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The Diamond Brothers Gang

Get to the bottom of the untold story of the Diamond brothers gang. Read about Eddie & Legs Diamond, Fatty Walsh, Lucky Luciano, Arnold Rothstein and more.  

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The Irish Mob Mini Book

The Irish Mob Mini Book is your introduction of the Irish Mob in America. From the Five Points to South Boston to St. Louis, the Irish Mob has left its mark on the American underworld.

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Murder on the Brooklyn Docks

The prevailing theory, for years has been that rival Italian killed Dinny Meehan, “Wild” Bill Lovett, and Richard “Peg Leg” Lonergan. However, that may not be the case. Watch this four-part series, Murder on the Brooklyn Docks – The White Hand Gang, the full history.

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The Murder of Dean O'Banion

Dean O’Banion was the North Side Gang’s sharp-dressed florist-gangster, at the top of Chicago’s bootlegging scene until his violent murder in 1924 sparked an all-out gang war with Capone’s outfit, culminating in the St. Valetines Day Massacre in 1929.

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The Irish Mob explores the history of Irish organized crime from the early street gangs of 19th-century New York to the waterfront rackets, Prohibition era violence, and infamous figures like Whitey Bulger and the White Hand Gang. Discover detailed stories, historical context, videos, and rare insights into gangsters, gunmen, murder, mayhem and riots that shaped Irish mob influence in America and Ireland.

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The Irish Mob Mini Book Cover

An excellent introduction to the Irish Mob

The Irish Mob Mini Book

For nearly two centuries, Irish-American gangsters carved their legend into the streets of America. From the Dead Rabbits rioting in the slums of 19th-century New York, to the bloody bootlegging wars of Prohibition, and finally to the ruthless reign of Whitey Bulger in Boston, the Irish Mob shaped organized crime in ways history often forgets.

This 75 page mini book delivers a fast-paced, essential overview of the figures, wars, and rackets that defined the Irish Mob.

Dinny Meehan and the White Hand Gang on the Brooklyn docks, Dean O’Banion’s North Side Gang in Chicago, Owney Madden’s Cotton Club empire in Harlem, Danny Greene’s car-bomb war in Cleveland, and the Westies’ brutal alliance with the Gambinos in Hell’s Kitchen.

Packed with fact files, timelines, and stories of gangland power, The Irish Mob Pocket Book is your guide through the brutal rise, violent feuds, and bloody fall of America’s Irish underworld.

Out Now

The Untold Story of the Diamond Brothers Gang

Part One

Intro – Arnold Rothstein – Photo – Eddie Diamond

Part Two

“Legs” Diamond – “Fatty” Walsh – “Lucky” Luciano

What Is The Irish Mob?

The Irish mob has had a significant influence on America’s crime world, originating in the early 1800s and spanning across much of the country. One of its first incarnations started as street gangs in New York City, as depicted in 1928 book “The Gangs of New York,” by Herbert Asbury.

The Irish Mob emerged during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, rooted in immigrant neighborhoods where poverty, discrimination, and limited opportunity shaped daily life. Irish gangs gained power by controlling labor and dock unions, neighborhood rackets, and bootlegging during the Prohibition era.

Gangs enforced their rule through violence, intimidation, and strict codes of silence. While later overshadowed by Italian organized crime, the Irish Mob played a crucial role in shaping America’s criminal underworld underworld.

About This Site

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This website is meant for educational purposes only.

While great care and pain staking effort goes into each one of the stories on this website, all of the information on this website is as accurate and reliable as the sources it came from and not meant to be presented as undeniable facts, as information can change from time to time when new research techniques are being developed

This website can be seen as a resource for helping readers look into the history of the Irish Mob to read about Gangsters, Gunmen, Murder, Mayhem & Riots. All images belong to their respective owners.

From time to time there will be graphic content, such as crime scene’s, murders etc.

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Murder on the Brooklyn Docks

Murder on the Brooklyn Docks is a series about Brooklyns White Hand Gang, an Irish Mob, who were in fact a collection of smaller gangs under one umbrella, the main factions being the Warren Street Red Onion Gang and the Jay Street Gang, who fought among themselves for control of the rackets and docks.

Watch the video series here.

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The Irish Mob explores the violent, complex, and often overlooked history of Irish organized crime in America. From the brutal dock wars of Brooklyn’s waterfront to the blood-soaked alleys of Prohibition-era, Irish gangsters played a central role in shaping the criminal underworld of the early 20th century.

