Blackpool F.C. and American Mafia: Difference between pages

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The '''American Mafia''' (also known as '''American Cosa Nostra''' or '''Italian-American Mafia''') is an [[Italian-American]] criminal society and offshoot of the [[Sicilian]] [[Mafia]]. It emerged on the [[East Coast of the United States|East Coast]] of the [[United States]] during the late 19th century following waves of Sicilian and Southern Italian [[emigration]] (see also [[Italian diaspora]]). In North America, the Mafia often refers to Italian organized crime in general, rather than just traditional Sicilian organized crime. For example the five main Mafia families include [[Gambino crime family|Gambino]], [[Lucchese crime family|Lucchese]], [[Genovese crime family|Genovese]], [[Bonanno crime family|Bonanno]] and [[Colombo crime family|Colombo]] crime families with only Italian-American made members. The Italian-American Mafia continues to dominate organized crime in the U.S. It uses this status to maintain control over much of [[Chicago]], [[Detroit]], [[Boston]], [[Buffalo]], [[Pittsburgh]], [[Cleveland]], [[Philadelphia]], [[Providence]], [[New Jersey]] and [[New York City]]'s organized criminal activity, as well as criminal activity in other cities in the [[Northeastern United States|Northeast]] and across the country, such as [[Las Vegas]], [[New Orleans]], [[St. Louis]], [[Miami]], [[Los Angeles]], [[Milwaukee]], [[Seattle]], [[Kansas City]] and many others.
{{Football club infobox |
clubname = Blackpool F.C. |
image = [[Image:Blackpool FC.png|150px|Blackpool logo]] |
fullname = Blackpool Football Club|
nickname = 'Pool,<br>The Seasiders,<br>The Tangerines |
founded = 26 July, 1887<ref name="formation"> Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref> |
ground = [[Bloomfield Road, its a right dump]]<br>[[Blackpool]], [[England]] |
capacity = 9,788 |
chairman = {{flagicon|England}} [[Karl S. Oyston|Karl Oyston]] |
manager = {{flagicon|England}} [[Simon Grayson]] |
league = [[Football League Championship|The Championship]] |
season = [[Blackpool F.C. season 2007-08|2007-08]] |
position = The Championship, 19th but should have been relegated |
pattern_la1=_whiteborder|pattern_b1=_whitethinlines|pattern_ra1=_whiteborder|
leftarm1=F28500|body1=F28500|rightarm1=F28500|shorts1=FFFFFF|socks1=F28500|
pattern_la2=|pattern_b2=_thinsidesonwhite|pattern_ra2=|
leftarm2=FFFFFF|body2=F28500|rightarm2=FFFFFF|shorts2=F28500|socks2=FFFFFF|
}}
'''Blackpool Football Club''' are an [[England|English]] [[Association football|football]] club founded in 1887 and located in the [[Lancashire]] [[seaside resort|seaside town]] of [[Blackpool]]. The club have been a member of the [[The Football League|Football League]] since 1896, although the [[1899-1900 in English football|1899–1900]] season was spent in [[non-League football]] after they failed to be re-elected.


The Italian-American Mafia, specifically the [[Five Families]] of New York, has its roots in the Sicilian Mafia, but has been a separate organization in the United States for many years. Today, the Italian American Mafia cooperates in various criminal activities with different [[Italian organized crime]] groups other than just the Sicilian Mafia, such as [[Camorra]] and [[Ndrangheta]], which are headquartered in [[Italy]]. In 1986, according to government reports, it was estimated that there are 1,700 members of "Cosa Nostra" and thousands of associate members. Reports also are said to include the Italian-American Mafia as the largest organized crime group in the United States and continues to hold dominance over the [[National Crime Syndicate]], despite the increasing numbers of street gangs and other organizations of neither Italian nor Sicilian ethnicity. Many members refer to the Italian Mafia as the "original Mafia", although it was neither the oldest [[criminal organization]], nor the first to act in the U.S.
The club currently play in [[Football League Championship|The Championship]], the [[English football league system|second tier]] of professional football in England, after winning the [[2006-07 in English football|2006–07]] [[Football League One Play-Offs#2007|League One Play-Off Final]].


