1. New York
in the early 20th century.
Copy !req
2. Some of the most notorious criminals
in history
Copy !req
3. would start their lives of crime
here.
Copy !req
4. But few would rise from real poverty
to power,
Copy !req
5. to take on not only the law,
but the entire system
Copy !req
6. and even the Mafia itself.
Copy !req
7. A ruthless racketeer...
Copy !req
8. So, what we got here?
Copy !req
9. and one of the most feared
and respected bosses...
Copy !req
10. who became a legend...
Copy !req
11. in her own lifetime.
Copy !req
12. Who's next?
Copy !req
13. In the early 1900s, crime was
very much a white man's game.
Copy !req
14. But in her own backyard, the Queen
of Harlem didn't just play it,
Copy !req
15. she ran it.
Copy !req
16. Bombings, beatings.
Copy !req
17. bodies in alleyways.
Copy !req
18. Harlem bled,
but she never bent.
Copy !req
19. A warlord in pearls.
Copy !req
20. To her allies, she was a legend.
Copy !req
21. To her enemies, she was lethal.
Copy !req
22. Why don't we know her name?
Copy !req
23. Stephanie St Clair.
Copy !req
24. She is from Guadeloupe,
and she was born in the 1890s.
Copy !req
25. She was the daughter of
two working-class people.
Copy !req
26. Her dad died when she was about
ten or 11 years old,
Copy !req
27. and she was raised by
a single mother.
Copy !req
28. She was relatively well educated
for a child growing up
Copy !req
29. in the French West Indies.
Copy !req
30. Her mother died at a young age,
Copy !req
31. meaning that she was left alone
at maybe age 12 or 13.
Copy !req
32. Perhaps that's what pushed her to
migrate to the Northern Hemisphere.
Copy !req
33. So much of her early years
are shrouded in mystery.
Copy !req
34. One account has it that
after her mother died of TB,
Copy !req
35. she was forced to become
a house girl at a sugar plantation,
Copy !req
36. but ran away at 13
Copy !req
37. after having killed the owner's son
Copy !req
38. who had repeatedly raped her
over the years.
Copy !req
39. Another account has it that
she didn't kill him,
Copy !req
40. but while he was passed out,
drunk from rum,
Copy !req
41. she emptied his pockets,
ran to the docks
Copy !req
42. and jumped on the first boat out,
heading anywhere.
Copy !req
43. Travelling virtually alone
on a steamship for weeks
Copy !req
44. left women or really a young girl
open to theft,
Copy !req
45. open to kidnapping,
open to assault.
Copy !req
46. It would not have been
an easy journey,
Copy !req
47. and without a clear sense of
what's waiting on the other side.
Copy !req
48. All we know for sure is that she
arrived in North America in 1911.
Copy !req
49. There were few opportunities
for immigrants,
Copy !req
50. much less for a young black woman
Copy !req
51. from a non-English-speaking island
in the Caribbean.
Copy !req
52. She migrates to New York
City to work as a domestic worker.
Copy !req
53. You are hired to scrub and clean
and feed a white family
Copy !req
54. and also care for their children.
Copy !req
55. No woman wants to do domestic work
just because of, you know,
Copy !req
56. how abusive that job can be.
Copy !req
57. Stephanie St Clair hardly talks
about that early life.
Copy !req
58. I think that's purposeful.
Copy !req
59. There are differing accounts
of how she made her first entry
Copy !req
60. into New York's criminal underworld.
Copy !req
61. One says that she starts dating
a drug dealer,
Copy !req
62. and is working for him,
until he gets shot, and she flees.
Copy !req
63. Another that she shacks up
with a man named Duke,
Copy !req
64. a pimp, who tries to force her
into prostitution,
Copy !req
65. until St Clair buries a fork
in his eye...
Copy !req
66. allegedly.
Copy !req
67. So this is the world where
Stephanie St Clair finds herself.
Copy !req
68. New York is going through one of
the biggest changes it's ever known.
Copy !req
69. A lot of
Southern African-Americans
Copy !req
70. had made the decision to go to
the north and specifically New York
Copy !req
71. for better business opportunities,
Copy !req
72. but also to escape the racist
tensions of the Jim Crow era
Copy !req
73. in the south.
Copy !req
74. For a lot of these Black Americans,
the journey north ended in Harlem.
Copy !req
75. Harlem was called
the Black Mecca.
Copy !req
76. African-Americans from various
parts of the world
Copy !req
77. are bringing different customs,
traditions,
Copy !req
78. ways of knowing, ways of life,
Copy !req
79. and bringing those things to Harlem.
Copy !req
80. It's difficult to comprehend
just how hard life would have been
Copy !req
81. back then for Stephanie.
Copy !req
82. We know all too well that
Black Americans were being subjected
Copy !req
83. to appalling racial discrimination.
Copy !req
84. Slavery is still in living memory
Copy !req
85. and sadly attitudes hadn't changed
all that much.
Copy !req
86. It was almost impossible for Black
people to even open bank accounts
Copy !req
87. or secure housing.
Copy !req
88. And even when they were able to,
the conditions were so poor,
Copy !req
89. they were almost unliveable.
Copy !req
90. We even have evidence of
Black folks in the early 1910s
Copy !req
91. and early 1920s sleeping in shifts.