This site is dedicated to telling those stories in full, the feuds, the assassinations, the unsolved murders, and the people caught in between. Drawing from police reports, contemporary newspapers, and historical research, The Irish Mob digs beneath the myths to uncover the real history of Irish-American gangsters, their rivals, and the cities they controlled.

Whether you’re interested in waterfront rackets, Prohibition-era violence, or the forgotten figures of organized crime, The Irish Mob is your gateway to a darker chapter of history.

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The Latest Stories

Edward “Wimpy” Bennett

Edward “Wimpy” Bennett

Edward "Wimpy" Bennett was the head of the Roxbury Crew in Boston during the 1950s and 1960s. (20 Boston Irish Gangsters, n.d.) Described by some as a treacherous old school Irish gangster who controlled the rackets in the South End of Boston and Roxbury. He had a...

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If you like what we do and would like to support our work, please consider buying the beer.

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Featured Stories

The Gopher Gang of Hell’s Kitchen

The Gopher Gang were one of Hell’s Kitchen’s most brutal gangs. They were given the name "Gophers" because they used to hide in the cellars of buildings in the neighbourhood. The Gophers formed in the 1890s and went on to rule the West Side between Ninth and Eleventh...

Jacob Riis – Photographed The Gangs of New York

Jacob Riis was born in Denmark in 1849 and emigrated to the US in the 1870's, he was a pioneer in photography, a social reformer and journalist. He pioneered his use of photography and journalism to bring social changes in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, where...

Boiled Oysters Malloy – Saloon Keeper

Boiled Oysters Malloy was a criminal and dive bar owner in the Bowery during the mid to late 1800's, his name as you can guess came from his love of eating boiled oysters, which would have been a delicacy during that period. Boiled Oysters Malloy seemed to be at his...

The Child Gangs of New York

The photo is a child gang of orphans that lived in the alleys somewhere around Mulberry Street and was taken in 1888. It was part of an exhibition called How The Other Half Live by Jacob Riis. In early New York child gangs were mainly confined to the Five Points, the...

The Water Street Revival

Water Street was originally located on the waterfront in the 4th Ward on the Lower East Side which is now the Financial District today. “For at least twenty-five years, Water Street was probably the scene of more violent crime than any other street on the continent.”...

Early Characters

The earliest recorded organised criminal gang in the United States was in 1825. They were based in one of the most notorious slums in the world at the time, The Five Points in New York’s Lower East Side.

Read about some of the craziest characters from the days of the Gangs of New York. People like Bill “The Butcher” Poole & John Morrissey, gangs like The Dead Rabbits, Whyos & Plug Uglies, places like Shang Drapers Dive Bar or Billy McGlory’s Armory Hall.

 

Prohibition Era

You will read about some of the most Notorious Names in Mob History on this website, Bosses, Hitmen and more. From New York to Chicago to Boston some of the biggest names all in one place.

 

George Cassiday – The Bootlegger to Congress

George Cassiday was born in 1892 and fought in the First World War and a founder of the Irish Veterans Association upon his return after the war, he found employment difficult after the war and almost by accident he became a bootlegger, he would also become known as...

The Coll Schultz War Part 2 – The Death of a Mad Dog

With the months of May and June being the bloodiest part of the gang war between the Schultz and Coll gangs which left a trail of dead bodies in its wake, there would be further violence and one of the most infamous shootings was still to come. On July 28th came the...

When They Tried To Whack Eddie Diamond

Legs Diamond had one soft spot in life, his brother Eddie. He would have sacrificed everything he owned to bring him back to health. Tuberculosis had ravaged Eddie as well as other members of his family. Eddie had been sent to various sanatorium to try get cured but...

Prohibition in New Jersey

The controversy over the nation’s Prohibition Amendment spilled over into New Jersey politics. Republicans, whose base was in the more rural parts of the State, supported Prohibition; Democrats whose strength was in the big cities were opposed to Prohibition.   The...

The Sheltons special delivery for Charlie Bergir

The Sheltons were once described as Americas bloodiest gang and for good reason, they were locked in a war with their main rival who was once an ally, Charlie Birger. The Agnes & Ben Shelton raised 10 children on a farm near Fairfield, in Wayne County, Illinois....

