A Tammany Boss and a Mad Violinist Ruined Gun Rights for New Yorkers

By: The Fusionist

In May 1907, Timothy D. “Big Tim” Sullivan, a key leader in the powerful Tammany Democratic organization in New York City, spoke to a reporter from the New York Herald. “Help your neighbor, but keep your nose out of his affairs,” said Big Tim, seemingly libertarian-ly.

Timothy Sullivan

The former New York state legislator, who had recently resigned from Congress but not from his role as Tammany power-broker, wasn’t actually endorsing libertarianism. He was talking about his no-questions-asked policy of distributing charity to the poor who lived in the Bowery district – poor people whom the Democrats relied on to get elected and re-elected. Sullivan held an annual daylong summer extravaganza of food and entertainment for grateful voters and their families, and an annual Christmas dinner, too, plus clothing giveaways. He literally bailed out people who got in legal trouble, and helped job-seekers get employed in government or the private sector.

A businessman who had ownership interests in saloons and theaters, Sullivan probably chipped in some of his own money for his charitable efforts. But he didn’t have to rely solely on the contents of his own pocketbook. Sullivan took a “regulate and tax” approach to gambling, liquor, and other kinds of vice – if by “tax” you mean payoffs to himself and his friends, plus help for his poor constituents.

Often charged with being “King of the Underworld,” Sullivan denied it. He particularly denied shaking down prostitutes. At one point, in order to forcibly, as it were, rebut the allegations, Sullivan’s people raided some brothels and beat up some pimps.

Sullivan was even more enthusiastic about practicing violence against Republican poll-watchers. To take one example: when political reformer William Travers Jerome in 1901 threatened to employ poll watchers in Sullivan’s territory, Big Tim told the press: “If Jerome brings down a lot of football playing, hair-mattressed college athletes to run the polls by force, I will say now that there won’t be enough ambulances in New York to carry them away.”

And if Big Tim had to recruit from the criminal underworld to accomplish his dirty work, he would do so. As Professor Daniel Czitrom put it: “The Sullivan machine occasionally employed rival gangs for strong-arm support at election time, especially during the rare but bruising intra-Tammany primary fights. The largest and most notorious of these were the Jewish Monk Eastman gang and the Italian Paul Kelly Association, whose bitter feuding sometimes exploded into gunfire on Lower East Side streets.”

Shortly after Sullivan gave his comments about keeping one’s nose out of people’s affairs, a prestigious Quaker school in Washington, D. C., held its graduation ceremonies. Friends School, as it was known, was presided over by the husband-and-wife team of Thomas and Frances Sidwell, after whom the school would later be renamed. The graduates were to be addressed by a very important, albeit non-Quaker figure: President Theodore Roosevelt, whose son went to the school (Roosevelt, incidentally, was an old adversary of Sullivan’s).

While waiting for Roosevelt and his wife to arrive, the graduation crowd listened to a Friends School alumnus and Harvard graduate, who had studied in Berlin and Vienna to be a professional violinist and now shared his talent with the audience with solos by Vieuxtemps, Elgar, and Bazzini.

The violinist, Fitzhugh Coyle Goldsborough, was from a Southern family as distinguished as his name sounded. His doctor-father had financed his education and was probably relieved that Fitzhugh seemed to have settled down to a regular job. Fitzhugh’s sometimes strange and disturbing behavior made him unpleasant to have around the family home.

President Roosevelt arrived and gave his speech. Goldsborough remained during the speech, as we know from a photograph of the event showing the violinist standing on the President’s right. A later search of Goldsborough’s notebook showed the violinst describing the Rough Rider as “An example of evolution from Politics to Barbarism,” but despite this, perhaps Goldsborough found something in Roosevelt’s speech worth listening to. Roosevelt gave a version of one of his favorite speeches, “The American Boy” (the graduating class had a handful of girls as well as boys). Roosevelt proclaimed: “When a boy grows up, I want him to be of such a type that when somebody wrongs him he will feel a good, healthy desire to show the wrongdoers that he can not be wronged with impunity.”

