ARNOLD ROTHSTEIN


'Arnold Rothstein' (January 17, 1882 - November 4, 1928) was a New York businessman and gambler, chiefly famous for his role as a of organized crime. He is also widely reputed to have been behind baseball's Black Sox Scandal in which the 1919 World Series was fixed. His notoriety inspired several fictional characters based on his life, including "Meyer Wolfsheim" in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel ''The Great Gatsby'', and "Nathan Detroit" in the Damon Runyon story "The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown", which was made into the musical ''Guys and Dolls''.
According to crime writer Leo Katcher, Arnold Rothstein "transformed organized crime from a thuggish activity by hoodlums into a big business, run like a corporation, with himself at the top."[1] According to Rich Cohen, Rothstein was the person who first saw in Prohibition a business opportunity, a means to enormous wealth, who "understood the truths of early century capitalism (hypocrisy, exclusion, greed) and came to dominate them". Rothstein was the Moses of the Jewish gangsters, according to Cohen, the progenitor, a rich man's son who showed the young hoodlums of the Bowery how to have style; indeed, the man who, the Sicilian-American gangster Lucky Luciano would later say, "taught me how to dress".[2]

Contents
Early life and successes
1919 World Series
1921 Travers Stakes
Prohibition and organized crime
Murder
In popular culture
References
External links

Early life and successes


Arnold Rothstein was born in New York City, the son of a respectable Jewish businessman, Abraham Rothstein. Arnold was skilled at mathematics and developed an early interest in illegitimate business, whereas his older brother studied to become a rabbi. By 1910 Arnold had moved to the Tenderloin section of Manhattan, where he established an important gambling casino. During Prohibition, Rothstein purchased holdings in a number of speakeasies. He also invested in a horse racing track at Havre de Grace, Maryland, and it was widely reputed that he "fixed" many of the races that he won. Rothstein had a wide network of informants and very deep pockets when it came to paying for good information, regardless of how unscrupulous the sources were. His successes made him a millionaire by age thirty.

1919 World Series


In 1919, Rothstein's agents allegedly paid members of the Chicago White Sox to "throw", or deliberately lose, the World Series, enabling him to make a significant sum betting against Chicago.[3]
Summoned to Chicago to testify before a Grand Jury investigation of the incident, Rothstein stated that he was an innocent businessman intent on clearing his name and his reputation. Prosecutors could find no evidence linking Rothstein to the affair and he was never indicted. Rothstein's testimony is worth quoting. "The whole thing started when (Abe) Attell and some other cheap gamblers decided to frame the Series and make a killing. The world knows I was asked in on the deal and my friends know how I turned it down flat. I don't doubt that Attell used my name to put it over. That's been done by smarter men than Abe. But I was not in on it, would not have gone into it under any circumstances and did not bet a cent on the Series after I found out what was underway."[4]
The Grand Jury believed Rothstein, but the truth was a lot more complicated and Rothstein was a lot less innocent. One version of this story has Rothstein turning down the proposal relayed by Attel; however, this in fact had been the second "fix" he'd refused to bankroll. A gambler called Joseph "Sport" Sullivan had previously approached Rothstein with the same idea. After receiving Attel's offer, Rothstein reasoned he could now afford to reconsider the first offer from Sullivan's. Rothstein shrewdly figured that the field was becoming so crowded with would-be fixers that he could risk getting involved and still cover his tracks. As Rothstein explained it to Sullivan "If a girl goes to bed with nine guys, who's going to believe her when she says the tenth one's the father?".
Another version of this story has Rothstein working both ends of the fix with Sullivan and Attell.

1921 Travers Stakes


Rothstein is also attributed to having owned Sporting Blood, winner of the 1921 Travers Stakes. The race is known for its conspiracy theory between Rothstein and leading trainer, Sam Hildreth of the outstanding three year old, Grey Lag. Grey Lag entered on the morning of the race, immediately causing the odds on Rothstein's horse, Sporting Blood, to rise to 3-1. Rothstein then bet $150,000 through bookmakers, knowing that the second favorite, Prudery, was off her feed. Then, just before post time and without explanation, Hildreth scratched Grey Lag from the starting list. Rothstein collected over half a million in bets and purse and the conspiracy was never proven.

Prohibition and organized crime


With the advent of Prohibition, Rothstein diversified into bootlegging and narcotics. His criminal organization included such underworld luminaries as Meyer Lansky, Jack "Legs" Diamond, Lucky Luciano, and Dutch Schultz. Rothstein's various nicknames were ''Mr. Big'', ''The Fixer'', ''The Man Uptown'', ''The Big Bankroll'' and ''The Brain''. Rothstein frequently mediated differences between the New York gangs and reportedly charged a hefty fee for his services. His favorite "office" was Lindy's Restaurant, at Broadway and 49th Street, where he would stand on the corner surrounded by his bodyguards and do business on the street. Rothstein made bets and collected debts from those who had lost the previous day.

