Flowers, fantasy and fidelity. Seared in blood. St Valentine,
just another executed Christian martyr, beatified into sainthood. Roman
soldiers in uniform, Chicago Cops in their blue. Most Roman soldiers were
mercenaries from parts of the Empire. The two Cops who lined up seven members
of the Northside gang under the leadership of George 'Bugs' Moran, were actually
gangsters in disguise. It's never been proven who gunned down these seven men
spreadeagled against the wall, but it's thought to be a consequence of a bootlegging
turf rivalry with the Southside gang under Al Capone.
Capone actually operated his organisation "The
Outfit" from Cicero, a town nine miles outside of Chicago and under a different
and easily bribed legal jurisdiction. Prohibition fuelled the hired muscle of
the politicians turning the tables on their former masters, as they employed the
politicians on their payroll, because of the money flowing through the illegal
alcohol trade. It was the genie that could never be restoppered, as Organised
Crime fostered the development of Las Vegas as the gambling capital of the
world; of gangster Lucky Luciano working with the US government and military
during the Second World War campaign to invade Sicily; and even the endemic
corruption of the playboys' paradise that was President Batista's Cuba, which
helped inspire Castro's revolution to overthrow it.
Sometimes unsold flowers in shops are sent to hospitals. Capone
came to head The Outfit by protecting Crime Boss Johnny Torrio as he lay
wounded in hospital after an assassination attempt by then Northside gang
leader Dean O'Banion. Capone ringed the hospital's entrance with armed goons. A
grateful Torrio turned his gang over to Capone and got out of organised crime.
We mark death with flowers, so the message of flowers for a sick person is somewhat ambiguous. Flowers might signify life, vigour and health, but cut stems soon
die soon enough. Severed from their vinculum of life. The one victim of the St
Valentine's Day Massacre who didn't die on the spot was Frank Gusenberg. Lying
in a hospital bed and being quizzed by the Cops, he answered the question of
'who', with "Nobody shot me" despite the evidence of 14 bullet wounds
in his body. That ridiculous denial under the gangster code. He died within
three hours for all the good his vow of silence did him.
Dean O'Banion ran his criminal enterprise out of a flower
shop. Flowers were very important to the gangsters, be it the lavish wreaths
they sent to funerals of both rivals and comrades, or the buttonholes these
dandified killers wore in their sharp suits. For every Frank "The
Enforcer" Nitti, or Samuel "Nails" Morton, there was a Charles
Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd or a George "Baby Face" Nelson. Not
quite Oscar Wilde's posies and lilies, but none too far removed. O'Banion was
an expert flower arranger and was shot while arranging some chrysanthemums.
Moran took over from O'Banion.
And with their sharp clothes, highly impractical for hefting
illegal alcohol from trucks that had crossed the border from Canada, or their
own illegal stills and factories, these hardened men were living a fantasy. Two
of the killers in the St Valentine's Day massacre were dressed up in the fancy
dress of their other enemy, the Cop. It's not conclusively proven that Thompson
"Tommy" sub-machine guns were ever secreted in violin cases or not,
but the convergence of clinical hard gun metal with the plush lining to house a
musical instrument is part of the fantastical mythology. The only thing not
fantastical about the mental life of these men, was when they had a gun in
their hand spraying machine engineered death from the barrel. O'Banion refused
the offer of stakes in brothels, because he abhorred prostitution. Capone's
years in prison were blighted by syphilitic infection which had reached his
brain.
Capone was jailed for tax evasion. The St Valentine's Day
Massacre didn't kill his rival Moran, but their murderous feud had its wings
clipped by the Great Depression which bit into their profits and then the
repeal of Prohibition's Volstead Act. Economics was the ultimate arbiter,
though of course organised crime continues to this day. And still on economics
and the free market, when the garage that had hosted the massacre was finally
to come down, the bloodstained bricks of the 'Murder Wall" that the men
had been lined up against, were bought by a collector and entrepreneur. After a
few different incarnations on display, they are now housed in the Las Vegas Mob
Museum, which opened on this day last year. Less the few bought by ghoulish
collectors.
So within these tangles of an alternate, male version of St
Valentine's Day, we have similar if muddied emblems of the day. We have
flowers. We have sexual disease (Valentine's Day - VD). We have fantasy
self-images and a warped romantic mythology. Are they any less relevant than
Hallmark cards, gnomic poetry from anonymous admirers and confectionary in
heart shaped boxes? Happy VD!
1 comment:
I wanted to tick the "cynical" box - but you don't have one. So I'll settle for interesting. On the whole I'd prefer a card filled with bad poetry from an anonymous admirer than a bullet... ;-)
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