Copy !req
92. So, you might all be renting one bed
in one room
Copy !req
93. and, you know, somebody has it
for the day shift,
Copy !req
94. somebody has it for the night shift
Copy !req
95. and you switch back and forth.
Copy !req
96. Everybody was piled on top of each
other, which made for hard times,
Copy !req
97. but also a lot of
community building.
Copy !req
98. And then also police brutality
is rampant.
Copy !req
99. You would be walking
down the street
Copy !req
100. and you'd be stopped by
a police officer.
Copy !req
101. They would start to search you
if you talked back,
Copy !req
102. if you happen to have anything
on you.
Copy !req
103. You were in for a beating
and being put in jail.
Copy !req
104. What's incredible is that
even amongst all this hardship
Copy !req
105. and discrimination, the brutal
police repression and segregation,
Copy !req
106. creativity found a way.
Copy !req
107. When we think about Harlem
in the 1920s,
Copy !req
108. we tend to think about
the Harlem Renaissance,
Copy !req
109. that cultural expression
where artists, musicians,
Copy !req
110. actors, painters, sculptors
are using art as a vehicle
Copy !req
111. to really challenge race gender
and class discrimination,
Copy !req
112. racist caricatures,
racist silent movies
Copy !req
113. like the film Birth of a Nation,
which comes out in 1910s.
Copy !req
114. So, Harlem is this incredibly
vibrant cultural epicentre,
Copy !req
115. a real phenomenon.
Copy !req
116. It's around this time that St Clair
made her mind up
Copy !req
117. that she wants more.
Copy !req
118. But those economic hardships
weren't going anywhere.
Copy !req
119. How is someone like Stephanie
supposed to change her lot?
Copy !req
120. For Harlem's poorer population,
there was only really one option
Copy !req
121. to strike it rich.
Copy !req
122. The Numbers Game was like
a people's lottery
Copy !req
123. in a time when Black people weren't
even allowed bank accounts.
Copy !req
124. - What you want?
- Give me 500, will you?
Copy !req
125. - You want 500?
- 309.
Copy !req
126. 78. 591.
Copy !req
127. Players would write their
lucky three-digit numbers
Copy !req
128. on slips of paper, and runners would
run these slips
Copy !req
129. and the bets between the gamblers
and the bankers.
Copy !req
130. The winning numbers were chosen
from the last three digits
Copy !req
131. of the daily trading totals
of the New York Stock Exchange,
Copy !req
132. which, crucially, made the game
impossible to tamper with or fix.
Copy !req
133. So the New York Clearing House
is a financial institution
Copy !req
134. handling millions of dollars
every day.
Copy !req
135. Then they publish in the paper,
Copy !req
136. "Yesterday we handled
$57,982,431.91.”
Copy !req
137. And so the 431, those three digits
before the decimal point,
Copy !req
138. that becomes the New York number.
Copy !req
139. Hitting the number is huge
for anybody
Copy !req
140. that gives you the opportunity
to take care of oneself
Copy !req
141. and one's family.
Copy !req
142. So if you hit the number,
your rent is paid for months.
Copy !req
143. The numbers game was something
everyone could get involved with,
Copy !req
144. and Stephanie St Clair wanted
a piece of that pie.
Copy !req
145. But the question is,
Copy !req
146. how was it going to change Stephanie
St Clair the house cleaner...
Copy !req
147. into Stephanie St Clair
the mob boss?
Copy !req
148. Prohibition in 1920
Copy !req
149. would change the course of
the nation's history.
Copy !req
150. The entire country would ban
the sale and production of alcohol
Copy !req
151. to try and curb its social ills.
Copy !req
152. Prohibition lends itself to
the creation of Harlem
Copy !req
153. as a sort of vice district.
Copy !req
154. The police funnel illegal alcohol
activity
Copy !req
155. into this particular neighbourhood.
Copy !req
156. The police are willing to allow
illegal activity to go on,
Copy !req
157. provided that they themselves
get a cut.
Copy !req
158. An association emerges
between Harlem and vice activity.
Copy !req
159. That's part of why you would see
something as common as
Copy !req
160. people betting on street corners.
Copy !req
161. The Prohibition racket was
controlled by the Mafia,
Copy !req
162. which meant dealing with
legendary mob bosses
Copy !req
163. like Lucky Luciano, Joe Masseria
Copy !req
164. and Arnold Rothstein,
Copy !req
165. the gangster who allegedly rigged
the 1919 World Series.
Copy !req
166. The Black community was cut out of
Prohibition entirely,
Copy !req
167. so they created something
of their own.
Copy !req
168. So who was Stephanie St Clair?
Copy !req
169. Well, at this point in time,
she wasn't really anybody.
Copy !req
170. But all that was about to change.
Copy !req
171. The Numbers Game was an illegal game
anyone could play.
Copy !req
172. Which could change your life.
Copy !req
173. The People's Lottery, of sorts.
Copy !req
174. Pretty much anybody can start taking
bets
Copy !req
175. as long as they've got either
the cash to pay out winners
Copy !req
176. or the moxie to chance their arm
Copy !req
177. until they build up
a big enough pot.
Copy !req
178. With no startup costs
and few overheads,
Copy !req
179. it's easier to see why it's so
appealing to the working classes.
Copy !req
180. Eventually these central figures
come to be called bankers,
Copy !req
181. people with a large enough
pool of money
Copy !req
182. that they could pay out
multiple wins on a given bet.