With these not-fully-Quakerish sentiments echoing in their ears, the graduates, the President, and Goldsborough went their separate ways. Goldsborough got work playing first violin for the Pittsburgh Orchestra. He had undeniable musical talent. But he was not a talented poet. This was unfortunate, since Goldsborough insisted on reading his poetry to other members of the orchestra. His colleagues put up with it, until one day a fellow-musician said that Goldsborough’s poetry was terrible. Goldsborough broke his violin over the other musician’s head.

[insert “sax and violins” joke here]

Soon after this, in 1910, Goldsborough left Pittsburgh, explaining everything in a brief note so that nobody would worry: “The Pittsburgh smoke has driven me crazy. You will never see me again.”

David Graham Phillips

On January 23, 1911, around New York City’s Gramercy Park, the novelist David Graham Phillips was taking his regular walk in the high-toned neighborhood. Phillips was a “muckracker,” a term coined by President Roosevelt to describe writers like Phillips who focused on corruptions and abuses in society. Phillips had written several novels denouncing political abuses, and he had also written a novel of manners, The Fashionable Adventures of Joshua Craig, mocking the upper crust.

One of the young ladies in the Joshua Craig novel was described as follows: “To her luxurious, sensuous nature every kind of pleasurable physical sensation made keen appeal, and she strove in every way to make it keener.” Someone had recently been bombarding Phillips with letters complaining that this character was a satire on his (the correspondent’s) sister. This was not true, and Phillips had rightly concluded that the letter-writer was a nut, but what Phillips didn’t know was that the letter-writer had taken up lodging nearby in order to stalk Phillips and seek “revenge.”

And now the letter-writer, Fitzhugh Coyle Goldsborough, was coming up to Phillips, shooting the novelist and then himself. Goldsborough died promptly; Phillips died the following day.

Phillips’ murder was quite helpful to a bureaucrat named George P. LeBrun, a gun-control zealot who got together a coalition for a more restrictive firearms law. LeBrun recruited a committee consisting of John D. Rockefeller and other bigshots – the committee called itself the Legislation League for the Conservation of Human Life, of which LeBrun became secretary.

To sponsor the gun law, LeBrun recruited Big Tim Sullivan, who by this time was back in the state Senate. Sullivan, who now represented in the Lower East Side, piously told LeBrun about the need to stop murderous gang rivalry. (Cynics to this day suggest that Sullivan wanted a legal weapon to keep his allies well-armed while disarming his adversaries, but what possible basis can there be for such a supposition?) Sullivan took the floor on behalf of his bill, which would require permits for concealable guns. The legislature voted with Sullivan and the bill became law.

LeBrun credited Phillips’ murder: “Four shots fired by a maniac caused me to become the father of the Sullivan Law…” This law, of course, restricts the arms-bearing rights of perfectly sane people. Unless they have connections, like Big Tim Sullivan’s allies.

The New York Times reported Sullivan’s reassurances: “Senator Sullivan said that householders and business men who desired to keep weapons in their homes and places of business as a measure of protection would not be inconvenienced by the new law.” As reported in the Times, Sullivan was sure of the law’s constitutionality because he had “consulted a Supreme Court Justice [i. e., state trial judge] in preparing it.”

This justice may or may not have been the retired judge – and Tammany ally – Roger A. Pryor, who in an interview with the Times assured the reporter that the law was constitutional, because the state of New York did not have to obey the Second Amendment – “it is settled by uniform adjudication that [the Second Amendment] is a limitation on the authority and power of the Federal Government only….Senator Sullivan is entirely right and his critics are all wrong.”

Judge Pryor had certainly come a long way since that April day in Charleston harbor half a century before, when he and others discussed whether to fire on Fort Sumter…but that is a story for another time.

As for Sullivan, he was elected to Congress again in 1912, but went mad, and died mysteriously in 1913.