The Italian American Cosa Nostra is most active in the New York metropolitan area, [[Philadelphia]], [[New England]] (see the [[Patriarca crime family]]), [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] (see the [[Detroit Partnership]]), and [[Chicago]] (see the [[Chicago Outfit]]), but there are actually around 26 Cosa Nostra family cities around the United States, with many more offshoot and splinter groups as well as associates in other cities.<ref>[http://www.americanmafia.com/26_Family_Cities.html Rick Porrello's AmericanMafia.com - 26 Mafia Families and Their Cities<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.
The club's home ground has been [[Bloomfield Road]] since 1899, and their nicknames include ''The 'Pool'', ''The Seasiders'' and ''The Tangerines'', the latter in reference to their home colour. They have a fierce rivalry with local arch-enemy [[Preston North End F.C.|Preston North End]], and any League meeting between the two clubs is known as the [[West Lancashire derby]] (or, alternatively, the [[M55 motorway|M55]] derby).


=== History ===
Blackpool's most notable achievement is winning the [[1953 FA Cup Final]], the so-called "[[Stanley Matthews|Matthews]] Final", in which they beat [[Bolton Wanderers F.C.|Bolton Wanderers]] 4–3, overturning a 1–3 deficit in the closing stages of the game.
====Origins: The Black Hand====
{{main|Black Hand (blackmail)}}
Mafia groups in the United States first became influential in the New York City area, gradually progressing from small neighborhood operations in [[Little Italy|poor Italian ghettos]] to citywide and eventually international organizations. The American Mafia started with La Mano Nera, "[[Black Hand (blackmail)|The Black Hand]]", extorting Italians (and other immigrants) around New York city. Black Hand gangsters would threaten them by mail if their extortion demands were not met. The threats were sometimes marked with a hand-print in black ink at the bottom of the page. As more Sicilian gangsters immigrated to the U.S., they expanded their criminal activities from extortion to loan-sharking, prostitution, drugs and alcohol, robbery, kidnapping, and murder. Many poor Italian immigrants embraced the Mafia as a possible way of gaining power and rising out of the poverty and [[anti-Italianism]] they experienced in America.


[[Giuseppe Esposito]] was the first known [[Sicily|Sicilian]] Mafia member to emigrate to the [[United States]]. He and six other Sicilians fled to [[New York]] after murdering eleven wealthy landowners as well as the chancellor and a vice chancellor of a Sicilian province. He was arrested in [[New Orleans]] in 1881 and extradited to [[Italy]].
During that post-[[World War II|war]] period, Blackpool made three [[Wembley Stadium (1923)|Wembley]] appearances in six years and came close to winning the [[English football champions|League Championship]] on several occasions. They also supplied the national teams with many players, notably for [[England national football team|England]] in [[1953 in football (soccer)|1953]] when four Blackpool men lined up at Wembley, causing the ''[[Daily Mirror]]'' to declare that "Blackpool F.C. are playing [[Hungary national football team|Hungary]] today",<ref name="formation"> Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref> though it became [[England v Hungary (1953)|a day that English football fans would want to forget]].


[[New Orleans]] was also the site of the first Mafia incident in the [[United States]] that received both national and international attention. On [[October 15]] [[1890]], [[New Orleans]] Police Superintendent [[David Hennessey]] was murdered execution-style. It is still unclear whether Italian immigrants actually killed him or whether it was a [[frame-up]] against the feated underclass immigrants. Hundreds of Sicilians were arrested on mostly baseless charges, and nineteen were eventually indicted for the murder. An acquittal followed, with rumors of bribed and intimidated witnesses. The outraged citizens of [[New Orleans]] organized a [[lynch]] mob and proceeded to kill eleven of the nineteen defendants. Two were hanged, nine were shot, and the remaining eight escaped. The lynching was the largest mass lynching in American history.<ref>[http://www.bestofneworleans.com/dispatch/2004-03-02/blake.html Welcome to the Best of New Orleans! Blake Pontchartrain 03 02 04<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.
In [[Blackpool F.C. season 1982-83|1982–83]], Blackpool finished four places from the bottom of the entire Football League, their lowest-ever ranking in the competition, and were only saved from relegation to the Alliance Premier League (now the [[Football Conference|Conference]]) because the re-election system voted in their favour. [[Blackpool F.C. season 1970-71|Twelve years earlier]], the club was playing in English football's [[Football League First Division|top flight]]. '''Gary has big balls.'''