Copy !req
183. It was a way for Black people
to enter the banking system,
Copy !req
184. a way for money to be generated.
Copy !req
185. The Numbers Game was something that
everybody could get involved with,
Copy !req
186. everyone could play,
Copy !req
187. and there was the potential
of winning.
Copy !req
188. And Stephanie St Clair
wanted a piece of that pie.
Copy !req
189. In 1922, Stephanie St Clair's
fortunes took a dramatic turn.
Copy !req
190. She managed to accumulate $30,000,
Copy !req
191. a huge sum for the era
Copy !req
192. and more than enough to launch
her own numbers operation.
Copy !req
193. Ted Poston, a journalist
at the time, did offer one theory.
Copy !req
194. Stephanie herself was
a numbers player.
Copy !req
195. According to Poston's research,
St Clair hit the number
Copy !req
196. and used her winnings to set up
her own policy shop.
Copy !req
197. It's very unique
for a woman and a Black person
Copy !req
198. to run an illegal operation,
Copy !req
199. because African-Americans
at this particular time
Copy !req
200. are supposed to be confined
to certain stations in life.
Copy !req
201. She's really stepping out of
the boundaries of race.
Copy !req
202. She's entering a male-dominated
space.
Copy !req
203. No-one is doubting that men,
historically outnumber women
Copy !req
204. in nearly all types of crime.
Copy !req
205. So people like Stephanie St Clair,
who climbed the ranks, were rare.
Copy !req
206. In the numbers racket,
Copy !req
207. the collection enforcement were
essential in dangerous jobs.
Copy !req
208. Runners carried large amounts of
cash through city streets,
Copy !req
209. making them prime targets
for thieves.
Copy !req
210. If you were a collector,
this meant knocking on doors,
Copy !req
211. where you might not walk away.
Copy !req
212. There were no courts to turn to,
only street justice.
Copy !req
213. One of the things
that's really interesting
Copy !req
214. is that it seems like she used
other people, particularly men,
Copy !req
215. to keep her hands clean.
Copy !req
216. She is meting out punishment,
she's putting down and making sure
Copy !req
217. that you don't defy her,
Copy !req
218. but she's not doing these acts
themselves.
Copy !req
219. One of the most significant
people who would work with Stephanie
Copy !req
220. was Bumpy Johnson.
Copy !req
221. He would later become
the godfather of Harlem,
Copy !req
222. but right now,
he's her toughest enforcer.
Copy !req
223. We can see here from civil records
Copy !req
224. that he was born Ellsworth Johnson
in Charleston, South Carolina
Copy !req
225. in October 1905.
Copy !req
226. He'd eventually become
Stephanie's right-hand man.
Copy !req
227. You know not to cross her,
Copy !req
228. because you hear stories of what
happens when you take her money.
Copy !req
229. You hear stories of what happens
Copy !req
230. when you try to scam her
or fudge the numbers
Copy !req
231. or not pay up when it's your turn.
Copy !req
232. And that includes her using
her right-hand man, Bumpy,
Copy !req
233. in order to be an enforcer.
Copy !req
234. Men didn't work for women, but
here you had Stephanie St Clair,
Copy !req
235. who had men working for her,
men answering to her.
Copy !req
236. Bumpy apparently said Stephanie was
one woman he would never cross.
Copy !req
237. Bumpy met out punishment
in the form of beatings,
Copy !req
238. taking people's lives.
Copy !req
239. Without Stephanie St Clair,
there'd be no Bumpy Johnson.
Copy !req
240. And without Bumpy Johnson,
Copy !req
241. you wouldn't get legendary gangster
Frank Lucas.
Copy !req
242. And so the Queen of Harlem gave
birth to these demi-gods,
Copy !req
243. these secular gangster gods.
Copy !req
244. By 1928,
Stephanie's reputation
Copy !req
245. as a woman not to be crossed
had spread through New York.
Copy !req
246. Stephanie St Clair, in the
late 1920s, lived at 409 Edgecombe,
Copy !req
247. which is in Sugar Hill in Harlem.
Copy !req
248. And this is a neighbourhood
and a building
Copy !req
249. where some of the most prominent
Black elite folks lived.
Copy !req
250. On the one hand,
she is respected in her community,
Copy !req
251. but a lot of people don't think that
she's a respectable person
Copy !req
252. because she was engaged in
illicit trade.
Copy !req
253. She certainly was a lady
in a lot of ways,
Copy !req
254. but she also was a criminal.
Copy !req
255. Stephanie decided to get
her own voice out there,
Copy !req
256. to let the people of Harlem know
who she really was
Copy !req
257. and for whom she was fighting.
Copy !req
258. Black newspapers become
this sort of venue
Copy !req
259. for Black people to learn about
various things happening
Copy !req
260. across the country.
Copy !req
261. And in New York City,
The New York Amsterdam News
Copy !req
262. is a paper that St Clair turns
Copy !req
263. to kind of air out her grievances
about the state of Harlem,
Copy !req
264. the state of Black New Yorkers,
and also about the police.
Copy !req
265. And her ad is particularly stunning
because on this ad
Copy !req
266. Stephanie St Clair always has
an image of herself.
Copy !req
267. Although very few photos of her
survive,
Copy !req
268. we can see that image was incredibly
important to Stephanie.
