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Given its proximity to New York City, it comes as no surprise that the tiny little Town of Pelham played a colorful role during Prohibition as a cross-roads for illegal distillers, liquor-serving roadhouses, and bootleggers during the 1920s and early 1930s. Today's Historic Pelham Blog article tells yet another story of illicit bootlegging in North Pelham -- this time in 1922!
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North Pelham Police Captain Michael J. Fitzpatrick was a stickler for detail. He took pride in his work and pride in his appearance. On a lazy Pelham afternoon in late spring, 1922, Captain Fitzpatrick strolled into the little tailor's shop on Fifth Avenue to have his coat pressed. As he waited, he glanced out the shop window and watched the hustle and bustle of Pelham outside.
As he watched, he noticed an interesting character whom he did not recognize struggling with a large suitcase. The man was "glancing around furtively" as he carried a very heavy case along the sidewalk outside.
Chief Fitzpatrick called North Pelham police headquarters and dispatched Police Officer James Whalen to intercept the stranger on the sidewalk and bring him to headquarters. Chief Fitzpatrick then hustled to headquarters where he met Officer Whalen with the stranger who identified himself as "Henry Bersohn." Bersohn, it turned out, had just arrived in North Pelham on a New York, Westchester & Boston Railway train.
Chief Fitzpatrick and Officer Whalen had the stranger open his heavy suitcase. Inside were twelve quarts of "colorless fluid . . . labeled 'Gordon's Gin.'" Doing his duty, Chief Fitzpatrick took a swig. According to the Chief, it "tasted like Hell." (The local newspaper reported that Chief Fitzpatrick "was forced by law to taste it.")
Busted, the stranger wove an odd tale. He told a strange story of a strange man on the New York, Westchester & Boston Railway train who asked him to hold the suitcase, then wandered off and failed to return. For a time, Chief Fitzpatrick could not shake the man from his "fishy story." Then the Chief had an idea.
He mentioned casually that if the liquor were for the man's own consumption and he had a permit to transport it, the situation "might be different." Henry Bersohn took the bait.
Bersohn changed his tune and "admitted" to the Chief that the gin was his own and intended for his own consumption. The Chief confronted Bersohn with the change in his story and the fact that one way or the other he had lied. At that point, "Bersohn then broke down and confessed that he was bootlegging and that the liquor was intended for Pelham Manor consumption."
Chief Fitzpatrick arrested Henry Bersohn. He was brought before Judge I. Balch Louis on Saturday, June 10, 1922. After his formal arraignment he was released on a $250 bond furnished by his father. The case scheduled before a Federal Grand Jury.
North Pelham police had apprehended yet another bootlegger due to good old-fashioned police work. Pelham Manor, consequently, would be just a little bit drier for just a little while. . . . . .
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"Bootlegger Arrested In North Pelham
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Captain Fitzpatrick and Officer Whalen Arrest Henry Bersohn on Fifth Avenue
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Twelve Quarts of Gordon Gin Found In Suitcase That He Was Carrying -- Released On $250 Bond
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Twelve quarts of Gordon gin which were en route from the Boston and Westchester station to Pelham Manor, snugly ensconced in a suitcase carried by Henry Bersohn, now repose on the desk of Captain Michael Fitzpatrick of North Pelham, while Bersohn is out on $250 bail awaiting a Federal jury trial.
Captain Fitzpatrick was having his coat pressed in the tailor shop on Fifth Avenue when he noticed Bersohn traveling along Fifth Avenue. Bersohn's furtive glancing around and the fact that the suitcase seemed particularly heavy aroused the captain's suspicions, so he dispatched Officer James Whalen to bring Bersohn into headquarters.
On the suitcase being opened, twelve quarts of colorless fluid which is labeled 'Gordon Gin' but which the captain says tasted like h__l (captain is forced by law to taste it) were found.
Bersohn was quizzed at headquarters as to where he got the liquor. He told a strange story of a strange man on the train asking him to hold the suitcase for a while, and the strange man failing to come again for his grip. His story was fishy, so Fitzpatrick mentioned the fact that if the liquor was for his own consumption and he had a permit to transport it, the case might be different.