In the 1910s and 1920s in [[New York City]], the Sicilian Mafia developed into the [[Five Points Gang]]. In Chicago, the 19th Ward, which was an Italian neighborhood, became known as the "Bloody Nineteenth" due to the frequent violence in the ward, mostly as a result of Mafia activity, feuds, and vendettas.
==History==
{{details3|[[History of Blackpool F.C. (1887–1962)]] and [[History of Blackpool F.C. (1962–present)]]|this topic}}
{{For|Blackpool's season-by-season stats|Blackpool F.C. seasons}}


====The rising: the Prohibition====
[[Image:Blackpool F.C. FL finishing positions (overall).jpg|thumb|right|A graph displaying Blackpool's finishing positions in the [[Football League]].]]
[[Image:LuckyLucianoSmaller.jpeg|thumb|right|[[Lucky Luciano|Charles "Lucky" Luciano]], one of the most infamous American bosses]]
Mafia activities were restricted until 1920, when they exploded because of the introduction of the [[Prohibition in the United States|prohibition]].
[[Al Capone]]'s Syndicate in the 1920s ruled [[Chicago]].


By the end of the 1920s, two factions of [[organized crime]] had emerged, causing the [[Castellamarese war]] for control of [[organized crime]] in [[New York City]]. With the murder of [[Joseph Masseria]], the leader of one of the factions, the war ended uniting the two sides back into one organization now dubbed Cosa Nostra. [[Salvatore Maranzano]], the first leader of American Mafia, was himself murdered within six months and [[Lucky Luciano|Charles "Lucky" Luciano]] became the new leader. [[Salvatore Maranzano|Maranzano]] had established the code of conduct for the organization, set up the "[[Five Families|family]]" divisions and structure, and established procedures for resolving disputes. [[Lucky Luciano|Luciano]] set up the "[[National Crime Syndicate|Commission]]" to rule their activities. The Commission included bosses from six or seven families.
===Formation and early years===


====Post World War II====
Blackpool Football Club was formed on 26 July, 1887, after a [[mergers and acquisitions|merger]] with a breakaway group from the local St. John's Football Club. The club managed to win two pieces of silverware in its first season in existence, [[1887-88 in English football|1887–88]]: the [[The Fylde|Fylde]] Cup and the Lancashire Junior Cup.
In 1951, a U.S. Senate Committee, led by Democratic Tennessee Senator [[Estes Kefauver]], determined that a "sinister criminal organization", with ties to the [[Soviet Union|USSR]], also known as the Mafia operated around the [[United States]]. There is, however, no evidence that the USSR worked with the American Mafia.


In 1957, the [[New York]] State Police uncovered a meeting of major American Cosa Nostra figures from around the country in the small upstate [[New York]] town of [[Apalachin, New York|Apalachin]]. This gathering has become known as the [[Apalachin Meeting|Apalachin Conference]]. Many of the attendees were arrested and this event was the catalyst that changed the way law enforcement battles [[organized crime]].
At the conclusion of the following [[1888-89 in English football|1888–89]] season, Blackpool became founder members of the [[Lancashire League (football)|Lancashire League]]. In their first season in the competition, the club finished fifth out of the thirteen member clubs. They finished as runners-up over the following three seasons (to [[Bury F.C.|Bury]] twice and [[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]] once), before winning the championship themselves on their fourth attempt.


