Plug Uglies

Plug Uglies

The Plug Uglies were a street gang (though most often referred to as a political club) that operated in the westside of Baltimore, Maryland from 1854 to 1860. The Plug Uglies coalesced shortly after the creation of the Mount Vernon Hook-and-Ladder Company, a volunteer fire company whose truck house was on Biddle Street, between Pennsylvania Avenue and Ross Street (later Druid Hill). They were originally runners and rowdies affiliated with the Mount Vernon. Plug Ugly captains included John English and James Morgan. Other prominent members were Louis A. Carl, George Coulson, George "Howard" Davis, Henry Clay Gambrill, Alexander Levy, Erasmus "Ras" Levy, James Wardell, and Wesley Woodward. The gang associated with the emerging American Party (the Know Nothings) in Baltimore.

Like similar associations in Baltimore and other United States cities during this period, the Plug Uglies' street influence made them useful to party politicians anxious to control the polls on Election Days. The Plug Uglies were the central figures in the first election riot in Baltimore in October 1855. Together with the Rip Raps, they were also actively involved in deadly rioting at the October 1856 municipal election in Baltimore and in similar violence at the Know-Nothing Riot in Washington in June 1857. At the Washington riot, United States Marines called out to quell the fighting shot and killed ten citizens. Accounts of the Washington riot appeared in newspapers nationally and gained widespread notoriety for the Plug Uglies.

Besides election-day fighting, the gang was involved in several assassinations and shootings in Baltimore. Most notably, Plug Ugly Henry Gambrill was implicated in the murder of a Baltimore police officer in September 1858. Gambrill's trial, and the subsequent deadly violence relating to it, made the crime one of the most sensational of the era.

The violence of the Plug Uglies and other political clubs had an important impact on Baltimore. It was largely responsible for the creation of modern policing and a paid, professional fire department, as well as court and electoral reforms. These reforms, together with the election of a Reform municipal administration in October 1860 and then the Civil War, led to the breaking up of the Plug Uglies.

Fallacy of the New York Plug Uglies

Herbert Asbury's book "Gangs of New York" (1927) has led to a popular misconception that the Plug Uglies were a New York gang. Historians and researchers, in locating the gang in New York, have followed Asbury, whose book, those who have checked now understand, blends fact and fiction. In "Low Life" (page 363), Luc Sante writes, "It is a compelling if somewhat ragtag book, cobbled from legend, memory, police records, the self-aggrandizements of aging crooks, popular journalism, and solid historical research. Tracing some of Asbury's wilder assertions became a sub-theme to my research, and indeed I was able to take a number of them back several stages before reaching a dead end."

Contrary to Asbury's assertion, there is no evidence of an organized gang called Plug Uglies operating in New York (see discussion page for this entry for a fuller description of this lack of evidence). Instead, the New York event to which the Plug Uglies are most often linked provides positive evidence that they were a Baltimore gang. On July 4 1857, large-scale rioting erupted in New York. City newspaper accounts in the days following universally describe the fighting as being between the Dead Rabbits (an offshoot of the Roach Guards) and the Bowery Boys (some of them also identified as the Atlantic Guard). In at least two newspapers (New York Tribune and New York Times), these New York gangs are compared to the Baltimore Plug Uglies, whose name was fresh in the mind of the public because of the Know-Nothing Riot in Washington only a month earlier. According to the "Tribune" of July 6 1857 (page 7), "The notoriety give [sic] to this Club of rowdies [Dead Rabbits] by these riots is destined to make them rivals--in point of unenviable reputation--of the 'Plug Uglies' of Baltimore, and renders a sketch of their rise and progress interesting." The description appeared under a sub-headline that read, "Plug Uglies Outdone". Asbury, who clearly read the newspaper accounts of these riots, inaccurately lumped the Baltimore Plug Uglies in with the infamous New York gangs of the Five Points district. All later accounts of the Plug Uglies as a New York gang, including Martin Scorsese's popular film Gangs of New York (2002), trace back to Asbury. None offer any primary source evidence of Plug Uglies operating in New York. Asbury's source may well have been Matthew Hale Smith's "Sunshine and Shadow in New York" (Hartford: J. B. Burr, 1868), p. 669, which avers that "The Bowery Boys, Plug Uglies, and low New York patronize this place [the Bowery Theatre] , and the plays are of the Dick Turpin and blood-and-thunder school." Like "Bowery Boy," "Plug-Ugly" soon became a generic term, and Smith's usage may simply reflect this.

Further reading

*Asbury, Herbert., "The Gangs of New York", New York: Alfred A. Knoff, 1927.
*Haskins, James., "Street Gangs", New York: Hastings House, 1974.
*Kobler, John., "Capone: The Life and World of Al Capone". New York: J.P. Putnam's Sons, 1971.
*Peterson, Virgil., "The Mob: 200 Years of Organized Crime in New York". Ottawa, Illinois: Green Hill, 1983.
*Sifakis, Carl. "The Encyclopedia of American Crime" (3rd ed.). New York: Facts on File Inc., 2005.