When They Tried To Whack Eddie Diamond

Legs Diamond had one soft spot in life, his brother Eddie. He would have sacrificed everything he owned to bring him back to health. Tuberculosis had ravaged Eddie as well as other members of his family. Eddie had been sent to various sanatorium to try get cured but...

Red Kane kills the Yellow Kid in court – Egans Rats St. Louis

Red Kane or Thomas Kane as he was known as, was a leading figure in one of the most vindictive gang wars to have ever happened in St. Louis. Red Kane was sentenced to serve a 12 year term in prison for the murder of Fred “Yellow Kid” Mohrle, who Kane had shot and...

Owney “The Killer” Madden – Leader of the Gopher Gang

When Madden assumed control of the Gopher Gang in Hell's Kitchen his territory stretched from below 42nd Street and along the lines of the Hudson Duster territory near the Hudson River. The Gophers and the Hudson Dusters were enemies and would frequently engage in...

The Fox Lake Massacre – Inside the 1930s Chicago Gangland Killing

The Fox Lake Massacre was an event when Prohibition Era violence spilled over into Lake County, northeastern Illinois, on June 1, 1930. Gangsters from Terry “Machine Gun” Druggan & Frankie Lake’s gang were gunned down at Manning’s Hotel in Fox Lake. That area of...

Thomas “Fatty” Walsh & Haunting the Biltmore Hotel

Thomas "Fatty" Walsh was a gambler, mobster and an associate of Dutch Schultz and Lucky Luciano. He now reportedly haunts the 13th floor of the Biltmore Hotel, Miami, Florida. "Fatty" Walsh was a former bodyguard of Arnold Rothstein, Rothstein or "The Brain" would...

Prohibition Era

You will read about some of the most Notorious Names in Mob History on this website, Bosses, Hitmen and more. From New York to Chicago to Boston some of the biggest names all in one place.

 

The Bloody Maxwell District Chicago

For about a hundred years, the Maxwell Street District or better known as Bloody Maxwell on the Near West Side of Chicago, was the toughest neighborhood in town from the 1850s through the 1950s. Named after Dr. Philip Maxwell, who had served in the military, was the...

The Diamond Brothers

The Diamond brothers first heist together was on Commonwealth Avenue in the Bronx, September 24, 1921. They hit the private address of 56 year old John Gorman, who stored fifty cases of Irish whiskey, they quickly loaded the cases on a stolen truck and vanished....

The Coll Schultz War Part 2 – The Death of a Mad Dog

With the months of May and June being the bloodiest part of the gang war between the Schultz and Coll gangs which left a trail of dead bodies in its wake, there would be further violence and one of the most infamous shootings was still to come. On July 28th came the...

The Fox Lake Massacre – Inside the 1930s Chicago Gangland Killing

The Fox Lake Massacre was an event when Prohibition Era violence spilled over into Lake County, northeastern Illinois, on June 1, 1930. Gangsters from Terry “Machine Gun” Druggan & Frankie Lake’s gang were gunned down at Manning’s Hotel in Fox Lake. That area of...

When They Tried To Whack Eddie Diamond

Legs Diamond had one soft spot in life, his brother Eddie. He would have sacrificed everything he owned to bring him back to health. Tuberculosis had ravaged Eddie as well as other members of his family. Eddie had been sent to various sanatorium to try get cured but...

Notorious Names

From tough guys like Pat Nee from Boston to Jimmy Coonan, Mickey Featherstone & The Westies gang all the way to the biggest name of them all James “Whitey” Bulger, who was Boss for more than 20 years and went on the run for a further 16.

 

About the Author

As a novice writer, learning along the way, I jump into various sources and topics to craft intriguing articles as a hobby. My creative flair extends to web design, 3D art, and digital media. Holding certifications as an Adobe Certified Associate in Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, and Dreamweaver, I’ve also shared my expertise as a lecturer in Web Design at colleges and adult education centers. You can check out my other work here.

I am also a keen gardener, and enjoy spending as much time there as I possibly can.

My fascination with Mafia stories, influenced by iconic films like ‘Goodfellas’, ‘Casino’, and ‘Black Mass’ led me to explore the murky realm of the Irish Mob, with a particular focus on the Roaring Twenties during the Prohibition Era, and notorious figures like James Whitey Bulger. This journey ignited my passion for storytelling, prompting me to research and write about these captivating characters, all of which you can explore throughout this website!

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