 

Citations:

“Bang, Bang, Your [sic] Dead,” The Public “I,” January 24, 2013, http://thepublici.blogspot.com/2013/01/bang-bang-your-dead.html

Juan Ignacio Blanco, “Fitzhugh Coyle Goldsborough,” Murderpedia, http://murderpedia.org/male.G/g/goldsborough-fitzhugh.htm

Carl M. Cannon, “Clinton gives commencement address at daughter Chelsea’s private school ‘Dad, the girls want you to be wise the boys just want you to be funny.’” Baltimore Sun, June 07, 1997 http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1997-06-07/news/1997158013_1_sidwell-friends-school-clinton-chelsea

Sewell Chan, “Big Tim Sullivan, Tammany Kingmaker,” New York Times, City Room blog, December 18, 2009, https://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/18/big-tim-sullivan-tammany-kingmaker/

Commencement Exercises and President Roosevelt’s Address, May 24, 1907. Friends School, Washington, D.C.

Richard C. Cortner, The Supreme Court and the Second Bill of Rights: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Nationalization of Civil Liberties. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1981.

Daniel Czitrom, “Underworlds and Underdogs: Big Tim Sullivan and Metropolitan Politics in New York, 1889- 1913.” The Journal of American History, Vol. 78, No. 2 (Sep., 1991), pp. 536-558

Friends’ Intelligencer, Sixth month [June] 8, 1907, p. 366.

George P. Le Brun, as told to Edward D. Radin, call me if it’s murder! New York: Bantam, 1965, pp. 69-77.

“History,” Sidwell Friends School, http://www.sidwell.edu/about_sfs/history/index.aspx

“Roger A. Pryor Finds New Gun Law Valid,” New York Times, September 5, 1911. http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9800E4D91531E233A25756C0A96F9C946096D6CF

“Sullivan Wants New Gun Law to Stand,” New York Times, September 7, 1911, http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9B00E6DA1E3EE033A25754C0A96F9C946096D6CF

Comments

73 responses to “A Tammany Boss and a Mad Violinist Ruined Gun Rights for New Yorkers”

  1. Gilmore

    i am mildly intimidated by Eddies professional formatting, and absurdly-detailed citations.

    1. DOOMco

      this.

      1. Gilmore

        “he makes everyone else look sloppy! have the editors misspell some things, put in awkward paragraph breaks…. and christ, what, is he a librarian or something? HE PUT A DEWEY-DECIMAL NUMBER ON IT. AND WHAT DOES “IBID” MEAN”

        1. tarran

          I Believe In Dog.

          Or Doug.

          1. westernsloper

            I thought it meant: It Be In Dere since it had to do with a book reference.

        2. bacon-magic

          I see no bullet-points.

          1. Nephilium

            Swiss, can we get a ruling over here?

          2. Gilmore

            This is beyond bullet-points. He’s in full dork-mode.

            Bullet-points are simply my “poor man’s attempt to impose some basic order on chaos”

            Eddie, by contrast, is a man who already dry-cleans and starches his underwear before filing them alphabetically-by-brand/by-usage date in neatly-labeled drawers.

        3. John Titor

          And it’s in Chicago, the clearly superior citation method.

          1. egould310

            ALS of GTFO!

          2. egould310

            Hahaha! I haven’t had to cite anything in so long, i forgot the formats. MLA not ALS. I’m an idiot. No… wait… I’m sober. Tome to splash a little bourbon into this coffee.

        4. mikey

          Your tirade would be more effective with bullet points.

          1. Gilmore

            – Everything is more effective with bullet-points.

  2. WTF

    He was talking about his no-questions-asked policy of distributing charity to the poor who lived in the Bowery district – poor people whom the Democrats relied on to get elected and re-elected.

    Some things never change.

  3. The Late P Brooks

    the Legislation League for the Conservation of Human Life

    What sort of psychopath would dare impugn the motives of such an august and respectably named organization?

