Peaky Blinders

This article is about the criminal gang. For the television series, see Peaky Blinders (TV series).
"Baby face" Harry Fowles, a member of the gang

The Peaky Blinders were a criminal gang based in Birmingham, England during the late 19th century and, to a lesser extent, in the early 20th. They were one of many urban youth gangs in the era.

Name

According to Professor Carl Chinn, the name "Peaky Blinders" is popularly said to be derived from the practice of stitching razor blades into the peak of their flat caps which could then be used as weapons.[1] Chinn describes this as an unrealistic scenario and says that a more mundane explanation is that "peakys" was a common nickname for popular flat caps with peaks.[2][3] The gangs were known to have a distinctive clothing style, wearing peaked caps, cravats, bell-bottom trousers, and jackets whose "line of brass buttons down the front gave added distinction".[4]

History

It is a debated question whether the Peaky Blinders were a single gang or a local Birmingham term for a form of violent youth subculture. Eric Moonman states that youth street-gangs in Birmingham were known as "Peaky Blinders" or as "Sloggers".[5] Paul Thompson writes, "These gangs would attack a drunkard and probably leave him insensible in the gutter. If they cannot trip a man or knock him down, they kick or use the buckles of belts, again similar to the Scuttlers of Manchester ... They will use knife, poker, fork or anything."[6]

Philip Gooderson, author of The Gangs of Birmingham, states that the Peaky Blinders originated as one gang but the term later became generic. An earlier gang known as the Cheapside Sloggers had appeared in the 1870s, and the term "Sloggers" (i.e., "fighters") had already become an eponym for street gangs when the Peaky Blinders emerged at the end of the century in Adderley Street, in the Bordesley, and Small Heath areas, extremely poor slums of Birmingham. The Peaky Blinders were distinguished by their sartorial style, unlike earlier gangs. Notable members included David Taylor (imprisoned for carrying a gun at 13 years old), "baby-faced" Harry Fowles, Ernest Haynes, and Stephen McNickle.[7]

Girlfriends of gang members also had a distinctive style: "lavish display of pearls, the well-developed fringe obscuring the whole of the forehead and descending nearly to the eyes, and the characteristic gaudy-coloured silk handkerchief covering her throat."[7] Members were allegedly often violent towards girlfriends, one of whom commented: "He'll pinch and punch you every time he walks out with you. And if you speak to another chap, he don't mind kicking you."[7]

In popular culture

A BBC television drama series called Peaky Blinders and starring Cillian Murphy premiered in October 2013. It follows a single gang based in post-WWI Birmingham's Small Heath area. Its second season aired in 2014[1][8][9] and the third aired in May 2016.

References

  1. 1 2 Bradley, Michael (12 September 2013). "Birmingham's real Peaky Blinders". BBC News. West Midlands.
  2. Carl Chinn (2013-09-12). "Birmingham's Peaky blinders – fact and fiction". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  3. Chamberlain, Zoe (15 October 2014). "The TRUTH Behind the Peaky Blinders". Birmingham Mail.
  4. Ugolini, Laura (2007). Men and Menswear: Sartorial Consumption in Britain 1880–1939. Ashgate. p. 42.
  5. Moonman, Eric (1987). The Violent Society. F. Cass. p. 36.
  6. Thompson, Paul (1992). Edwardians: The Remaking of British Society. Routledge. p. 50.
  7. 1 2 3 Larner, Tony (1 August 2010). "When Peaky Blinders Ruled Streets with Fear". Sunday Mercury. p. 14.
  8. "BBC Two – Peaky Blinders, Series 1". BBC. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  9. "BBC Two – Peaky Blinders, Series 2". BBC. Retrieved 7 October 2014.

External links

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