Copy !req
269. She never allowed herself
to be photographed
Copy !req
270. without her hair, her makeup,
her clothes all perfectly styled.
Copy !req
271. Stephanie St Clair loves
the media.
Copy !req
272. She's a really flamboyant person.
Copy !req
273. It's not a mystery who she is.
She wants people to know.
Copy !req
274. She is dressed to the nines.
Her hair is done.
Copy !req
275. She always has a fur coat.
Copy !req
276. She has on, you know, jewellery.
Copy !req
277. She's just looking like,
you know, a ten.
Copy !req
278. She liked to be seen.
Copy !req
279. And seen looking well.
Copy !req
280. She commanded space,
she was a queen.
Copy !req
281. When she stepped out in Harlem,
Copy !req
282. every picture that you see of her
in the newspaper,
Copy !req
283. she's dressed from head to toe.
She's got fine jewels on,
Copy !req
284. she's walking slowly to make sure
that you know who she is.
Copy !req
285. It certainly is something that all
people who do what she does,
Copy !req
286. typically engage in,
which is this costume.
Copy !req
287. I think that shows status and power.
Copy !req
288. And she needed to show that
to people to maintain her position.
Copy !req
289. She wanted to wear nice clothes
and she enjoyed that.
Copy !req
290. It also is very much a part of
that uniform,
Copy !req
291. that sense of power and control.
Copy !req
292. "I'm in control, take me seriously.
Copy !req
293. I'm playing the same game
that you guys are playing."
Copy !req
294. So whereas it was mostly men playing
that game,
Copy !req
295. I think her costume was needed
to help her have that armour
Copy !req
296. to step into the arena and do
what they were doing
Copy !req
297. and kind of match them as well.
Copy !req
298. A few miles north of Harlem,
in the backstreets of the Bronx,
Copy !req
299. an ambitious young gangster was
casting an envious eye
Copy !req
300. towards Stephanie's grip
on the Harlem numbers racket.
Copy !req
301. And his name... was Dutch Schultz.
Copy !req
302. He was described by Edgar
Hoover as public enemy number one.
Copy !req
303. The Mob couldn't even handle him.
He was a loose cannon.
Copy !req
304. In time, their rivalry would
become one of the fiercest
Copy !req
305. and bloodiest
in New York gangland history.
Copy !req
306. Stephanie wasn't just
fighting for herself.
Copy !req
307. She was fighting for her whole
community.
Copy !req
308. She was a boss who made a fortune,
but gave back.
Copy !req
309. Gave back to the community.
Copy !req
310. If someone needed a hospital bill
paid, she would do it.
Copy !req
311. She wanted to keep the money
within Harlem.
Copy !req
312. The public viewed
Stephanie St Clair
Copy !req
313. as a very shrewd woman
who had a very nasty temper.
Copy !req
314. But she also had a nurturing side.
Copy !req
315. She was a huge champion of
her community,
Copy !req
316. which is shown by the number of
people she employed in the business.
Copy !req
317. She was an activist for
Black Advancement.
Copy !req
318. She educated her community
about their rights.
Copy !req
319. She would speak out about
discrimination.
Copy !req
320. The fact that she was so loyal to
her community
Copy !req
321. meant that this was returned to her.
Copy !req
322. So, it was a sound strategy that
paid dividends to her business.
Copy !req
323. I think that's largely the reason
Copy !req
324. that she was able to run
such a successful operation
Copy !req
325. that was, at the height,
able to bring in $200,000 a year.
Copy !req
326. $200,000 a year in 1928
Copy !req
327. would be worth over three million
today.
Copy !req
328. As the money starts rolling in,
so too do the corrupt cops,
Copy !req
329. who all want a cut.
Copy !req
330. At this particular time,
the NYPD is very corrupt.
Copy !req
331. You have officers who are involved
in various vice rackets,
Copy !req
332. the numbers racket,
the paid enforcement racket.
Copy !req
333. Police officers are involved in
the sex trade.
Copy !req
334. Some officers are known to assault,
harass, physically, sexually,
Copy !req
335. Black New Yorkers especially,
you know, African-American women.
Copy !req
336. Anyone who wanted to be a criminal
and had any sense,
Copy !req
337. was gonna pay off the police so that
they could go about their business
Copy !req
338. in a relatively inconspicuous
fashion.
Copy !req
339. St Clair did this. However,
she also spoke out about the police
Copy !req
340. and especially how much they were
harassing her employees and herself.
Copy !req
341. And so her actions were very closely
followed all throughout her reign.
Copy !req
342. In 1929, she was arrested for
possessing policy slips,
Copy !req
343. which is considered to be
a very trumped-up charge.
Copy !req
344. She does not hide that
she is a banker.
Copy !req
345. She actually testifies that
she's a banker.
Copy !req
346. And she only does that because
she wants to expose the police.
Copy !req
347. So, as early as 1929,
she's talking about, “I'm a banker,
Copy !req
348. but at the same time I was not
supposed to be arrested
Copy !req
349. because I paid for protection
from the NYPD."
Copy !req
350. She wrote these open letters,
saying, "I've paid my ice."
Copy !req
351. Ice was the kickbacks
which you gave to the police.
Copy !req
352. So, for her, it's exposing herself,
Copy !req
353. but she's definitely gonna put it
on the record
Copy !req
354. that the NYPD is corrupt.