In 1963, [[Joe Valachi|Joseph Valachi]] became the first American Cosa Nostra member to provide a detailed look at the inside of the organization. Having been recruited by FBI Special Agents, and testifying before the US Senate McClellan Committee, Valachi exposed the name, structure, power bases, codes, swearing-in ceremony, and members of this organization. All of this had been secret up to this point.
Blackpool's home at that point in time was Raikes Hall Gardens (also known as the Royal Palace Gardens), which was part of a large entertainment complex that included a theatre and a boating lake, amongst other attractions. This meant that the club's average attendances were around the two-thousand mark, making the club's formative years a financial success.<ref name="formation"> Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref>


Today, Cosa Nostra is involved in a broad spectrum of illegal activities. These include [[murder]], [[extortion]], [[drug trafficking]], corruption of public officials, [[gambling]], infiltration of legitimate businesses, labor [[racketeering]], [[loan sharking]], [[prostitution]], [[pornography]], [[tax fraud schemes]], and most notably today, [[stock manipulation]] schemes.
After struggling to repeat the success of the 1893–94 season, the Blackpool board decided it was time to leave local football behind, so on 13 May, 1896, the club became a [[limited company]] and applied for entry to the [[The Football League|Football League]].


====Union corruption====
Their application was successful, and for the club's [[Blackpool F.C. season 1896-97|debut season]] they joined the sixteen-team [[Football League Second Division|Second Division]]. Blackpool's first-ever [[The Football League|Football League]] game took place on 5 September 5, 1896, at [[Lincoln City F.C.|Lincoln City]], which they lost 3–1 in front of around 1,500 spectators.<ref name="formation"> Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref><ref name="Blackpool Gazette">[http://www.blackpoolgazette.co.uk/history?articleid=1240499 Early days in the Football League] – ''Blackpool Gazette''</ref>
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[Image:Jimmy riddle hoffa.jpg|thumb|Jimmy Hoffa]] -->
In the mid-20th century, the Mafia was reputed to have infiltrated many labor unions in the United States, notably the [[Teamsters]], whose president [[Jimmy Hoffa]] disappeared and is widely believed to have been murdered by Mateo Bari, enforcer for the Cleveland crime family. In the 1980s, the United States federal government made a determined effort to remove Mafia influence from labor unions.


=== Structure ===
After three seasons in the League, Blackpool were not re-elected at the conclusion of the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1898-99|1898–99]] season, after finishing third-bottom. They had moved to a new ground, at [[Stanley Park, Blackpool|Stanley Park]]'s Athletic Grounds, the same season.
The Mafia had eventually expanded to twenty-six crime families nationwide in the major cities of the United States, with the center of organized crime based in New York and its surrounding areas. After many [[turf war]]s, the Five Families ended up dominating New York, named after prominent early members: the [[Bonanno family]], the [[Colombo crime family|Colombo family]], the [[Gambino family]], the [[Genovese family]], and the [[Lucchese crime family|Lucchese family]]. These families held underground conferences with other mafia notables like [[Joe Porrello]] from [[Cleveland]], and other gang leaders, such as [[Al Capone]].