  4. The Late P Brooks

    At one point, in order to forcibly forcefully, as it were, rebut the allegations, Sullivan’s people raided some brothels and beat up some pimps.

    How do you like me now?

  5. Private Chipperbot

    Roosevelt proclaimed: “When a boy grows up, I want him to be of such a type that when somebody wrongs him he will feel a good, healthy desire to show the wrongdoers that he can not be wronged with impunity.”

    I imagine Teddy in the present day sitting by a computer and cropping Buffalo Soldiers out of a picture for the cover of his autobiography.

    1. Chipwooder

      BULLY! ……but not in a Hihntarded way

  6. The Late P Brooks

    I liked me better when I could preview my tagging.

    Once more, into the breach…

    At one point, in order to forcibly forcefully, as it were, rebut the allegations, Sullivan’s people raided some brothels and beat up some pimps.

    1. darn, you’re right.

  7. bacon-magic

    Good read.

    1. Tundra

      Seconded.

      Really interesting read, Eddie! Like a gentle, slow motion nut-punch that you are willing to endure because the lead up is so good.

      Respect.

      1. bacon-magic

        *fiddles a tune* *uses violin as a bludgeon*

        1. BakedPenguin

          You would do such a thing! You are a vulgarian cad, and your sister a shameless sensualist!

          1. bacon-magic

            Thanks!

          2. BakedPenguin

            Okay, I laughed.

  8. bacon-magic

    Pimp hand be strong. *smack*

  9. Tundra

    I didn’t choose the thug life.

    1. bacon-magic

      It chose you.

  10. The Late P Brooks

    I didn’t choose the thug life.

    Thug life chose you?

    1. Tundra

      I thought so, but it appears not…

  11. wdalasio

    Solid article. Really good job.

  12. Brett L

    At least back in the old days, when a man shot a public figure in NYC, he had the dignity to turn the gun on himself.

    1. bacon-magic

      Those were the days. /Archie and Edith

  13. This Machine

    As for Sullivan, he was elected to Congress again in 1912, but went mad, and died mysteriously in 1913.

    “Those whom the gods would destroy…”

    Fantastic read, and well cited. Bravo, Eddie.

  14. Gojira

    I’ve read it through twice, and still don’t see what this has to do with trannies.

    1. Goldsborough identified as a poet. It was probably society’s refusal to accept his self-identification that put him over the edge.

  15. For those interested in a more speculative treatment of Phillips’ murder, this non-canon Sherlock Holmes novel may be of interest.

    1. BakedPenguin

      Non-canon? Meh. Doyle may have been a spiritualist loony, but his Holmes fiction is superb. It must have been mind-blowing in the Victorian era.

      1. BakedPenguin

        BTW, my characterization of Doyle wasn’t a swipe at you (or any other believer), Eddie. Doyle attended seances and believe in psychic phenomena.

        1. Well, either the psychics are trying to trick the attendees into thinking there are real spirits present, or there *are* spirits, but they’re not what they claim to be. Either way, best to avoid.

  16. westernsloper

    A Tammany Boss and a Mad Violinist Ruined Gun Rights for New Yorkers

    Hillary will fix it! Hillary 2017!!!!!

    Interesting read Eddie. Thanks for the history lesson.

    1. Floridaman

      I don’t know, I don’t think she’s that good at fixing things. After all she could only fix the primary.

  17. John Titor

    Whoa, wait a second, I have to cite when I write history articles here? I thought this was laid back anarchy.

    Good job Eddie, I’d even have given you bonus points if you had done endnotes.

    1. Some of the cited works have additional, fun, information.

      Eg, one of Sullivan’s political protégées was Frances Perkins, future labor Secretary for the *other* Roosevelt.

      Sullivan was raised by his mother and drunken stepfather. For the rest of his life he was a teeotaler and he cited his sainted mother a lot (like when he said he would never take payoffs from hookers because his mother wouldn’t approve). He was a male suffragette, an early investor in the movie business, and in general there’s Richard F. Welch’s book King of the Bowery (2009), which I didn’t have the chance to re-read before doing this article.

