Tony Genna
Tony Genna | |
---|---|
Born |
Antonio Genna Jr. July 12, 1890 Marsala, Sicily, Italy |
Died |
July 8, 1925 34) Chicago, Illinois, U.S. | (aged
Cause of death | Homicide |
Resting place | Mount Carmel Cemetery |
Other names | The Gentleman, Tony the Gentleman, Tony |
Occupation | gangster, bootlegger, building contractor, racketeer |
Parent(s) |
Antonino Genna Sr. Maria Concetta Utica |
Allegiance | Genna crime family, Chicago Outfit, Unione Siciliana |
Antonio "the Gentleman" Genna (July 12, 1890 – July 8, 1925) was a Sicilian mobster in Chicago. He headed the Genna crime family with his brothers. Genna was ambushed by a Genna family turncoat on orders of North Side Gang leaders Vince Drucci and Bugs Moran.
Early life
Antonio Genna was born on July 12, 1890,[1] to Sicilian parents, Antonio Genna Sr. and Maria Concetta Utica in Marsala, Sicily. He had six brothers: Michele "the Devil", Vincenzo "Jim", Pietro "Peter", Salvatore "Sam", Angelo "Bloody Angelo", and Nicola Genna; and two sisters: Rosa Laudicina and Caterina Mariana.[2] He and his brothers entered the U.S. through New York around 1910.[3]
Legitimate business
Before becoming a gangster, Genna was an excellent building contractor and architect. If he stuck to this profession, he could have amounted to something honorable, but the lure of fast cash and cars and power quickly won over his mind as a way of life.[2]
Prohibition and O'Banion
The Genna brothers became a close-knit Marsala-based Mafia and bootlegging gang. When Prohibition became a federal law in 1919, the Gennas obtained a federal license to legally manufacture industrial alcohol, which they sold illegally.[4] Tony and his brothers operated from Chicago's Little Italy, which was located west of the Chicago loop.[4]
They started selling their extra alcohol at cut-rate prices outside of their territory on the North Side. This caused a problem with the North Side Gang leader Charles Dean O'Banion, who in turn, went to South Side Gang boss John "Johnny the Fox" Torrio and Unione Siciliana boss Mike Merlo to get the Gennas to back down. Torrio refused, so O'Banion started hijacking alcohol shipments belonging to the Genna brothers. Torrio ordered the brothers to kill O'Banion; the brothers carried out the hit on November 10, 1924.[4] Francesco Ioele and two Genna hitmen—Giovanni Scalise and Alberto Anselmi—entered O'Banion's flower shop, Schofield, and when Yale shook O'Banion's hand, Scalise and Anselmi shot two bullets into his chest and two in his neck. And while O'Banion was lying face-down on the floor, one of the men shot a final bullet in the back of his head.[5]
Personal life
Genna had a girlfriend named Gladys Bagwill, whom the rest of the Gennas did not like due to her not being Italian. She was a minister's daughter. Apparently, Genna had planned to marry her (before he was killed).[2]
Gang war and death
After the O'Banion murder, Chicago erupted into a full-scale war. The North Siders—now led by Adelard Cunin—attempted to kill Torrio outside his home, causing him to flee to Italy, leaving his second-in-command—Alphonse "Scarface" Capone—as head of the Outfit.
Then, the North Siders took aim at the Gennas. On May 26, 1925, Moran, Vincent "the Schemer" Drucci, and Earl "Hymie" Weiss wounded Tony's brother Angelo in a high-speed chase, causing him to die shortly after. Then on June 13, 1925, Mike Genna was killed by police after a shootout with North Siders.
On July 8, 1925, Tony Genna was asked to meet by one of his friends—Antonio "Cavalero" Spano (aka Giuseppe Nerone)—at Grand Avenue and Curtis Street. He agreed, not knowing that the meeting was set up by Drucci and Moran. The two men met in front of a grocery store, and when they shook hands, another two men stepped out from behind Spano and shot Genna in the chest and abdomen (Spano set it up to be just like O'Banion's murder). Tony was rushed to the hospital and lived long enough to tell Sam Genna that it was Spano who lured him.[2]
Funeral
Genna's funeral was the exact opposite of his brother Genna's funeral. It was modest and secretive. There were only two floral pieces, one from a relative and one from his remaining brothers. His casket cost $5,000. None of his brothers showed up at the funeral. Due to Tony being a slain gangster, Cardinal Mundelin refused the family Catholic funeral rites.[2]
Aftermath
The remaining three brothers fled Chicago. On August 26, 1926, Spano was killed by one of Giuseppe "Joe" Aiello's brothers for a past transgression against the Aiellos.[2]
After the Gennas fled, the Aiello brothers declared themselves the bosses of the old Genna territory.[6] The Aiellos had an alliance with Castellammarese Clan boss Salvatore Maranzano and a close connection to the North Siders. They attempted to murder Capone to become the most powerful Italian organization in Chicago. In 1930, Joe Aiello was murdered and Capone took over the territory.
See also
References
- ↑ http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=genna&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSob=n&GRid=3394&
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The Genna Brothers (Dubbed in the newspapers as "the Terrible Gennas")". August 2009.
- ↑ "Genna, Angelo (1898-1925)". Thomas A. Hunt. April 2011.
- 1 2 3 "La Cosa Nostra database: Genna Brothers" Brothers
- ↑ The Dean O'Banion Project
- ↑ The true and complete story of 'machine gun' Jack McGurn by Amanda Jayne Parr pg. 244