Copy !req
355. In 1930, police corruption
in New York was so widespread
Copy !req
356. that President Roosevelt ordered
Judge Samuel Seabury
Copy !req
357. to lead a public investigation.
Copy !req
358. During that investigation,
I proved that corruption existed
Copy !req
359. in many of the departments of
the city government,
Copy !req
360. and all of those departments
were honeycombed
Copy !req
361. with political appointees.
Copy !req
362. Stephanie St Clair will go
before the Seabury Commission
Copy !req
363. to testify about vice rackets
Copy !req
364. and the participation of the NYPD
in them.
Copy !req
365. Due to her testimony,
over a dozen police officers,
Copy !req
366. including a lieutenant,
were then suspended from the NYPD.
Copy !req
367. She was definitely fearless.
Copy !req
368. She stood up to corrupt NYPD blue.
Copy !req
369. For anyone, let alone a Black woman
at that time,
Copy !req
370. to literally be pointing out
corrupt police officers in court,
Copy !req
371. naming and shaming them!
Copy !req
372. In a lifetime of bold moves, that
one might have been the boldest.
Copy !req
373. Although St Clair managed to
get the NYPD off her back,
Copy !req
374. she still had the problem of
an ambitious, aggressive gang
Copy !req
375. from the Bronx
trying to muscle in on her turf.
Copy !req
376. Prohibition is repealed,
Copy !req
377. leaving bootleggers like
Dutch Shultz looking for new ways
Copy !req
378. to make money.
Copy !req
379. And what could be more appealing
than muscling in
Copy !req
380. on the lucrative Numbers Game?
Copy !req
381. Dutch Shultz especially
was known for making bold moves
Copy !req
382. to take over the bootlegging game
in the Bronx.
Copy !req
383. He was using those same tactics
to take over Numbers Game operations
Copy !req
384. in Harlem.
Copy !req
385. But Stephanie St Clair
said no.
Copy !req
386. Harlem was about to become
a war zone.
Copy !req
387. New York, 1933.
Copy !req
388. Prohibition is repealed
and America celebrates.
Copy !req
389. But as the liquor flowed,
so too did the blood.
Copy !req
390. Among the many gangsters
Stephanie had to deal with,
Copy !req
391. none were more vicious,
more ruthless
Copy !req
392. than one of the city's biggest
bootleggers,
Copy !req
393. notorious for torture and murder...
Copy !req
394. Dutch Shultz.
Copy !req
395. Shultz was not known
for his gentle ways
Copy !req
396. with the opposition.
Copy !req
397. He and his mob kept New York City
in a constant state
Copy !req
398. of violence and bloody gunplay.
Copy !req
399. This was the face that struck terror
in rival mobsters.
Copy !req
400. Real name, Arthur Flegenheimer.
He was born in the Bronx.
Copy !req
401. Eventually becomes a bootlegger
for several crime families
Copy !req
402. in New York City.
Copy !req
403. He was so successful at that,
that he was known as
Copy !req
404. the Beer Baron of the Bronx.
Copy !req
405. And he also made money
through paid protection.
Copy !req
406. Dutch Shultz was a notorious,
ruthless mobster,
Copy !req
407. who made his fortune
during Prohibition.
Copy !req
408. Shultz had made a name for himself
by removing obstacles in his way.
Copy !req
409. And those obstacles were people.
Copy !req
410. He would torture people,
he had people killed.
Copy !req
411. Dutch Shultz, it's estimated that
at the height of his success
Copy !req
412. was bringing in about 20 million
dollars a year,
Copy !req
413. which for that time is a huge,
huge sum of money.
Copy !req
414. So when Prohibition ended,
obviously gangsters then
Copy !req
415. were looking at other ventures
to make up for these lost profits,
Copy !req
416. which were ginormous.
Copy !req
417. During the early
1930s, we see many white racketeers
Copy !req
418. whose funds have dried up
because Prohibition is over
Copy !req
419. look for new avenues of income.
Copy !req
420. The Numbers Game was seen as
the welfare clients' Wall Street,
Copy !req
421. it was called the 'N' word pool.
Copy !req
422. This is a game
that only Blacks play.
Copy !req
423. This is a game
that's not profitable.
Copy !req
424. But once many of the Black
racketeers started getting arrested
Copy !req
425. and some of their revenue was
printed in the newspapers,
Copy !req
426. white racketeers like Shultz wanted
to get into that game.
Copy !req
427. And many of them started to force
people out of the business.
Copy !req
428. Dutch Shultz had power,
Copy !req
429. and he had the support of people
like Jimmy Hines,
Copy !req
430. who was a Tammany Hall
political machine, Democratic boss.
Copy !req
431. He was a huge, huge threat,
and that's why so many people,
Copy !req
432. rather than try and fight him,
just succumbed to his wishes,
Copy !req
433. whether that be paying him a portion
of their business
Copy !req
434. or handing it over entirely.
Copy !req
435. And Stephanie St Clair was
one of his targets.
Copy !req
436. And she was like, “No!”
Copy !req
437. And with that, all hell broke loose.
Copy !req
438. Harlem was at war.
Copy !req
439. You can go anywhere in America.
But you're not coming into Harlem.
Copy !req
440. Harlem is ours,
Harlem is for Black people.