      When Bill Clinton spoke at Sidwell friends in 1993, the administration at the school said how much better Clinton was than Teddy Roosevelt with his talk about boys to a coed graduating class. They didn’t mention that Roosevelt shared the stage with a murderous lunatic violinist, I may be the first to discover that through the magic of Google.

  18. egould310

    Nice article Eddie. Informative, suspenseful, narrative. I think we all just grew up a little today.

      1. BakedPenguin

        Given your new avatar, I thought that was going to be this.

        1. Tundra

          Damn. That would’ve been better!

      2. egould310

        Good one?

        Here’s one that is topical for this article https://youtu.be/I8piMHsOya4

        1. Tundra

          I noticed them on your playlist, as well. Great band with a great name!

  19. R C Dean

    Very well crafted, Eddie. The workmanship vastly exceeds most of the “professional” writing that one encounters.

    Gun control has always stood on the bodies of the recently slain. Presumably to ensure they have plenty of company in the coming years.

  20. Gustave Lytton

    Nice work Eddie! Pryor is quite an interesting fellow. Challenged a WI rep to duel but backed out after the rep chose Bowie knives. Almost died at Ft Sumpter too. Fucked up his command, resigned and reenlisted as a private. Then went on to a successful law career in partnership with a Union general.

    Would never have looked him up if it wasn’t for that little first shot tidbit. Thanks Eddie!

    1. I was going to ask the mods if I could do my next thing on Pryor.

    2. Scruffy Nerfherder

      Challenged a WI rep to duel but backed out after the rep chose Bowie knives

      Probably a good choice, the winner in a knife fight is the one that gets to the hospital before he dies.

  21. robc

    Is there any connection to the Sullivan who was involved in the Black Sox scandal?

    1. This guy? I’m not sure if he was related to Big Tim. There are a lot of Sullivans.

      1. robc

        Yeah, probably not connected, as he was from Boston.

        Other than the mob connection of working for Rothstein.

    2. robc

      His (Arnold Rothstein) illegal empire was broken up and distributed among a number of other underworld organizations and led in part to the downfall of Tammany Hall

      Rothstein funded Joseph Sullivan so there is an indirect connection, at least.

      Rothstein is an interesting figure too.

  22. Scruffy Nerfherder

    Encyclopedia Eddie should be your new nom de plume.

    Nice work.

  23. Rufus the Monocled

    Good stuff!

  24. Suthenboy

    Very well done Eddie. Very well done.

    1. Suthenboy

      Gun grabbers are all the same. Opportunistic scumbags with ulterior motives drumming up support with fear mongering and using ignorance to their advantage. Every last goddamned one of them.

  25. Tonio

    Good article, Eddie. Cite that shit, yo.

  26. l0b0t

    Eddie, I have long enjoyed your comments, even when I disagree with them. This article however was just awesome; I was aware of the vauge outline of the history of our abhorrent law but had no knowledge of the details. Thank you for writing it and please write more.

  27. Hyperion

    That’s very impressive. It even made me read the entire article, something that I rarely, I must admit, do.

  28. Mike Schmidt

    Outstanding. I look forward to more Fusionist articles here.

    And I must ask; what’s with “Eddie?” Real name or nickname from something that happened t Reason?

    1. Old handle…long story.

      1. Mike Schmidt

        Fair enough. I just didn’t want to go there if it was a term of familiarity reserved for the core group

        1. Call me Eddie if you want. Everyone who gets admitted to Glibertarians.com is in the core group.

          Though there *is* a even smaller group which works with the Illuminati and the Lizard People…I hope I haven’t given away too much.

          1. Mike Schmidt

            The damn Lizard People. I’ve always thought they were cold blooded.

  29. The Immaculate Trouser

    Great article, really enjoyed it. More, please!