GUN MOLL

A 'gun moll' was the female companion of an American gangster of the 1920s and 30s. Gun is an obsolete English slang word [1], deriving from "ganef" [2], itself a Yiddsh borrowing meaning "thief". Moll, from ''Molly'' a diminutive of ''Mary'', was a euphemism for ''whore'' or ''prostitute''. These women for the most part were unremarkable except for their association with some of the most notorious killers of the times and organized crime mobsters. . The word "gun moll" can also mean a female companion of a robber or terrorist, and not only just a gangster. Bonnie Parker and Blanche Barrow were notable because of their active participation in the criminal activities of the Barrow Gang.

Contents
Prominent Gun molls
Related terms
In popular culture
See also
External links

Prominent Gun molls



Beulah Baird - Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd

★ Jean Delaney - Tommy Carroll

★ Evelyn "Billie" Frechette - John Dillinger

★ Mary Kinder - Harry Pierpont

★ Kathryn Thorne - George "Machine Gun" Kelly Barnes

★ Opal "Mack Truck" Long - Russell Clark

Bonnie Parker - Clyde Barrow

★ Helen Wawzynak - Lester Joseph Gillis, aka George "Baby Face" Nelson

Virginia Hill - Bugsy Siegel

Judith Exner - Sam Giancana

Related terms



★ gunman - a man who uses a gun to commit a crime

★ gunsel - a derogatory name for a criminal carrying a gun; from the Yiddish ''gendzel'', "little goose", thought to be a slang term for catamite

★ moll - common term for whore or prostitute, and also the nickname of a 17th century criminal Moll Cutpurse

In popular culture



★ ''The Lady in Red'' (1979)

★ ''Ruby'' (1977)

★ ''Jigsaw'' (1949)

★ ''Gang Smashers'' (1938)

★ ''Outside the Law'' (1921)

See also



Femme fatale

External links



Don’t Call Us Molls: Women of the John Dillinger Gang by Ellen Poulson

The Gun Moll and Femme Fatale Page

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves