Almighty Gaylords
FoundedEarly 1950s
Founding locationChicago, Illinois, United States
Years active1950s–present
TerritoryChicago, Indiana, Florida, Iowa, Alabama, Wisconsin, Michigan
EthnicityMostly White Americans. Some Mexican Americans
Membership1,000–2,000
ActivitiesExtortion, battery, assault, gun trafficking, intimidation, murder
AlliesPeople Nation, Latin Kings, Insane South Side Popes, 12th Street Players, Indiana Aryan Brotherhood,[1] Vice Lords, Latin Brothers
RivalsFolk Nation, Insane Deuces, Simon City Royals, Insane Spanish Cobras, Maniac Latin Disciples, C-Notes, Insane North Side Popes

The Almighty Gaylords Nation is a Chicago street gang that was founded in the early 1950s. The original president of the Gaylords selected the name after reading about the Gaylords in the public library; the Gaillards, later anglicized to Gaylord, were people from Normandy who lived near the Château Gaillard, constructed by Richard I.[2] They are part of the People Nation alliance and are known for disrupting rival gangs near Kilbourn Park.[3]

Origins and history

The Almighty Gaylords Nation is one of Chicago's oldest street gangs,[4] founded in the West Town neighborhood of Chicago in 1953. It originated on the intersection of Grand Avenue and Noble Street in Chicago's West Town neighborhood. Most of the original members were Italian, but they took in some non-Italians, including some Mexican Americans. This ethnic makeup reflected the population of the Neighborhood at the time and was known as one of Chicago's "Little Italies". The first street corners they claimed were Huron and Throop, where they hung out at Angie's, Grand and Ogden, and Ohio and Noble.

The Gaylords would soon take control of about half of the West Town area and all of Noble Square. They had their clubhouses and baseball teams. The main club for the Gaylords by the late 1950s was on the corner of Ohio and Noble Street. Some of their earliest rivals were C-Notes, Lazy Gents, and Playboys. Some original Ohio and Noble Gaylords included Anthony Johnny Boy, Anarina, and Bobby Shipbaugh. It should also be noted that there were other clubs in Chicago with the name Gaylords that had no connection to the Gaylords of West Town/Noble Square, like the Little Village Gaylords that started in 1950 and lasted until the Vietnam War, when most of their members enlisted and the Gaylords club within the Taylor Street area, which started at some point before 1954.

The Gaylords grew in the 1960s, opening up territory in the Pilsen neighborhood; at 18th and Western and, more notoriously, in Logan Square, Lawndale, Altgeld, and Kilbourn Park. More turf for the Gaylords opened up across the north side as middle-class Whites left for the suburbs, leaving poor Whites behind to fend for themselves in increasingly Puerto Rican, Mexican, and African American city slums.[5] At the height of the Gaylords reign in 1979, they were listed as the fourth most powerful gang in Chicago with about 1,500 members and were noted as "Chicago's largest White street gang...considered a violent, bigoted outfit."[6] In 1970, they were suspected for being involved in the murder of a black Chicago citizen named Joe Henson, but no charges were brought: a later feature article in the Chicago Reader alleged police and political coverup.[7] It must also be noted that the Uptown Rebels were suspected of the murder and were more likely the real perpetrators of the crime.

During their peak period, the Chicago Gaylords held sets (or sections) on the North Side, West Side, and the South Side of Chicago. By the early 1980s, Gaylords were the third most prominent gang in Chicago, with 6,000 members. The West side sections included Ohio and Noble, Ohio and Leclaire and Monticello and Augusta. Their South Side sections had Back of the Yards and West Englewood (around 55th and Ashland, Sherman Park), Pilsen (18th and Western), and Bridgeport (Throop Street). Their North Side presence included Belmont Cragin, Manor Bowl, Reinberg School, Chopin Park, Blackhawk Park, St Gens., Humboldt Park (Moffat and Campbell); Logan Square (Palmer and California, Lawndale and Altgeld); Irving Park (Albany and Byron); Kilbourn Park (Roscoe and Kilbourn); Kelvyn Park (Kilbourn and Wrightwood); Dunham Park (Montrose and Narragansett); Ravenswood (Seeley and Ainslie); and Uptown (Sunnyside and Magnolia, Lawrence and Broadway). Two of the most potent Gaylord sections existed in Logan Square: Lawndale and Altgeld (L-A section) and Palmer and California (Palmer Street).[6]

By the early 1990s, the Gaylords were in decline, as many of their leaders went to prison, and the last of the Whites were leaving the inner city for the suburbs. In 2011, police and federal agents arrested nine members of suburban Gaylord's factions on charges of drug dealing, gun trafficking, and violent intimidation.[8] However, they continue to remain active within their strongholds in Chicago and its environs.

Gang structure

Divisions within setsAge group
Slylords/Palmer PudsUnder 14
Midget15 to 17
PeeWees17 to 20
Juniors20 to 25+
Seniors25 and older

Gang colors

The sets, or sections, started by Kilbourn Park wore black and light blue. Teams formed by Palmer Street wore black and grey. South Side sections began by the 18th, and Western units like 55th and Ashland, and Sherman Park wore black and brown.

References

  1. Thacker, Matt. "Alleged hate group members suspected of burglaries". News and Tribune.
  2. Scott, Michael (September 4, 2004). Lords of Lawndale: My Life in a Chicago White Street Gang. AuthorHouse. ISBN 1418482196.
  3. Florida Department of Corrections. "Street Gangs — Chicago Based or Influenced: People Nation and Folk Nation". State of Florida. Archived from the original on 2008-03-16. Retrieved 2008-03-08.
  4. "The Young Lords and Early Chicago Puerto Rican Gangs". UIC Gang Research Website. University of Illinois. 27 January 2002. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  5. "Gaylords | Chicago Gang History". Archived from the original on 2020-08-09. Retrieved 2020-08-02.
  6. 1 2 Kilian, Michael; Fletcher, Connie; Ciccone, E. Richard (1979). Who Runs Chicago?. St. Martin's Press. p. 165. ISBN 031287023X.
  7. Bogira, Steve (February 29, 2012). "The color of his skin". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  8. Heinzmann, David (August 23, 2011). "18-month gang investigation leads to arrest of 9". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
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