The Massacre on Clark
Street
The
rise of organized crime in Chicago began with the advent of Prohibition. The
law that banned the sale and production of liquor went into effect in 1920 and
vast fortunes began to be made by lawless elements in the city. The decline of
these criminal empires began almost a decade later in February 1929. It was on
St. Valentine’s Day of that year that the general public no longer saw the mob
as “public benefactors,” offering alcohol to a thirsty city, but as the
collection of cold-blooded killers and thugs that it truly was. The massacre
changed the face of Chicago crime forever and led to the end of Al Capone’s
role as mob boss of the city.
Chicago in the 1920s
Capone,
who had started out as a gun for hire for an old benefactor named John Torrio,
quickly rose through the ranks of the underworld to become Torrio’s second in
command. After his boss had a brush with death when friends of murdered mobster
Dean O’Banion tried to kill him, Capone took over the operations of the South
Side Outfit, eventually creating a multi-million-dollar crime empire at the age
of only twenty-six. By 1929, Capone had wiped out most of his rivals, with the
exception of the remnants of O’Banion’s old gang, now run by George “Bugs”
Moran. Moran spent a good part of his time purposely antagonizing Capone and
made several attempts to kill him in revenge for the murder of Dean O’Banion in
1924.
In
December 1928, Capone left Chicago for Miami Beach, where he kept a second
home. In early February, one of his closest confidantes from Chicago, Jack
McGurn, arrived for a short visit. After his departure, Capone spoke (as
telephone records would later show) at length every day with Jake Guzik, the
Outfit’s collector and another confidante of Capone, who lived at Chicago’s
Congress Hotel. The telephone conversations between the two men stopped on
February 11. Then, a single call was placed to Capone’s Palm Island winter home
three days later.
That
call came on February 14 – St. Valentine’s Day.
A
light snow was falling on North Clark Street on the morning of February 14,
1929. Traffic was moving slowly as a black Cadillac touring car edged onto the
street from Webster Avenue. There was a police alarm on the running board and
fastened to the back of the driver’s seat was a gun rack like the one used in
squad cars. The driver of the Cadillac had on horn-rimmed glasses and was a
wearing a policeman’s uniform, which included a cap with a brass star. A man
sitting next to him in the passenger’s seat also had on a police uniform. The
three men in the back seat were wearing civilian clothes.
As
the Cadillac turned the corner onto Clark Street, a truck sideswiped it,
forcing it to stop. The truck driver, Elmer Lewis, horrified at having hit what
he assumed was a police car, scrambled out of his cab and, filled with remorse
and nervous fear, hurried toward the Cadillac. The blue-uniformed man behind
the wheel smiled at him, a gap showing where one of his upper front teeth was
missing, and waved, reassuring him that no real damage had been done and that
he could return to his truck as if nothing had happened. Baffled but relieved,
Lewis watched the car drive on for about half a block, then stop in front of a
combination garage and warehouse belonging to a shipping and packing company at
2122 North Clark Street. Four men got out of the car and went inside.
The S-M-C Cartage Co. as it looked at the time of the massacre in 1929
Meanwhile, North Side gang leader George
“Bugs” Moran was also on his way to the same garage. The night before, a
hijacker had called Moran and offered him a truckload of whiskey from Detroit
that could be his for $57 per case. Moran had told him to deliver the shipment
around 10:30 a.m. to the North Clark Street garage, which was used as a
distribution point for the gang. He told the hijacker that he would have men on
hand to help unload the truck. Moran had been suffering from a head cold and
got a late start for the rendezvous. With a gambler friend, Ted Newberry, he
left his Parkway Hotel apartment, not far from the garage, a little after 10:30
a.m. The temperature was a biting 15 degrees and a bone-chilling wind was blowing
from the west. Hunched against the cold, Moran and Newberry took a shortcut
through an alley behind the garage. Willie Marks, one of the gang’s specialists
in business racketeering, was also running late. He arrived by trolley car at
almost the same time.
The
garage was a one-story building, constructed from red brick. It was 60 feet
wide and 120 feet long, sandwiched between two four-story buildings. Both the
plate-glass window in front and the glass-paneled door to the right of it had
been painted black to hide the garage’s interior. A white placard with black
lettering was placed in the lower part of the window. It read: S-M-C CARTAGE CO. / Shipping --
Packing Phone / Diversey 1471 / Long
Distance Hauling.
Behind
the window, running the width of the building, was a narrow office that was
separated from the warehouse by a wooden partition. The warehouse had a
concrete floor and brick walls. The original whitewash that had covered the
brick walls had turned grimy and yellow with age. Tall, wide doors at the rear
opened on the loading area in the alley behind the building.