*'''[[Crime boss|Boss]]'''—The head of the family, usually reigning as a dictator, sometimes called the [[crime boss|don]] or "godfather". The Boss receives a cut of every operation taken on by every member of his family. Depending on the family, the Boss may be chosen by a vote from the Caporegimes of the family. In the event of a tie, the Underboss(es) must vote. In the past, all the members of a family voted on the Boss, but by the late 1950s, any gathering such as that usually attracted too much attention.<ref>Capeci, Jerry. ''The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia''. Indianapolis: Alpha Books, 2002</ref>
On 12 December, 1899, Blackpool amalgamated with local rivals South Shore. Shortly afterwards, the club, after a brief return to Raikes Hall, moved to a new ground at Gamble's Field, on Bloomfield Road at the southern end of the town. The name of the ground was subsequently renamed for the road on which it stood.
*'''[[Underboss]]'''—The Underboss, usually appointed by the Boss, is the second in command of the family. The Underboss is in charge of all of the Capos, who are controlled by the Boss. The Underboss is usually first in line to become Acting Boss if the Boss is imprisoned or dies. There are normally no more than two or three Underbosses in a family, if there's more than one at all.
*'''[[Consigliere]]'''—The Consigliere is an advisor to the family and sometimes seen as the Boss's "right-hand man". They are often low profile gangsters that can be trusted. They are used as a mediator of disputes or representatives or aides in meetings with other families. They often keep the family looking as legitimate as possible and are sometimes, themselves, legitimate apart from some minor gambling or loan sharking. Some do not have crews of their own, but still wield great power in the family. They are also often the liaison between the Don and important 'bought' figures, such as politicians or Judges.
*'''[[Caporegime]]''' (or Capo)—A Capo (sometimes called a [[Captain]]) is in charge of a crew. There are usually four to six crews in each family, possibly even seven to nine crews, each one consisting of up to ten Soldiers. Capos run their own small family but must follow the limitations and guidelines created by the Boss, as well as pay him his cut of their profits. Capos are nominated by the Underboss, but typically chosen by the Boss himself.
*'''[[Soldier]]'''—Soldiers are members of the family, and can only be of Italian background (although a few families, including the Gambinos, require men to be of only half Italian descent on their father's side). Soldiers start as Associates that have proven themselves. When the books are open, meaning that there is an open spot in the family, a Capo (or several Capos) may recommend an up-and-coming Associate to be a new member. In the case that there is only one slot and multiple recommendations, the Boss will decide. The new member usually becomes part of the Capo's crew that recommended him. Some soldiers work by themselves, earning money for the Family alone though most are part of crews. Sometimes a soldier will be called a ''button man,'' because, in theory, when a capo presses a button, someone dies. They are also called ''[[made men]]'', who have ''made their bones,'' by committing a murder in front of Mafia witnesses or committed a murder by orders from a high member of the family (a Capo, an Underboss, a Consigliere or Boss). This ensures the soldier's reliability: he will never testify against a man who could testify against him. Being made is the beginning but not the end of a Mafia career. (The definitions of ''made man'' and ''making one's bones'' are inferred: Most books on the Mafia—fiction or nonfiction—assume these terms but never define them.) {{Fact|date=September 2007}}
*'''[[Associate]]'''—An Associate is not a member of the mob, and an Associate's role is more similar to that of an errand boy. They are usually a go-between or sometimes deal in drugs to keep the heat off the actual members, or they are people the family does business with (restaurant owners, etc.). In other cases, an associate might be a corrupt [[labor union]] delegate or businessman.<ref>Capeci, Jerry. ''The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia''. Indianapolis: Alpha Books, 2002</ref> Non-Italians will never go any further than this. However, occasionally an associate will become powerful within his own family, for example Joe Watts, a close associate of [[John Gotti]].


The American Mafia's organizational structure and system of control were created by Salvatore Maranzano (who became the first "capo di tutti capi" in the US, though he was killed after holding the position for only six months, by Lucky Luciano).
===Early 20th century===


Most recently there have been two new positions in the family leadership: the family messenger and [[Street Boss]].
Blackpool's season out of the Football League was a success: they finished third upon their return to the Lancashire League, and after the Football League's annual meeting on 25 May, 1900, were permitted back into Division Two.
These positions were created by former Genovese leader [[Vincent Gigante]].


Each faction was headed by a ''caporegime'', who reported to the boss. When the boss made a decision, he never issued orders directly to the soldiers who would carry it out, but instead passed instructions down through the chain of command. In this way, the higher levels of the organization were effectively insulated from incrimination if a lower level member should be captured by law enforcement. This structure is depicted in [[Mario Puzo]]'s famous novel ''[[The Godfather (novel)|The Godfather]]''. In ''[[The Godfather: Part II]],'' These links are called "buffers": they provide what the [[intelligence community]] calls [[plausible deniability]].
During the ten seasons that followed, Blackpool could finish no higher than twelfth place. The club's top goalscorers in the league included [[Bob Birkett]] (ten goals in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1900-01|1900–01]]), [[Geordie Anderson]] (twelve goals in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1901-02|1901–02]]) and [[Bob Whittingham]] (thirteen in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1908-09|1908–09]]).


=== Rituals ===
At the end of [[Blackpool F.C. season 1910-11|1910–11]], the club found themselves in seventh place, thanks largely to [[Joe Clennell]]'s haul of eighteen goals.


