Weird Mafia Myths Popularized by the Godfather and Media

Weird Mafia Myths Popularized by the Godfather and Media

Khalid Elhassan - July 15, 2022

Weird Mafia Myths Popularized by the Godfather and Media
A 1910 NYPD wanted poster for Black Hand activity. Wikimedia

15. Prohibition Backfired and Led to the Rise of the Mafia

Until the twentieth century, America had next to no history of organized crime as the term is understood today. American cities had plenty of gangs, but they were nothing as powerful as what the mafia would eventually become. Instead, city gangs were local affairs, comprised of street thugs whose reach and influence seldom extended beyond a radius of a few city blocks. Irish immigrants in particular had dominated the street gang scene in the nineteenth century, as dramatized in the 2002 Hollywood epic, Gangs of New York.

Weird Mafia Myths Popularized by the Godfather and Media
Police with seized bootlegging equipment, Ohio State University.

As new immigrant waves washed on America’s shores, Irish gangs found themselves rubbing shoulders with, then gradually getting shouldered out of the way, by other ethnic street gangs. By the early twentieth century, Italian gangs, the predecessors of the Italian-American mafia, were established in numerous American cities. Like their Irish predecessors, the Italian gangs were small-scale operations of no particular distinction. Their operations were confined to Italian neighborhoods, where they preyed upon Italian immigrants in a variety of ways, such as extortion, blackmail, protection rackets, prostitution, theft, and robbery.

Read More: 20 Significant Mafia Hits.

Advertisement