On
the morning of February 14, three empty trucks were parked in the garage. A
fourth was jacked up in the center of the floor and lying under it, wearing
oil-spattered coveralls and repairing a wheel, was Johnny May, a 35-year-old
failed safecracker that Moran hired as a mechanic for $50 a week. May lived in
an apartment at 1249 West Madison Street with his wife, Hattie, their six
children, and a German shepherd named Highball. The dog was tied by his leash
to the axle of the truck that May was fixing. May had brought some scraps of
meat for him in a paper bag.
Six
other men were in the warehouse that morning, gathered around a coffee pot that
percolated on a hot plate. They wore their hats and overcoats, shivering in the
unheated building.
(Left to Right) Frank Gusenberg; Pete Gusenberg; Al Weinshank, who it is believed was mistaken for George Moran by lookouts across the street on the morning of the massacre.
(Left to Right) Mechanic John May, who was in the wrong place at the wrong time that morning. He had been previously keeping a promise to his wife to give up a life of crime; Adam Heyer; James Clark
The
men included the Gusenberg brothers, Frank and Pete, who had a long day ahead
of them. As soon as the hijacked liquor was delivered, they were supposed to
drive two empty trucks to Detroit to pick up some smuggled Canadian whiskey.
Pete “Goosey” Gusenberg was a 40-year-old career criminal who first started
showing up in police files in 1902. He spent several years in the Joliet
Correctional Center, earning his parole in 1911, only to end up in Leavenworth
in 1923, sentenced along with “Big Tim” Murphy and others after the Dearborn
Station mail robbery. After his release, he became a gunman for Moran. Pete was
married to Myrtle Gorman. As far as she knew, her husband was a salesman.
Frank
Gusenberg was four years younger than his brother. Despite having a police
record that dated back to 1909, his only prison sentence was for ninety days in
Bridewell for disorderly conduct. Frank was a bigamist, married to two women --
Lucille and Ruth -- at the same time. His double life was unbeknownst to them,
as well as the fact that his alleged career as a salesman was a front for
robbery and burglary.
Adam
Heyer was also present that morning. A business college graduate and certified
accountant before doing prison time for embezzlement, he handled all of the
gang’s finances and also managed the Fairview Kennel Club, the North Side
gang’s dog-racing enterprise. Little else is known about Heyer. Even his wife
of seven months, Mame, did not know his birth date, although he was believed to
be around 40 years old.
Al
“Gorilla” Weinshank (or Weinshenker), the newest member of the gang, had helped
Moran muscle into the cleaning and dyeing rackets and was the owner of a club
called the Alcazar. Heavyset and round-faced, he bore a resemblance to Moran,
which was enhanced on February 14 by the fact that both men happened to be
wearing tan fedoras and gray overcoats. It is believed that he may have been
mistaken for Moran by a lookout that morning.
The
sixth man was Albert Kachellek, who was better known as James Clark, an alias
that he had adopted to spare his mother grief over his frequent brushes with
the law. Clark was 42 years old and had first been arrested in 1905 for
robbery. He spent the next nine years in and out of the Pontiac Reformatory and
Joliet Penitentiary. With a string of murders under his belt, he was known as
Moran’s chief gunmen, often wreaking havoc alongside the Gusenbergs. Oddly,
newspaper reports after the massacre identified Clark as George Moran’s
brother-in-law. This mistake was hotly denied by his sister, Mrs. Marie
Neubauer, at the coroner’s inquest but writers copying previous writers have
kept the error alive over the years.
The unlucky seventh man in the garage that morning was Reinhardt Schwimmer. I have never seen a formal photo of him. This was clipped from a newspaper photograph of the crime scene.
The
seventh man in the garage that day was the anomaly of the group. His name was
Reinhart Schwimmer and he was an optometrist (although today he would be
considered an optician since he had no formal training in conducting eye
examinations or treating eye ailments). Schwimmer was 29 and spent most of his
time with gangsters. He had started associating with members of the North Side
gang after his divorce in 1923. He spent much of his time in the company of
O’Banion, Weiss and Drucci, to the detriment of his legitimate business. Even
after marrying a rich widow, he couldn’t stay away from his underworld pals. He
liked to pretend that he was in the bootlegging business and often told friends
that he could have people killed if he wanted to. After his second wife
divorced him in 1928, he moved into the Parkway Hotel and befriended George
Moran. Schwimmer was considered part of the gang, although he never got
involved in crime – he simply liked the rush of being in the company of
gangsters. On the morning of February 14, he had dropped into the garage, as he
frequently did on the way to work, to see what the gang was up to. He had
stayed behind to chat – a decision that he wouldn’t live long enough to regret.