Copy !req
441. Stephanie said she'd resist any
attempt by Shultz
Copy !req
442. to breach her borders.
Copy !req
443. And she did.
Shultz sent in his soldiers,
Copy !req
444. armed in forces
who used intimidation,
Copy !req
445. beatings...
Copy !req
446. bombings and murder
Copy !req
447. to muscle in
on St Clair's territory.
Copy !req
448. But as well as fighting back with
her own network of gangsters,
Copy !req
449. she was well ahead of her time
Copy !req
450. when it came to the weaponisation
of public opinion.
Copy !req
451. The beef between those two really
on St Clair's part is a public beef.
Copy !req
452. Both of them make this about saying
things about one another
Copy !req
453. in the newspaper.
Copy !req
454. St Clair is quick to go to
the New York Amsterdam News,
Copy !req
455. which is a Black newspaper
Copy !req
456. and talk about Schultz and other
white racketeers
Copy !req
457. coming into Harlem and taking over
this game.
Copy !req
458. And of course, wanting to project
a sense of toughness
Copy !req
459. and wanting to really keep
what she's grown. She's like, "No!"
Copy !req
460. Stephanie said, “I'm not
afraid of Dutch Shultz
Copy !req
461. or any other man living,
he'll never touch me.
Copy !req
462. I am sane and smart and fearless.”
Copy !req
463. She went to the newspapers
and wrote articles,
Copy !req
464. calling on anyone who was buying
a ticket, to buy Black.
Copy !req
465. This is many ways
is a form of economic nationalism.
Copy !req
466. If whites are treating you
in particular types of ways,
Copy !req
467. you should not do business with
these people.
Copy !req
468. So, challenging Shultz
in a newspaper
Copy !req
469. is just one of a variety of ways
that St Clair speaks out
Copy !req
470. against white encroachment.
Copy !req
471. The rivalry between Dutch
and Stephanie would escalate.
Copy !req
472. Dutch once sent an underling
to intimidate her.
Copy !req
473. St Clair pushed him in a closet
Copy !req
474. and told her bodyguards to, quote,
“Get rid of him."
Copy !req
475. She dramatically walks through
Harlem
Copy !req
476. and goes to white businesses,
Copy !req
477. which serve as numbers drops
for white racketeers,
Copy !req
478. and she goes into those businesses,
she trashes the place,
Copy !req
479. and tells the white business owners
Copy !req
480. to get out of Harlem, you know,
this is Black game.
Copy !req
481. Just really causes a spectacle
at some of these stores.
Copy !req
482. Legend has it that
at some point
Copy !req
483. she even had to go into hiding
because he had put a hit out on her,
Copy !req
484. and she retaliated in kind,
both in print and on the streets.
Copy !req
485. She refused to let this man
walk over her
Copy !req
486. and take her business that
she'd worked so hard for
Copy !req
487. and that was so successful for her.
Copy !req
488. She waged an all-out war.
Copy !req
489. It's estimated that it was
responsible for about 40 murders.
Copy !req
490. She fed information to the police
about Schultz's operations,
Copy !req
491. and due to this, they were able
to infiltrate his house
Copy !req
492. and seize 12 million dollars
of his money
Copy !req
493. and arrest a lot of his employees.
Copy !req
494. She went toe to toe.
Copy !req
495. I know so much of the violence is
vilified.
Copy !req
496. But I think we've got to remember
that we're talking gangsters.
Copy !req
497. You couldn't go to small claims
court. This isn't a civil matter.
Copy !req
498. People had to work out
their grievances on the street,
Copy !req
499. and we're talking
millions of dollars.
Copy !req
500. I think it's great that
she stood up to him.
Copy !req
501. But Dutch Shultz was soon
get his comeuppance
Copy !req
502. for defying the Commission,
Copy !req
503. the governing body of organised
crime in New York.
Copy !req
504. Dutch Shultz was being
prosecuted for tax evasion
Copy !req
505. by District Attorney Thomas Dewey.
Copy !req
506. Racketeers succeed only
so long as they can prey upon
Copy !req
507. the fear or weakness of disorganised
or timid victims.
Copy !req
508. He asked the Organised Crime
Commission if he could kill Dewey,
Copy !req
509. but they unanimously denied
the request
Copy !req
510. for fear of bringing the full weight
of the government
Copy !req
511. down on all of them.
Copy !req
512. But Shultz put the hit out on Dewey
regardless.
Copy !req
513. Here was the loose cannon of Dutch,
doing what he wanted again.
Copy !req
514. So the Commission hired Murder Inc
Copy !req
515. to take Shultz out.
Copy !req
516. Murder Inc, or the Syndicate,
was an organised crime group
Copy !req
517. that acted as the enforcement arm
of the Commission,
Copy !req
518. led by Charles Lucky Luciano...
Copy !req
519. Meyer Lansky...
Copy !req
520. and Bugsy Siegel.
Copy !req
521. Incredibly, they were responsible
for between 400 and 1,000
Copy !req
522. contract killings
in that period alone.
Copy !req
523. It's 10:15pm on October 23rd,
1935.
Copy !req
524. Dutch Shultz is in the restroom
of one of his favourite restaurants,
Copy !req
525. the Palace Chop House
in Newark, New Jersey.
Copy !req
526. Two gunmen - Charles Workmen
and Mendy Weiss -
Copy !req
527. burst through the door
and opened fire.