Bersohn then changed his story, according to the police, and told that the liquor was his own and intended for his personal use. Fitzpatrick immediately pointed out that the statement contradicted his story of the man on the train, and Bersohn then broke down and confessed that he was bootlegging and that the liquor was intended for Pelham Manor consumption. He was arrested and brought before Judge I. Balch Louis on Saturday. After a formal arraignment he was released on a $250 bond furnished by his father, the case to be taken before the Federal Grand Jury."
Source: Bootlegger Arrested In North Pelham -- Captain Fitzpatrick and Officer Whalen Arrest Henry Bersohn on Fifth Avenue -- Twelve Quarts of Gordon Gin Found In Suitcase That He Was Carrying -- Released On $250 Bond, The Pelham Sun, Jun. 16, 1922, Vol. 13, No. 16, p. 1, col. 7.
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I have written extensively about Pelham's struggles with Prohibition and the enforcement of the unpopular laws that it spawned as well as illegal stills, bootleggers, and speakeasies in Pelham. See:
Tue., Mar. 13, 2018: House Fire in Chester Park Revealed Bootleg Still in 1935, Nearly Two Years After the End of Prohibition.
Tue., Feb. 27, 2018: Police Raided a Storefront Still and Bootlegging Operation in a Fifth Avenue Store in 1926.
Wed., Feb. 21, 2018: Massive Prohibition Raid in 1927 Netted Four Bootleggers and 225 Kegs of Beer.
Tue., Jan. 30, 2018: Visit to the Wrong House Uncovered Massive Pelham Manor Bootlegging During Prohibition.
Wed., Jan. 03, 2018: The Massive Illegal Still Discovered at 137 Corlies Avenue During Prohibition in 1932.
Wed., Jun. 21, 2017: The Infamous Ash Tree Inn of Pelham Manor and its Prohibition Violations During the 1920s.
Thu., Feb. 02, 2017: Bootleggers Began to Feel the Heat in Pelham in 1922.
Mon., Dec. 26, 2016: Pelham Stood Alone in Westchester When It Voted to Go Dry in 1896.
Mon., Aug. 22, 2016: Pelham, It Seems, Became a Hotbed of Bootlegging and Illegal Stills During Prohibition.
Mon., Jul. 06, 2015: Police Raided a Massive 300-Gallon Illegal Liquor Still on Corlies Avenue in 1932.
Fri., Jun. 19, 2015: More Liquor Raids in Pelham During Prohibition in the 1920s.
Wed., Jun. 17, 2015: Prohibition Rum-Runners Delivering A Boatload of Booze Were Foiled in Pelham in 1925.
Fri., Apr. 24, 2015: The North Pelham "Speakeasy Section" Created Quite a Stir During Prohibition.
Tue., Nov. 18, 2014: More Bootleggers and Speakeasies Raided in Pelham in 1929 During Prohibition.
Fri., May 23, 2014: How Dry I Am -- Early Prohibition Efforts Succeed in Pelham in 1896.
Thu., Apr. 03, 2014: The Prohibition Era in Pelham: Another Speakeasy Raided.
Tue., Feb. 18, 2014: Pelham Speakeasies and Moonshiners - Prohibition in Pelham: The Feds Raid the Moreau.
Thu., Feb. 07, 2008: Village Elections in Pelham in 1900 - New York Athletic Club Members Campaign Against the Prohibition Ticket in Pelham Manor.
Thu., Jan. 12, 2006: The Beer Battle of 1933.
Thu., Aug. 11, 2005: How Dry I Am: Pelham Goes Dry in the 1890s and Travers Island Is At the Center of a Storm.
Bell, Blake A., The Prohibition Era in Pelham, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 25, June 18, 2004, p. 12, col. 2.
Archive of the Historic Pelham Web Site.
Home Page of the Historic Pelham Blog.
Order a Copy of "The Haunted History of Pelham, New York"
Order a Copy of "Thomas Pell and the Legend of the Pell Treaty Oak."
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