- Labor Slugger War
The Labor Sluggers War was a series of gang wars among
New York labor sluggers for control oflabor racketeering lasting from the first war between "Dopey"Benny Fein and Joe "The Greaser" Rosenzweig against a coalition of smaller gangs in 1911 and continuing on and off until the murder of Jacob "Little Augie" Orgen by Louis "Lepke" Buchalter andGurrah Shapiro in 1927.Origin
With the industrialization of the
United States and the emergence oflabor union s in the late nineteenth century and into early 1900s, street gangs began to be hired by companies asstrikebreaker s and to discourage union activity. Unions themselves would also hire labor sluggers primarily as protection from these strikebreakers and to recruit, by force if necessary, new union members. Many of these workers were recently arriving immigrants, particularly Jewish and Italians, in New York's East Side. Gangs made up of immigrants from similar backgrounds often sided with unions of their compatriots, but also were quick to exploit the lucrative opportunities for labor racketeering.Labor Slugger War: 1913-1917
By 1912 two major gangs, one led by "Dopey" Benny Fein and another by Joe "The Greaser" Rosenzweig, dominated labor slugging in New York. The various remaining gangs, who had been largely rendered powerless by Fein and Rosenzweig's brutal tactics, united in a loose alliance in an attempt to break the monopoly held by the two gang leaders.
Declaring war, a major gunfight was fought on Grand and
Forsyth Street s in late-1913 between Fein and Rosenzweig against several gangs, includingBilly Lustig , Paul Philip,Little Rhody ,Punk Madden (not to be confused withProhibition gangsterOwney Madden ), andMoe Jewbach . While there were no casualties on either side, gang leader Paul Philip was later killed by Rosenzweig gunmanBenny Snyder .Later arrested by police, Snyder confessed to the murder and agreed to testify against Rosenzweig, who also later testified against the gang. Although Fein and Rosenzweig defeated the gangs eventually, Rosenzweig's conviction in 1915, as well as Fein's arrest on a separate murder charge soon after, would see Fein also testify against his organization as an investigation was launched on labor slugging activities. Eleven gangsters and twenty-three union officials were arrested.
econd Labor Sluggers War: 1918-1919
The subsequent investigations and imprisonment of labor sluggers Benny Fein and Joseph Rosenzweig had effectively ended labor slugging and other labor-related racketeering until the release of "Kid Dropper"
Nathan Kaplan andJohnny Spanish in 1917. Former rivals, Kaplan and Spanish formed a gang made up mostly of ex-Five Points Gang members that soon dominated labor slugging in New York virtually unchallenged. However infighting between Kaplan and Spanish began again, with Spanish leaving the gang in late 1918. The two factions began fighting for several months until Spanish was killed, supposedly by Kaplan, onJuly 29 ,1919 .Third Labor Sluggers War of 1923
With the death of Johnny Spanish, Kaplan completely controlled labor slugging operations for over four years. In the early 1920s, however, Kaplan began to face competition from rival
Jacob Orgen 's "Little Augies", includingJack Diamond ,Louis Buchalter , andGurrah Shapiro . In early 1923 war broke out between Kaplan and Orgen over striking "wet wash" laundry workers. Violent gunfights were fought throughout the city until Kaplan's death by Orgen gunmanLouis Kushner while in police custody for a concealed weapons charge in August 1923.Fourth Labor Slugger War of 1927
Orgen, now in complete control of labor racketeering, began expanding into bootlegging. However city officials began investigations into labor racketeering, putting pressure on labor slugging in particular. Advised by
Meyer Lansky to instead infiltrate the unions, Orgen refused, continuing labor slugging operations.In October 1927 Organ was killed by former associates Buchalter and Shapiro, who also wounded Orgen's bodyguard Jack Diamond, in a drive-by shooting. As Buchalter took over as the principal labor racketeer in New York City he began to focus on control of labor unions and extortion, while offering his services to others in organized crime, eventually becoming head of
Murder, Inc. , as labor racketeering was divided among members into theNational Crime Syndicate in the 1930s.Further reading
*Daugherty, Carroll Roop. "Labor Problems in American Industry". New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1938.
*Gottesman, Ronald and Richard Maxwell Brown. "Violence in America: An Encyclopedia". New York: Simon and Schuster, 1999. ISBN 0-684-80487-5
*MacDonald, Lois. "Labor Problems and the American Scene". New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1938.References
*Asbury, Herbert. "The Gangs of New York". New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1928. ISBN 1-56025-275-8
*Sifakis, Carl. "The Mafia Encyclopedia". New York: Da Capo Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8160-5694-3
*Sifakis, Carl. "The Encyclopedia of American Crime". New York: Facts on File Inc., 2001. ISBN 0-8160-4040-0
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