Genovese
Alfred Mineo (Manfredi)†Willie Moretti Joe Adonis Frank Costello .commander2 =
Salvatore Maranzano †Joseph Bonanno Stefano Magaddino Joseph Profaci Joe Aiello †.casualties1 = 5
casualties2 = 3The Castellammarese War (1929 - 1931) was a bloody power struggle for control of the
Italian-American mafia between two factions. The war ended withSalvatore Maranzano , head of the Castellammarese faction, becoming "capo di tutti capi" (Boss of All Bosses) for the entire mafia. After he was killed, "the Commission" of five mafia families of equal stature was established.The Protagonists
The name "Castelammarese" refers to immigrants from the town of
Castellammare del Golfo in WesternSicily . In Sicily, these people were controlled by the powerful Sicilian mafioso Don Vito Cascio Ferro. In the U.S., the Castellammarese leader wasSalvatore Maranzano , a New York gangster. The Castellammarese mobsters in the U.S. included Joseph "Joe Bananas" Bonanno, Stefano "The Undertaker" Magaddino,Joseph Profaci , andJoe Aiello . This was one of the two factions in this gang war.The second faction came from other parts of
Sicily and theCalabria andCampania regions ofSouthern Italy . Many members of this faction originated fromNaples . Their leader was another New York mob leader, Joe "The Boss" Masseria. Masseria's faction includedAlphonse Capone , Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Albert "Mad Hatter" Anastasia,Vito Genovese , Alfred Mineo (Alfredo Manfredi),Willie Moretti ,Joe Adonis , andFrank Costello .Outwardly, the Castellammarese War was between the forces of Masseria and Maranzano. In reality, it was a generational conflict between the old guard Sicilian leadership, fondly known as the "
Mustache Pete s" for their long mustaches and old-world ways, and the "Young Turks", a younger and more diverse Italian group who wanted to work more with non-Italians. Tensions between the two factions were readily evident as far back as 1928, with one side frequently hijacking the other'salcohol trucks (alcohol production was then illegal in theUnited States due toProhibition ). However, both factions were fluid; many gangsters switched sides or killed their own allies during this war.The First Shot
It is hard to tell when the warfare actually started. In February 1930, Masseria supposedly ordered the death of
Gaspar Milazzo , a Castellemmarese native who was the president ofDetroit 's chapter ofUnione Siciliane . Masseria was reportedly humiliated by Milazzo's refusal to support him in an Unione Siciliane dispute involving theChicago Outfit andAl Capone .However, according to most sources, the opening salvo in the war was fired within the Masseria faction. On
February 26 ,1930 , Masseria ordered the murder of an ally,Gaetano Reina (whose daughter Carmela -- often referred to incorrectly as Mildred due to her nickname, Millie -- would marryJoe Valachi two years later). Masseria ordered the hit and gave the job to a youngVito Genovese , who killed Reina with a shotgun. Masseria's intent was to protect his secret alliesTommy Gagliano ,Tommy Lucchese , andDominic Petrilli (known as "The Gap"); however, his treachery would come back to haunt him, as the Reina family then threw its support to Maranzano.Trading blows
On
August 15 ,1930 , Castellammerese loyalists executed a key Masseria enforcer, Pietro Morello, at Morello'sEast Harlem office (a visitor, Giuseppe Pariano, was also killed). Two weeks later, Masseria suffered another blow. After Reina's murder, Masseria had appointedJoseph Pinzolo to take over the ice-distribution racket. However, onSeptember 9 ,1930 , the Reina family shot and killed Pinzolo at aTimes Square office rented by Lucchese. After these two murders, the Reina crew formally joined forces with the Castellammerese.Masseria soon struck back. On
October 23 ,1930 , Castellammerese allyJoe Aiello , president of the Chicago Unione Siciliane, was murdered inChicago . At the time, it was widely assumed that Capone, another Castellammerese ally, had killed Aiello as part of a bitter power struggle in Chicago. However, Luciano later admitted that Masseria ordered the Aiello hit, which was performed by Masseria allyAlfred Mineo .The Tide Turns
Following the murder of Aiello, the tide of war rapidly turned in favor of the Castellammarese. On
November 5 ,1930 Mineo and a key member of Masseria's gang,Steve Ferrigno , were murdered. At this point, members of Masseria's gang began defecting to Maranzano, rendering the original battle lines of the conflict (Castellammarese versus non-Castellammarese) meaningless. OnFebruary 3 ,1931 , another important Masseria lieutenant,Joseph Catania , was gunned down, dying two days later.Given the worsened situation, Masseria allies Luciano and Genovese started communicating with Castellammarese leader Maranzano. The two men agreed to betray Masseria if Maranzano would end the war. On
April 15 ,1931 , Masseria was killed while eating dinner at Nuova Villa Tammaro, aConey Island restaurant inBrooklyn . The hitters wereAlbert Anastasia ,Joe Adonis ,Vito Genovese , and Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel; Ciro "The Artichoke King" Terranova drove the getaway car, but legend has it that he was too shaken up to drive away and had to be shoved out of the driver's seat by Siegel.The New Mafia Structure
With the death of Masseria, the war was over. The winners, at least on paper, were Maranzano and the traditional Castellammarese faction. Now Maranzano took some significant actions to avoid more bloody and self-destructive gang wars. Many of these changes are still in effect today.
Except for
New York City , the major urban areas in the Northeast andMidwest were organized into one family per city; due to the sheer size of organized crime in New York, it was organized into five separate families. The bosses of the Five Families of New York were to be Luciano, Profaci, Gagliano, Bonanno, andVincent Mangano . All however would owe allegance and tribute to Maranzano. The Castellammarese, such as Profaci and Bonanno, were divided among the New York crime families and ceased to exist as a separate faction. Maranzano set himself above, and apart from, all the U.S. crime families by creating an additional position for himself--capo di tutti capi or "boss of all bosses."Each crime "family" unit was to be headed by a "boss", who was assisted by an "
underboss " (the third-ranking position of "consigliere ," was added somewhat later). Below the underboss, the family was divided into crews, each headed by a "caporegime ", or capo, and staffed by "soldiers." The soldiers would often be assisted by associates-not-yet-members (or as they became known later, "wise guys"). Associates might also include non-Italians who worked with the family.Death of Maranzano
Unfortunately for Maranzano, his reign as capo di tutti capi was short-lived. On
September 10 ,1931 Maranzano was shot and stabbed to death in hisManhattan office by a team of Jewish triggermen recruited byMeyer Lansky , a team which included Samuel "Red" Levine andBo Weinberg .In the end, both of the traditional factions in the New York Mafia lost the war. The real winners were the younger and more ruthless generation of mobsters, headed by Luciano. With their ascension to power, organized crime was poised to expand into a truly national and multi-ethnic combination.
ee also
*
History of the mafia External links
* [http://www.geocities.com/americanmafioso/-castellammaresewar.html American Mafioso: The Castellammarese War]
* [http://www.murderinc.com/fam/castwar.html War of Castellammare] on [http://www.murderinc.com/ www.murderinc.com]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.