Elmer
Lewis, the truck driver, was not the only person to see the Cadillac stop at
the SMC Cartage Company and the four men go inside, the pair in uniform leading
the way. On the second floor of the rooming house next door, the landlady,
Jeanette Landesman, was ironing a shirt when she heard the car and the truck
collide at the corner. She went to the window to take a look and then saw the
Cadillac stop in front of the warehouse. Mrs. Landesman also saw four men go
into the building.
When
Moran and Newberry saw the Cadillac parked out front, they assumed that a
police raid or a shakedown was taking place and hurried down the street to a
coffee shop. They decided to wait things out and drink coffee until the cops
left. Willie Marks, approaching from the south, reached the same conclusion. He
ducked into a doorway and avoided the garage altogether.
On
the second floor of the rooming house, Mrs. Landesman heard a peculiar banging
sound outside, almost like someone furiously beating a drum. The sound lasted
for more than a minute and then it was followed by two thunderous blasts, like
two cars backfiring. The silence that followed was broken by the plaintive
sound of a howling dog. Disturbed, Mrs. Landesman went back to the window and
looked out at the snowy, windy street. Her friend across the way, Josephine
Morin, looked out of her third-floor window at the same time and they both saw
the same four men reappear. The first two, in civilian clothes, had their hands
raised. The two men behind them, wearing police uniforms, held guns to their
backs and prodded them toward the car. It was a police raid and two men had
been arrested, the two women assumed; the fifth man driving the car must have
been a plainclothes detective. They climbed into the Cadillac and drove away,
continuing south on Clark Street and turning right onto Ogden Avenue.
Next
door in the garage, the dog continued to howl mournfully and Mrs. Landesman’s
uneasiness grew. Finally, she asked one of her tenants, a man named C.L.
McAllister, to see what was going on next door and find out why the dog was
howling. He went next door to the warehouse but he didn’t stay inside for long.
His face was a ghostly pale when he hurried back up the steps into the rooming
house. “The place is full of dead men,” he cried.
We
will never know for certain what took place inside of the SMC Cartage Co. on
the cold morning of February 14, 1929. Only one man survived the initial
slaughter and he never talked. However, historians and crime enthusiasts have
spent many years trying to put together the pieces of one of the greatest
(technically) unsolved crimes in history.
Crime scene photograph of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre
Here’s
what most think happened that day:
The
massacre was set in motion by a telephone call from a rooming house across the
street from the garage, signaling the killers that everything was in place for
an assault on the North Side gang. It is believed that Weinshank was mistaken
for George Moran, who had not actually arrived.
At
10:30 a.m., a Cadillac touring car, painted and outfitted to look like a police
car, pulled up in front of the warehouse and four men got out, two of them
dressed in police uniforms and two in plain clothes. A fifth man, also in plain
clothes, stayed behind the wheel of the car.
The
Moran gang members inside were likely puzzled when the two uniformed officers
walked into the garage. Protection money was undoubtedly being paid to avoid
problems from the police but the gangsters probably assumed that it was a raid
being carried out to appease the reformers. It was likely that they would be out
of jail almost as quickly as they were taken in. The uniformed men took weapons
from five of the men in the garage. Reinhart Schwimmer was unarmed and so was
Johnny May, who was pulled from under the truck protesting that he was only a
mechanic and not part of the gang. He was a failed criminal and had promised
his wife that he would stay on the straight and narrow. As he had promised her,
he carried a St. Christopher medal in his back pocket. The experience was
probably only mildly annoying at that point.
Schwimmer would most likely have been thrilled to be arrested. Now he
would be able to prove to his friends that he really did have gangster
connections.
After
removing the weapons from the North Side men, the police signaled the two men
in plain clothes who were waiting on the other side of the front office
partition. The two men walked into the warehouse, Thompson machine guns in
their hands. The North Side men were then herded up against the wall and shot
to death. Only one of them survived – Frank Gusenberg. With fourteen slugs in
his body, he managed to crawl about twenty feet from the rear wall. The others
were dead where they had fallen at the foot of the wall, Clark on his face,
Weinshank, Heyer, May and Schwimmer on their backs. Pete Gusenberg had died
kneeling; his upper body slumped against a chair. Schwimmer was still wearing
his hat and Weinshank’s tan fedora rested on his chest. Where the seven men had
been standing against the wall, the bricks were now splashed with blood. Darker
crimson stains ran across the oily floor. Highball, howling and snapping,
pulled at his leash, trying in vain to get to the executioners.
The
murders had been carried out with precision. The Tommy guns were swung back and
forth three times, first at the level of the victim’s heads, then their chests,
and finally at their stomachs. The victims were literally blown to pieces. Some
of the corpses on the floor were only held together by bits of gristle, flesh
and bone. In spite of this, signs of life must have still flickered in Johnny
May and James Clark after the machine gun fire, for they had also been blasted
with shotguns at such close range that their faces had almost been obliterated.