Copy !req
528. The Commission took
no chances. They needed Dutch dead.
Copy !req
529. The gunmen intentionally used
rusty bullets
Copy !req
530. to increase the chances of sepsis
and infection
Copy !req
531. in case the gunshots themselves
were not fatal.
Copy !req
532. Wanting to have the final word,
Copy !req
533. Stephanie immediately sends
a telegram to her enemy
Copy !req
534. on his deathbed,
signed "Madam Queen of Policy."
Copy !req
535. It read, "As you sow,
so shall you reap."
Copy !req
536. This is Galatians 6:7.
Copy !req
537. "All the evil that you have sown
and placed upon myself and others,
Copy !req
538. you're reaping that now."
Copy !req
539. I think when Stephanie sent
the telegram,
Copy !req
540. it shows really that she's going
back to her true values.
Copy !req
541. This is someone who is always
fighting for the underdog.
Copy !req
542. This is someone who has that strong
moral sense
Copy !req
543. of what is right and what is wrong.
Copy !req
544. And she's just reminding that person
of his wrongdoing
Copy !req
545. as her final word to him
Copy !req
546. so that he is reminded of really
where he's going to go
Copy !req
547. after the moment he takes
his last breath.
Copy !req
548. "As you sow, so shall you reap."
Copy !req
549. It's poetic justice.
Copy !req
550. And with no more battles
left to fight,
Copy !req
551. Stephanie St Clair got out the game,
Copy !req
552. passing her empire on to
her trusted enforcer Bumpy Johnson.
Copy !req
553. And you might think her story
ended there,
Copy !req
554. but she would soon cross paths
with a man known on the streets
Copy !req
555. as Black Hitler.
Copy !req
556. And this time,
things would get personal.
Copy !req
557. It's 1935 and Stephanie St Clair's
main rival, Dutch Shultz,
Copy !req
558. is six feet under.
Copy !req
559. With the turf wars over, Stephanie
steps back from the Numbers Game,
Copy !req
560. ready to enjoy her fortune
and live a quiet life.
Copy !req
561. But her peace wouldn't last long.
Copy !req
562. She would fall straight into the
arms of Sufi Abdul Hamid,
Copy !req
563. a man the press would later call
Black Hitler.
Copy !req
564. Sufi Hamed, whose real name is
Eugene Brown,
Copy !req
565. and Eugene Brown was a Chicago
political activist
Copy !req
566. who migrates to New York City.
Copy !req
567. He was a religious leader
and a union leader
Copy !req
568. and he had a preference for
Nazi-style military dress.
Copy !req
569. And also he was very anti-Semitic.
Copy !req
570. And thus he earned the nickname
Black Hitler.
Copy !req
571. Like St Clair,
he was trying to advocate
Copy !req
572. for Black advancement.
Copy !req
573. So he organised a lot of boycotts
of white shops,
Copy !req
574. a lot of white Jewish shops.
Copy !req
575. He was a very flamboyant
and a very controversial figure.
Copy !req
576. His persona is very larger
than life.
Copy !req
577. This is someone who preaches from
the corner of 135th and Lennox Ave,
Copy !req
578. with black riding boots,
you know, colourful pants,
Copy !req
579. a white shirt, a really long cape,
Copy !req
580. a really big turban. He has
a really massive beard.
Copy !req
581. This would be a person that you
would stop and actually listen to.
Copy !req
582. Just not based upon necessarily
what he's saying,
Copy !req
583. but just based upon the way
he looks.
Copy !req
584. They were a power couple.
Copy !req
585. They were a power couple
stomping around Harlem.
Copy !req
586. I think this is really good for her
mythology and her brand.
Copy !req
587. Here was someone else speaking out
as vociferously as she did.
Copy !req
588. But it seems like Sufi
was only with her for the money.
Copy !req
589. And whilst he may have been
flamboyant and eye-catching,
Copy !req
590. his antisemitism was toxic
Copy !req
591. and stirred up ill-feeling
and tensions
Copy !req
592. with nearby Jewish districts.
Copy !req
593. The marriage lasts for about
two to three years.
Copy !req
594. There's an alleged affair between
Stephanie St Clair's friend,
Copy !req
595. Dorothy Matthews, who is a famous
Harlem occult leader.
Copy !req
596. So, Stephanie St Clair wants
to confront him.
Copy !req
597. She waited for him when he was
going to meet his lawyer one day,
Copy !req
598. stood in the hallway,
and shot him three times.
Copy !req
599. The first shot,
he's hit in the mouth,
Copy !req
600. cracks a tooth. The second shot
goes through his coat jacket.
Copy !req
601. And the third shot goes over
his head.
Copy !req
602. In the trial, St Clair said he had
been treating her very poorly,
Copy !req
603. and that he'd been having
the affair.
Copy !req
604. But that also, her handling the gun,
which she claimed was his,
Copy !req
605. was only meant to scare him rather
than actually meant to shoot him.
Copy !req
606. She's arrested,
she's indicted and she's prosecuted
Copy !req
607. and she's given two to ten years
at the Westfield State Farm
Copy !req
608. in upstate New York.
Copy !req
609. Stephanie starts her second
stint behind bars.
Copy !req
610. Hamed, who survives the shooting,
tries to make a comeback.
