- James Patrick O'Leary
James Patrick O'Leary (1869 in
Chicago ,Illinois -January 23 ,1925 in Chicago) was a gambling boss and saloon owner in Chicago. His parents were Patrick andCatherine O'Leary , in whose barn the Great Chicago Fire began.O'Leary was born at 137 DeKoven Street, the house in which his parents lived and which would see the start of the Chicago Fire two years later. He had a sister, who married James Ledwell.
O'Leary began working for local bookies as a teenager eventually opening
Long Beach, Indiana , anoff-track betting resort, however it soon closed due tobankruptcy by the 1880s. As a young man, O'Leary worked at theUnion Stock Yards , where he acquired the nickname "Big Jim." By the early 1890s, however, he had left the Stock Yards to open a saloon onHalsted Street ,which he designed to includeTurkish bath s, a restaurant, billiard room, and a bowling alley, as well as the detailedrace track results and other betting information, near the entrance to the Stock Yards. He also started operating a pool hall and book parlor from the back of the saloon. One of the leading gambler barons in Chicago, O'Leary was known for taking bets on everything from presidential candidates to the weather.Citation | last = Kelley | first = John | author-link = John Kelley | title = O'Leary, Who Would Bet on Anything, Dies | newspaper = Chicago Tribune | year = 1925 | date = 1925-01-24]In 1904, O'Leary began operating illegal gambling on
Lake Michigan with the steamship "The City of Traverse". However, without police protection, the ship soon went out of business by 1907 due to repreated police raids whenever the ship had docked. O'Leary however, refused to bribe police and instead had his businesses fortified including the construction of an iron and zinc layered oak door to his resort which were supposedly "fire proof, bomb-proof, and police-proof." After Chicago crime lord Michael Cassius MacDonald's death that same year O'Leary gained exclusive control of gambling operations in Chicago's Southwest Side based in around theUnion Stock Yards .O'Leary, who had been delivering whiskey to Colosimo's Cafe under arrangement with
Johnny Torrio , was suspected of being involved in the murder ofJames Colosimo onMay 11 ,1920 . Despite his connection, there were no charges brought against him. By the time of his death in 1925, O'Leary had become a millionaire several times over.Despite numerous raids by police, he was only found guilty of gambling once during his thirty year career. There was a perception that O'Leary, along with gambling bosses Mont Tennes and "Hot Stove" Jimmy Quinn, controlled the Chicago Police. [cite book | last = Merriner | first = James L. | authorlink = James L. Merriner | title = Grafters and Goo Goos: Corruption and Reform in Chicago, 1833-2003 | publisher = Southern Illinois University Press | date = 2004 | location = Carbondale, IL | pages = 84 | isbn = 0809325713]
O'Leary married Annie McLaughlin, whose family lived in the cottage next to the O'Leary's at the time of the fire. [Citation | title = Centennial Eve Reveals Truth of Great Fire | newspaper = Chicago Tribune | year = 1903 | date = 1903-09-23] The couple had five children, two sons and three daughters.
References
Further reading
*Asbury, Herbert. "The Gangs of Chicago: An Informal History of the Chicago Underworld". New York: Alfred A. Knoff, 1940. ISBN 1-56025-454-8
*English, T.J. "Paddy Whacked: The Untold Story of the Irish American Gangster". New York: HarperCollins, 2005. ISBN 0-06-059002-5
*Johnson, Curt and R. Craig Sautter. "The Wicked City: Chicago from Kenna to Capone". New York: Da Capo Press, 1998. ISBN 0-306-80821-8
*"Big Jim" O'Leary Dead". "New York Times", 23 January 1925
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