Then,
spreading leaving pools of blood, seventy shell casings and the mutilated
bodies of seven men behind, the plainclothes killers walked out with the phony
cops, pretending that they are being arrested. The driver was still waiting for
them behind the wheel of the car outside.
The police take away the victims of the massacre through the loading doors in the back of the building. (Below) A crowd gathered in from the shipping company in hopes of getting a glimpse through the painted windows at what was going on inside. Ironically, this photo was taken from almost the exact same vantage point that the lookout had in the days before the massacre.
After
the discovery of the massacre, the police were summoned and the investigation
began. It wasn’t long before crowds began to gather in front and in back of
2122 North Clark Street, all hoping to get a look at the dead bodies
inside.
When
the police arrived, Sergeant Tom Loftus was the first on the scene. Oddly, a
detective named Clarence J. Sweeney would later place himself at the scene and
would also claim that he was at the side of Frank Gusenberg when he died from
his wounds in the hospital three hours later. Sweeny kept the myth going over
the years, involving himself more and more in the story, but Loftus was
actually the first policeman to arrive and he questioned Gusenberg before the
ambulance got there. Frank had managed to crawl almost twenty feet, leaving a
bloody trail behind him, before collapsing on the floor.
Loftus
asked him: “Do you know me, Frank?”
Gusenberg:
“Yes, you are Tom Loftus.”
Loftus:
“Who did it or what happened?”
Gusenberg:
“I won’t talk.”
Loftus:
“You’re in bad shape.”
Gusenberg:
“Pete is here, too.”
Loftus
then asked him if they had been lined up against the wall and Gusenberg again
told him that he wasn’t going to talk. Gusenberg’s legendary statements of
“Nobody shot me” and “I ain’t no copper” turned out to be fabrications of
Detective Sweeney and the newspapers. Sweeney claimed to be at Frank's bedside,
yet Loftus detailed Officer James Mikes to be near Gusenberg at all times with
no mention of Sweeney ever being there.
Loftus
visited Gusenberg at Alexian Brothers Hospital and tried to question him again.
Once more, Frank refused to talk. Before he died, though, Loftus asked him if
the killers wore police uniforms and this time Frank whispered “Yes” before he
finally succumbed to his wounds.
"Only Capone kills guys like that," George Moran told the newspapers.
One
newspaper quote that was printed correctly came from George Moran. When he
learned of the massacre that he had escaped by only a few minutes, he told
reporters: “Only Capone kills like that.”
News
of the massacre quickly spread throughout the city and across the country –
even to as far away as Miami, where Al Capone was conveniently hosting guests
who were in town for the impending world championship fight between Jack
Sharkey and “Young” Stribling. Capone had invited more than one hundred guests
to his place on Palm Island, including sportswriters, gamblers, show business
people, racketeers, and politicians. Capone was a boxing enthusiast and bet on
Sharkey to win the title. He frequently visited his training camp and was
photographed by news cameramen standing proudly between Sharkey and Bill
Cunningham, a sportscaster and former All-American center.
Al Capone was conveniently in Florida at the time of the massacre.
On
the night of February 14, Capone hosted an elaborate party at his estate. They
feasted on a lavish buffet and drank champagne that was served by a half dozen
of Capone’s bodyguards. Mae Capone stayed quietly in the background, seeing to
everything that anyone needed. When it came to be Sonny’s bedtime, his father
took him by the hand and led him from group to group to say goodnight. The
small boy with the hearing aid, a shy, withdrawn little figure with huge eyes
and a bashful smile, was a sharp contrast to his bombastic father.
Jack
Kofoed, sports editor for the New York
Post, brought his wife, Marie, to the party. As the humid night wore on,
she decided to cool off in the swimming pool. She retired to the Venetian
bathhouse carrying her bathing suit and she saw, in the corner of the ladies’
dressing room, what appeared to be a crate covered with a canvas drop cloth.
She sat down on it to remove her shoes and quickly jumped up with a cry of
pain. Something had poked her in the leg. She lifted the cloth and saw that the
open crate was filled with shotguns, revolvers and Tommy guns.
The
guests at the party that night whispered among themselves about the Chicago
massacre that was being reported in the evening papers and on radio broadcasts.
Tact prevented them from speaking about it too loudly. Capone never mentioned
it at all.
The
next morning, when additional details had been published, among them Moran’s
comment about the massacre, Jack Kofoed called on his party host. “Al, I feel
silly asking you this,” he said, “but my boss wants me to. Al, did you have
anything to do with it?”
“Jack,”
Capone said, bending a serious gaze on his friend, “the only man who kills like
that is Bugs Moran.”
To Be
Continued….
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