Copy !req
611. But news of the affair did major
damage to his messianic image.
Copy !req
612. What a character Hamed was.
Copy !req
613. He ends up trying to prove to
his followers
Copy !req
614. that he's not leading
a life of excess,
Copy !req
615. and the way he chooses to do that
is to publicly fill up the fuel
Copy !req
616. for his private airplane himself.
Copy !req
617. He ends up crashing the plane
and dying,
Copy !req
618. cos he hadn't put enough fuel in it.
Copy !req
619. After Stephanie St Clair
comes out of prison
Copy !req
620. in the early 1940s,
Copy !req
621. we really don't know a lot
about her.
Copy !req
622. The New York Amsterdam News
suggests
Copy !req
623. that she lived in seclusion
and travelled to the Caribbean.
Copy !req
624. Another ad suggests that
Stephanie St Clair was hospitalised
Copy !req
625. at a mental institution
in Central Islip, Long Island.
Copy !req
626. She also appears in the late '60s
Copy !req
627. when she would have been about 77,
Copy !req
628. in a court document
where she accuses a van driver
Copy !req
629. of knocking her down.
Copy !req
630. She got $2,000, which is
the equivalent to $15,000 today.
Copy !req
631. I think why I like that story
Copy !req
632. is because she had also bought
a house,
Copy !req
633. but in terms of the records, she
wasn't able to keep up payments.
Copy !req
634. And so it seems like even at 77,
Copy !req
635. she'd do what it takes
to get that money.
Copy !req
636. When the money is issued
to her lawyer,
Copy !req
637. all of these creditors come after
the money.
Copy !req
638. This is a person who has
a rags-to-riches story
Copy !req
639. and seemingly towards the end of her
life has a riches-to-rags story.
Copy !req
640. Stephanie St Clair is
an extraordinary story.
Copy !req
641. From being a maid to a crime boss
to an activist.
Copy !req
642. Stephanie was someone who really
fought to see change happen,
Copy !req
643. and not only that, but she fought
for that at a time
Copy !req
644. where she would be bearing the brunt
of a lot of force against her
Copy !req
645. to stop her from doing that.
Copy !req
646. So it wasn't something that she was
able to speak really openly about.
Copy !req
647. She was never one to resist
writing an editorial
Copy !req
648. and placing it in a magazine
or in the local newspaper,
Copy !req
649. where she decried the police
ignoring the civil rights
Copy !req
650. and the legal rights of Black people
in the community.
Copy !req
651. She talked openly and often about
the ways in which Black women
Copy !req
652. endured assault at the hands of
the police.
Copy !req
653. She rallied Black people.
Copy !req
654. They were talking about what it
meant to be Black in America
Copy !req
655. at a time when Black people were
finding their voice.
Copy !req
656. And not only did she find her voice,
she lived her voice.
Copy !req
657. What started as a desire
to grow her own empire
Copy !req
658. became a way to give back.
Copy !req
659. A genuine desire to see
Black Americans lifted up.
Copy !req
660. That to me, that says
something fascinating
Copy !req
661. about human nature,
about solidarity.
Copy !req
662. You practice it enough,
no matter what the reason,
Copy !req
663. it becomes who you are.
Copy !req
664. I think one of the reasons that
Stephanie St Clair is not remembered
Copy !req
665. and ensconced in history
the way others are,
Copy !req
666. is first and foremost because
she was a woman.
Copy !req
667. We often don't preserve
the histories and contributions
Copy !req
668. of women in general at the same rate
that we do with men,
Copy !req
669. and certainly not Black women.
Copy !req
670. Folks like Stephanie St Clair have
been marginalised or excluded
Copy !req
671. from history books, because there's
a tendency to kind of spotlight
Copy !req
672. and become really preoccupied with
those who were doing the striving,
Copy !req
673. like those who were what we would
call a credit to the race.
Copy !req
674. But within that, more scholars are
looking at the complex lives
Copy !req
675. of working-class, ordinary
Black people.
Copy !req
676. I think there's a tendency now
to explore those people
Copy !req
677. who lived more complicated
and more layered lives.
Copy !req
678. Perhaps the legacy that
Stephanie leaves behind
Copy !req
679. is that despite all of
the discrimination,
Copy !req
680. there's something unyielding
in the human spirit,
Copy !req
681. a refusal to accept the hand
you've been dealt.
Copy !req
682. A part of her legacy is
persevering over tough obstacles,
Copy !req
683. especially when you're kind of born
into a world
Copy !req
684. where you're not supposed to thrive,
let alone survive.
Copy !req
685. Why isn't Stephanie St Clair
better known today?
Copy !req
686. Would she be more widely remembered
if she'd been white or a man?
Copy !req
687. Or is it because she knew
when to quit?
Copy !req
688. We'll never know for sure,
Copy !req
689. but perhaps we should let HER have
the last word.
Copy !req
690. "Many persons have said
that they're afraid for me
Copy !req
691. and that I should be careful.
Copy !req
692. I'm not going to be any more careful
than I have been.
Copy !req
693. Please have no fear for me.
Copy !req
694. I have no fear of anybody.
Copy !req
695. I'm going to continue to fight
until the members of the race
Copy !req
696. get their just and legal rights."
Copy !req
697. She was the OG,
the Original Gangster.
Copy !req
698. Black, Queen, Badass.
Copy !req