Adam Worth

Adam Worth
Adam Worth
Born 1844
Germany
Died 8 January 1902 (aged 57–58)
London, England
Alias(es) Henry J. Raymond, Edward Grey
Charge(s) robbery
Penalty Seven years imprisonment
Status deceased
Occupation clerk, soldier, thief, gambler

Adam Worth (1844–January 8, 1902) was an American criminal. Scotland Yard detective Robert Anderson nicknamed him "the Napoleon of the criminal world",[1] and he is commonly referred to as "the Napoleon of Crime".


Contents

Earlier life

Adam Worth was born into a poor Jewish family in Germany.[2][3] His original surname might have been "Werth".[4] When he was five years old, his family moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts in the United States and his father became a tailor.[5] In 1854, he ran away from home and moved first to Boston and then in 1860 to New York City. He worked as a clerk in a department store for one month.

When the American Civil War broke out, Worth was 17. He lied about his age and enlisted in the Union army. Worth served in the 2nd New York heavy Artillery, Battery L (later designated 34th New York Battery) and was promoted to sergeant in a couple of months. He was wounded in the Second Battle of Bull Run on August 30, 1862 and was shipped to a Georgetown Hospital in Washington DC. In the hospital, he learned he had been listed as "killed in action" and left.

Criminal career

Worth became a bounty jumper; he began to enlist into various regiments with assumed names, received his pay, engaged in action and then deserted. When the Pinkerton Detective Agency began to track him, like many others using similar methods, he fled to New York City and came to Portsmouth.

After the war, Worth became a pickpocket in New York. In time, he founded his own gang of pickpockets, and then began to organize robberies and heists. When he was caught stealing the cash box of an Adams Express wagon, he was sentenced to three years imprisonment in Sing Sing; he escaped a couple of weeks later and resumed his criminal career.

Worth began to work for the prominent fence and criminal organizer Fredericka "Marm" Mandelbaum. With her help he expanded into bank and store robberies around 1866 and eventually began to plan his own heists. In 1869 he helped Mandelbaum to break out safecracker Charley Bullard from the White Plains Jail through a tunnel.

With Bullard, Worth robbed the vault of the Boylston National Bank in Boston on November 20, 1869, again through a tunnel, this time from a neighboring shop. The bank alerted the Pinkertons who tracked the shipment of trunks Worth and Bullard had used to ship the loot to New York. Worth decided to move to Europe with Bullard.

Exploits in Europe

Bullard and Worth went first to Liverpool. Bullard had taken the identity of "Charles H. Wells", a Texas oilman. Worth was financier "Henry Judson Raymond", the name he would use for years afterwards. They began to compete for the favors of a barmaid named Kitty Flynn who eventually learned their true identities. She became Bullard's wife but did not disfavor Worth, either. In October 1870, Kitty gave birth to a daughter, Lucy Adeleine, and seven years later had another daughter named Katherine Louise. The paternity of these two girls is left up to debate. It is possible that Kitty herself did not know, but Bullard and Worth claimed each child all the same. William Pinkerton believed that Kitty's daughters both belonged to Adam Worth.

When the Bullards went on their honeymoon, Worth began to rob local pawnshops. He shared the loot with Bullard and Flynn when they came back and, together, the three moved to Paris in 1871.

In Paris, the police force was still in disarray after the events of the Paris Commune. Worth and his associates founded an "American Bar", a restaurant and bar on the ground floor and a gambling den on the upper floor. Because gambling was illegal, the gambling tables were built so that they could be folded inside the walls and the floor. A buzzer would be sounded from downstairs to alert the customers before any police raid. Worth formed a new gang of associates, including some of his old comrades from New York.

When Allan Pinkerton, founder of the Pinkerton Detective Agency, visited the place in 1873, Worth recognized him. Later the Paris police raided the place numerous times and Worth and the Bullards decided to abandon the restaurant. Worth used his place for the last time to defraud a diamond dealer and the three moved to London.

London master criminal

In England, Worth and his associates bought West Lodge at Clapham Common. He also leased an apartment in Mayfair and joined high society. He formed his own criminal network and organized major robberies and burglaries through several intermediaries. Those who worked in his schemes never knew his name. He insisted that his subordinates should not use violence.

Eventually Scotland Yard learned of his network though they were initially unable to prove anything. Inspector John Shore made Worth's capture his personal mission.

Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, by Thomas Gainsborough, 1787, stolen by Worth in 1876.

Things began to go wrong when Worth's brother John was sent to cash a forged cheque in Paris, he was arrested and extradited to England; Worth managed to exonerate him and get him sent back to the USA. Four of his associates were arrested in Istanbul for spreading more forged letters of credit and he had to use a considerable amount of money to buy off the judges and the police. Bullard became increasingly violent as his alcoholism worsened, and he eventually left for New York, followed soon after by Kitty.

In 1876, Worth personally stole Thomas Gainsborough's recently rediscovered painting of Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire, from a London gallery of Agnew & Sons with the help of two associates. He was taken with the painting and did not try to sell it. The two men who assisted in the robbery, Junka Phillips and Little Joe, grew impatient. Phillips tried to make him talk about the theft in the presence of a police informer and Worth effectively fired him. Worth gave Little Joe money to return to the USA where he tried to rob the Union Trust Company, was arrested and talked to the Pinkertons. They alerted Scotland Yard but they still could not prove anything.