Murder


On November 3, 1928, Arnold Rothstein was shot and mortally wounded while conducting some business affairs at Manhattan's Park Central Hotel. He died the next day at the Stuyvesant Polyclinic Hospital in Manhattan.[5] The shooting was allegedly linked to a gambling event that Rothstein had participated in the previous month with several associates and acquaintances. According to underworld folklore, it was a spectacular three-day, high stakes poker game held somewhere in Manhattan. Rothstein apparently experienced a cold streak with the cards and ended up owing $320,000 at the end of the game. However, Rothstein refused to pay the debt, claiming the game was fixed. The hit was arranged to punish Rothstein for skipping out on this debt. Gambler George "Hump" McManus was arrested for the murder, but later acquitted for lack of evidence.[6] Rothstein, on his deathbed, refused to identify his killer (answering police inquiries with "Me mother did it"). Rothstein was buried in Union Field Cemetery, Queens in an Orthodox ceremony.
Another theory about Rothstein's death is offered by crime reporter Paul Sann in his book "Kill the Dutchman." Sann alleges that Dutch Schultz murdered Rothstein in retaliation for the murder of Schultz's friend and associate, Joey Noe, by Rothstein's protégé, Jack "Legs" Diamond.
Meyer Lansky, Bugsy Siegel, and other former associates inherited Rothstein's various "enterprises" after his death. Politically, Rothstein's death contributed to the fall of the corrupt Democratic political machine known as Tammany Hall and the rise of Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia.
Arnold Rothstein's estate was finally declared bankrupt ten years after his death by his only surviving brother, but he left a legacy of shaping the form of American organized crime in the 20th century.

In popular culture



F. Scott Fitzgerald based the character "Meyer Wolfsheim", "Jay Gatsby's" crooked associate in ''The Great Gatsby'', on Arnold Rothstein. Gatsby mentions to narrator "Nick Carraway", "that's the man who fixed the 1919 World Series".

★ Rothstein's legendary pool playing marathon, against a Philadelphia pool shark called Jack Conway, shipped in by Rothstein's enemies to humiliate him, took place over two days and nights in 1911 at McGraw's Billiard Parlor, off Herald Square in New York. Rothstein just kept playing and betting till in the end Conway's backers were reputedly down $10,000. Eventually John McGraw stepped in and shut down the hall, saying "That's it. If I let you go on I'll have one o' youse dead on my hands." This was the real life inspiration for the opening contest between "Minnesota Fats" (Jackie Gleason) and "Fast Eddie Felson" (Paul Newman) in the 1961 film "The Hustler." Rothstein's patronage of floating crap games also provided the model for gambler "Nathan Detroit" in the musical ''Guys and Dolls''. Rothstein also appears as "The Brain" in several of Damon Runyon's short stories, including a fictional version of his death in "The Brain Goes Home"

★ The character of Hyman Roth from the film ''The Godfather, Part II'' mentions Rothstein as his inspiration and modeled his surname after Rothstein's in honor of his part in the Black Sox Scandal.

★ Rothstein was portrayed in several films by actors including F. Murray Abraham in the 1991 film ''Mobsters'', David Janssen in the 1961 film ''King of the Roaring 20's - The Story of Arnold Rothstein'', and Michael Lerner in the 1988 movie, ''Eight Men Out'', based on the Black Sox Scandal.

★ The famous American director Martin Scorsese is thought to have used Rothstein as inspiration for some of his characters, such as Robert DeNiro's gambler "Sam 'Ace' Rothstein" in the 1995 film ''Casino''.

References


1. Katcher, Leo (1959/1994). ''The Big Bankroll. The Life and Times of Arnold Rothstein'', New York: Da Capo Press
2. Defenders of the faith, The Guardian, Saturday July 6, 2002; Cohen, Rich (1999). ''Tough Jews: Fathers, Sons, and Gangster Dreams'', London: Vintage
3. Arnold Rothstein and Baseball's 1919 Black Sox Scandal
4. The Big Fix: Arnold Rothstein rigged the 1919 World Series. Or did he?, Legal Affairs, March-April, 2004
5. In Room 349, Time, December 24, 1928
6. Tammany's Rothstein, Time, December 16, 1929


★ Cohen, Rich (1999). ''Tough Jews: Fathers, Sons, and Gangster Dreams'', London: Vintage ISBN 0-099-75791-5

★ Henderson Clarke, Donald (1929). ''In the Reign of Rothstein'', New York: The Vanguard Press.

★ Katcher, Leo (1959/1994). ''The Big Bankroll. The Life and Times of Arnold Rothstein'', New York: Da Capo Press ISBN 0-306-80565-0

★ Pietrusza, David (2003). ''Rothstein: The Life, Times and Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the 1919 World Series'', New York: Carroll & Graf.

★ Rothstein, Carolyn (with Donald Henderson Clarke) (1934), ''Now I'll Tell'', New York: Vantage Press.

★ Tosches, Nick (2005). ''King of the Jews. The Arnold Rothstein Story'', London: Hamish Hamilton ISBN 0-241-14144-3

External links



Arnold Rothstein at Crime Library

Biography at the Jewish Virtual Library

The Big Fix: Arnold Rothstein rigged the 1919 World Series. Or did he?, Legal Affairs, March-April, 2004

An Arnold Rothstein Chronology

Review of David Pietrusza's ''Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the 1919 World Series''

Rothstein grave

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