Shirt Tails
This article includes a improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2009) ) |
Founding location | Five Points, Manhattan, New York City |
---|---|
Years active | 1830s-1860s |
Territory | Lower East Side, Manhattan, New York City |
Ethnicity | Irish American |
Membership (est.) | ? |
Criminal activities | street fighting, knife fighting, assault, murder, robbery |
Allies | Forty Thieves, Roach Guards, Tammany Hall Chichesters, Dead Rabbits, |
Rivals | Bowery Boys, Atlantic Guards |
The Shirt Tails were a mid-19th-century
Five Points slum in Manhattan, New York, United States, who wore their shirts on the outside of their pants as 19th-century Chinese laborers would dress as a form of insignia and as a sign of gang group affiliation. Members kept their weapons—as many as three or four at a time—concealed beneath their shirts; this discreet measure stands in contrast to competing gangs who flaunted their weapons in order to intimidate.[citation needed
]
Never numbering more than a few hundred members, the Shirt Tails, like many other gangs, disappeared shortly before the
New York Draft Riots
), with its remaining members dissipating or joining other Irish gangs.
References
- Asbury, Herbert. The Gangs of New York. ISBN 1-56025-275-8