Worth kept the painting with him even when he was traveling and organizing new schemes and robberies. Eventually he decided to travel to South Africa where he stole $500,000 worth of uncut diamonds. Back in London, he founded Wynert & Company which sold diamonds at a cheaper price than the competitors.

In the 1880s Worth married a Louise Margaret Boljahn still using the name Henry Raymond and they had a son Henry and a daughter Beatrice. Possibly his wife did not know his real identity. He smuggled the painting to the USA and left it there.

Mistake and capture

In 1892 Worth decided to visit Belgium where Bullard was in jail. He had been working with Max Shinburn, Worth's rival, when Belgian police had captured them both. In Belgium he heard that Bullard had recently died.

On October 5 Worth improvised a robbery of a money delivery cart in Liège with two untried associates, one of them the American Johnny Curtin. The robbery went badly wrong and the police captured him on the spot. Two others got away.

In jail Worth refused to identify himself and the Belgian police made inquiries abroad. Both the New York Police Department and Scotland Yard identified him as Worth, although the Pinkertons did not say anything. Max Shinburn, now in Belgian jail, told the police everything he knew. In jail, Worth heard nothing about his family in London but received a letter from Kitty Flynn, who offered to finance his defense.

Worth's trial took place March 20, 1893. The prosecutor used everything he knew about Worth. Worth flatly denied that he had anything to do with various crimes, saying that the last robbery had been a stupid act he had committed out of need for money. All the other accusations, including those by British and American police, were mere hearsay. He claimed that his wealth came out of legal gambling. In the end Worth was sentenced to seven years for robbery and was sent to Leuven prison.

During his first year in jail, Shinburn hired other inmates to beat Worth up. Later Worth heard that Johnny Curtin, who was supposed to have taken care of his wife, had seduced and abandoned her. She had gone insane and been committed to an asylum. The children were in the care of his brother John in the United States.

Release and last years

Worth was released early for good behaviour in 1897. He returned to London and stole £4,000 from a diamond shop to get funds. When he visited his wife, she barely recognized him. He traveled to New York and visited his children. Then he proceeded to meet with William Pinkerton, to whom he described the events of his life in great detail. The manuscript which Pinkerton wrote after Worth left is still preserved in the archives of the Pinkerton Detective Agency in Van Nuys, California.

Through Pinkerton, Worth arranged the return of the painting Duchess of Devonshire to Agnew & Sons in return for $25,000. The portrait and payment were exchanged in Chicago on March 28, 1901. Worth returned to London with his children and spent the rest of his life with them. His son took advantage of an agreement between his father and Alan Pinkerton and became a career Pinkerton detective.

Adam Worth died on January 8, 1902. He was buried in Highgate Cemetery in a mass pauper's grave under the name of "Henry J. Raymond". A small tombstone was erected to mark his resting place in 1997 by the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation.[6]

In popular culture

It has been widely speculated that Arthur Conan Doyle used Worth as the prototype for Sherlock Holmes' nemesis, Professor Moriarty. In his "Books Alive" column in The Chicago Sunday Tribune (December 26, 1943), Vincent Starrett wrote, "Worth was the original of Prof. Moriarty. This information, which isn't generally known, was revealed by Conan Doyle in conversation with Dr. Gray C. Briggs of St. Louis, Dr. Briggs once told me." Starrett was a good friend of Dr. Gray Chandler Briggs (1882—1942), a St. Louis doctor and X-ray specialist.

Adam Worth biographer Ben Macintyre also traces the inspiration for Macavity, the Mystery Cat, in T. S. Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats to Doyle's rendition of Moriarty. Andrew Lloyd Weber, in turn, based his hit musical, Cats, on T.S. Elliot's work, including the character Macavity, who Kitty declares, is "the Napolean of Crime!" [7]

Michael Caine plays Adam Worth in the film Harry and Walter Go to New York. Though Worth is correctly portrayed as a criminal mastermind, the events of the story are not based on true events.

References

  1. ^ Macintyre (1997). "Chapter Two: A Fine War". p. 7. 
  2. ^ Nash, p. 258
  3. ^ The American Magazine, p. 211
  4. ^ Macintyre (1997). "Chapter Two: A Fine War". p. 6. 
  5. ^ Macintyre (1997). "Chapter Two: A Fine War". p. 7. 
  6. ^ "Jewish Amer. Society for Historic Preservation". Jewish-american-society-for-historic-preservation.org. http://www.jewish-american-society-for-historic-preservation.org/internationalprograms/londonengland.html. Retrieved 2011-08-16. 
  7. ^ Macintyre (1997). "Chapter Twenty Three: Alias Moriarty". p. 226. 

Notes

  • The American Magazine (1905). American Illustrated Magazine. New York: Colver Publishing House.
  • Macintyre, Ben (1997). The Napoleon of Crime: The Life and Times of Adam Worth, Master Thief. Delta. ISBN 0-385-31993-2. 
  • Nash, Jay Robert (2004). The Great Pictorial History of World Crime. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 1-928831-21-4

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