References

*Tracy Matthew Melton, "Hanging Henry Gambrill: The Violent Career of Baltimore's Plug Uglies, 1854-1860" (2005). The story of the Plug Uglies.
*Tyler Anbinder, "Five Points: The 19th Century New York City Neighborhood That Invented Tap Dance, Stole Elections, and Became the World's Most Notorious Slum" (2001). A rich and well-researched description of the neighborhood named by Asbury as the home of the Plug Uglies. Anbinder finds no Plug Uglies there.
*Herbert Asbury, "Gangs of New York: An Informal History of the Underworld" (1927). The source of the original fallacy of the New York Plug Uglies. A good, but not reliable, read.
*Luc Sante, "Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York" (1991). An excellent account that largely corrects Asbury on points.
*Martin Scorsese (director), Film Gangs of New York (2002).
*"Plug Uglies!!!" (Baltimore, 1856) song sheet. Shows the Plug Uglies as a Baltimore gang. The politicians referenced in the song include Henry Winter Davis, William Pinckney Whyte, and William P. Preston, all prominent Baltimore figures. View this song sheet at the American Memory site at the Library of Congress website [http://www.loc.gov/index.html] (keyword search "Plug Uglies").
*"New York (Daily) Herald", July 6 1857, page 7. Describes the Plug Uglies as a Baltimore gang.
*"New York (Daily) Times", July 7 1857, page 1. Describes the Plug Uglies as a Baltimore gang.

ee also

*List of historical gang members of New York City

addd me on myspace.www.myspace.com/dinosrule2010

External links

* [http://www.herbertasbury.com/gangsofnewyork/ Gangs of New York] , Herbert Asbury official website
* [http://www.americanmafia.com/Feature_Articles_113.html The Legend of Old Smoke Morrissey] by John William Tuohy
* [http://glasgowcrew.tripod.com/fivepoints.html Mafia-International - The Five Points & Eastman Gangs: Early Gangland in New York]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • plug-ugly — ☆ plug ugly [plug′ug′lē ] n. pl. plug uglies 〚see PLUG, vt. 6〛 [Old Slang] a city ruffian or gangster; rowdy * * * plug ug·ly (plŭgʹŭg lē) n. Slang pl. plug ug·lies A gangster or ruffian.   …   Universalium

  • plug-ugly — ☆ plug ugly [plug′ug′lē ] n. pl. plug uglies [see PLUG, vt. 6] [Old Slang] a city ruffian or gangster; rowdy …   English World dictionary

  • plug-ugly informal, — plug ugly informal, chiefly N. Amer. noun (plural plug uglies) a thug or villain. adjective (of a person) very ugly. Origin C19: by assoc. with plug in the sense hit with the fist …   English new terms dictionary

  • plug-ugly — /ˈplʌg ʌgli/ (say plug uglee) US Colloquial –noun (plural plug uglies) 1. a ruffian; a rowdy; a tough. –adjective 2. characteristic of or relating to ruffians or the like. {US slang (1850s); plug of uncertain origin + ugly; originally Plug Ugly a …  

  • plug-ugly — Adj. Very ugly. Originally a ruffian, and taken from the New York gang of the mid 1800s, called the Plug Uglies. Orig. U.S …   English slang and colloquialisms

  • Henry Stump — Infobox Person name = Henry Stump image size = caption = birth date = birth place = death date = 29 October 1865 [“Stump, Henry. An Eyewitness to the Baltimore Riot, 19th April, 1861,” Letter from Henry Stump to Mrs. Mary A. Stump, Maryland… …   Wikipedia

  • Herbert Asbury — Infobox Writer name = Herbert Asbury caption = birthdate = birth date|1889|9|1|mf=y birthplace = Farmington, Missouri deathdate = death date and age|1963|2|24|1889|9|1|mf=y deathplace = New York City, New York occupation = Writer and journalist… …   Wikipedia

  • Jerry Nolan — Birth name Gerard Nolan Born May 7, 1946 Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City Died January 14, 1992(1992 01 14) (aged 45) New York City Genres …   Wikipedia

  • Know-Nothing Riot of 1856 — The Know Nothing Riot of 1856, some of the worst rioting of the Know Nothing era in the United States, occurred in Baltimore in the fall of 1856. Street tensions had escalated sharply over the preceding half dozen years as neighborhood gangs,… …   Wikipedia

  • Know-Nothing Riot — The term Know Nothing Riot has been used to refer to several political uprisings in United States of America during the latter half of the 19th century. These included riots in St. Louis in 1854, Washington, D.C. in 1857, and New Orleans in 1858 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”