Chicago Gaylords
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The Almighty Gaylords Nation is a Chicago street gang founded in the early 1950s. The gang is part of the
People Nation The People Nation is an American alliance of street gangs generally associated with the Chicago area. They are rivals of the Folk Nation alliance of gangs. Formation In 1978, Mickey Cogwell and Jeff Fort (now Black P. Stones), Vice Lords and ...
alliance and are known for disrupting rival gangs near Kilbourn Park.


Origins and history

The Almighty Gaylords Nation, founded in 1952, is one of Chicago's oldest street gangs, originating in the West Town neighborhood at the intersection of Grand Avenue and Noble Street. Initially composed mostly of Italians, it also included some Mexican Americans, reflecting the ethnic diversity of the area, which was recognized as one of Chicago's " Little Italies". Their initial claimed street corners included Huron and Throop, where they frequented Angie's, Grand and Ogden, and Ohio and Noble. The Gaylords quickly gained control over approximately half of the West Town area and all of Noble Square, establishing clubhouses and baseball teams. By the late 1950s, their primary clubhouse was located at the corner of Ohio and Noble Street. Among their earliest rivals were the C-Notes, Lazy Gents, and Playboys. Notable original Ohio and Noble Gaylords included Anthony "Johnny Boy," Anarina, and Bobby Shipbaugh. It's worth noting that there were other clubs in Chicago with the name Gaylords, unrelated to the Gaylords of West Town/Noble Square, such as the Little Village Gaylords, which formed in 1950 and disbanded during the
Vietnam War The Vietnam War (1 November 1955 – 30 April 1975) was an armed conflict in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia fought between North Vietnam (Democratic Republic of Vietnam) and South Vietnam (Republic of Vietnam) and their allies. North Vietnam w ...
when many members enlisted, and the Gaylords club in the Taylor Street area, which originated sometime before 1954. In the 1960s, the Gaylords expanded their territory into the Pilsen neighborhood, particularly at 18th and Western, and notably in Logan Square, Lawndale, Altgeld, and Kilbourn Park. As middle-class Whites moved to the suburbs, leaving poor Whites in increasingly Puerto Rican, Mexican, and African American city slums, more turf became available for the Gaylords. By 1979, during the peak of their influence, the Gaylords ranked as the fourth most powerful gang in Chicago, boasting around 1,500 members. They were known as "Chicago's largest White street gang...considered a violent, bigoted outfit." In 1970, they were suspected of involvement in the murder of a black Chicago citizen named Joe Henson, although no charges were filed. A later feature article in the
Chicago Reader The ''Chicago Reader'', or ''Reader'' (stylized as ЯEADER), is an American alternative newspaper in Chicago, Illinois, noted for its literary style of journalism and coverage of the arts, particularly film and theater. The ''Reader'' has been ...
alleged police and political cover-up. During their peak period, the Chicago Gaylords had sets (or sections) across the North Side, West Side, and the South Side of Chicago. By the early 1980s, the Gaylords ranked as the third most prominent gang in Chicago, boasting 6,000 members. On the West Side, they controlled sections at Ohio and Noble, Ohio and Leclaire, and Monticello and Augusta. Their South Side territory included
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and West Englewood (around 55th and Ashland, Sherman Park), Pilsen (18th and Western), and Bridgeport (Throop Street). On the North Side, they were present in Belmont Cragin, Manor Bowl, Reinberg School, Chopin Park, Blackhawk Park, St. Gens., Humboldt Park (Moffat and Campbell), Logan Square (Palmer and California, Lawndale and Altgeld), Irving Park (Albany and Byron), Kilbourn Park (Roscoe and Kilbourn), Kelvyn Park (Kilbourn and Wrightwood), Dunham Park (Montrose and Narragansett), Ravenswood (Seeley and Ainslie), and Uptown (Sunnyside and Magnolia, Lawrence and Broadway). Two of their most potent sections were in Logan Square: Lawndale and Altgeld (L-A section) and Palmer and California (Palmer Street). By the early 1990s, the Gaylords experienced a decline as many of their leaders were incarcerated, and the remaining white population moved from the inner city to the suburbs. In 2011, police and federal agents arrested nine members of suburban Gaylords factions on charges of drug dealing, gun trafficking, and violent intimidation.


References


External links

* Official websit
Chicago Gaylords, Chicago Street Gangs, Chicago Gang Information
{{Organized crime groups in Chicago Organizations established in the 1940s 1940s establishments in Illinois People Nation European-American gangs European-American culture in Chicago Gangs in Chicago