The initiation ritual emerged from various sources, such as [[Roman Catholic]] confraternities and [[Freemasonry|Masonic Lodges]] in mid-nineteenth century Sicily<ref name="initiation">"Mafia's arcane rituals, and much of the organization's structure, were based largely on those of the Catholic confraternities and even Freemasonry, colored by Sicilian familial traditions and even certain customs associated with military-religious orders of chivalry like the Order of Malta." [http://www.bestofsicily.com/mafia.htm The Mafia] from [http://www.bestofsicily.com bestofsicily.com]</ref> and has hardly changed to this day. The Chief of Police of Palermo in 1875 reported that the man of honor to be initiated would be led into the presence of a group of bosses and underbosses. One of these men would prick the initiate's arm or hand and tell him to smear the blood onto a sacred image, usually a saint. The oath of loyalty would be taken as the image was burned and scattered, thus symbolising the annihilation of traitors. This was confirmed by the first [[pentito]], [[Tommaso Buscetta]].
It was a case of as-you-were, however, for the four seasons leading up to [[World War I]], with finishing positions of fourteenth, twentieth, sixteenth and tenth. For the latter of those seasons, [[Joe Lane (footballer)|Joe Lane]] netted 28 goals.


A ''hit'', or [[assassination]], of a [[made man|"made" man]] had to be preapproved by the leadership of his family, or retaliatory hits would be made, possibly inciting a war. In a state of war, families would ''go to the mattresses'' — rent vacant apartments and have a number of soldiers sleeping on mattresses on the floor in shifts, with the others ready at the windows to fire at members of rival families.
The outbreak of war forced the cancellation of League football for four years, during which time regional competitions were introduced. When normalcy resumed, in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1919-20|1919–20]], Blackpool had appointed their first full-time manager in the form of [[Bill Norman (football manager)|Bill Norman]]. Norman guided the club to fourth-placed finishes in his first two League seasons in charge (he was installed as manager during the final inter-war season), with Lane again netting close to thirty goals in the former.


====Symbolism in murders====
The club's form nosedived in the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1921-22|1921–22]] season, with a finishing position of nineteenth, before bouncing back to a fifth-placed finish in the following campaign. [[Harry Bedford]], who had joined the club from [[Nottingham Forest F.C.|Nottingham Forest]], was the country's top league scorer, with 32 goals to his name.


* There are many symbolic deeds done during certain gangland executions that are requested by the don. For allowing [[Joseph Pistone]] into the [[Bonanno crime family]] caporegime [[Dominick Napolitano]] had his hands severed. Later during the attempted murder of [[Joseph Ianuzzi]] this is what [[Tommy Agro]] attempted to do.
Bedford repeated the feat the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1923-24|following season]], this time under the watchful eye of new manager [[Frank Buckley (footballer)|Frank Buckley]], who replaced Bill Norman after his four years of service. Blackpool finished fourth in Buckley's first season in charge.
* As in the murder of [[Lucchese crime family]] soldier [[Bruno Facciolo]], a dead [[canary]] was stuffed inside his mouth after he was shot to death.
* A mobster who was thought to be skimming from gambling profits was shot dead and found with a twenty-dollar bill shoved into his rectum.
* An associate gave a powerful capo in the [[Colombo crime family]] the middle finger and although his life was spared, his middle fingers were severed by a dull knife and sent to him preserved in vinegar in a hollowed out monkey's head.


===American Mafia Families by city===
The [[Blackpool F.C. season 1924-25|1924–25]] season was not as successful; a seventeenth-placed finish tempered only slightly by the club's reaching the fourth round of the [[FA Cup]] for the first time. A single-goal defeat at fellow Lancastrians [[Blackburn Rovers F.C.|Blackburn Rovers]] ended ''the Seasiders''' run.
Note that the Mafia has members, associates, and families in others cities as well. The organization is not limited to these cities. Many of these families have influence in other cities also.


*[[Buffalo crime family|Buffalo family]]
Buckley guided Blackpool to top-ten finishes in his final two seasons as manager — with [[Billy Tremelling]]'s thirty goals in the latter helping considerably — before he left to take the helm at [[Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C.|Wolverhampton Wanderers]]).
*[[Chicago Outfit]]
*[[Cleveland crime family|Cleveland family]]
*[[Detroit Partnership]]
*[[Kansas City crime family|Kansas City family]]
*[[Los Angeles crime family|Los Angeles family]]
*[[New England]]-[[Providence]], [[Boston]], ([[Patriarca crime family|Patriarca family]])
*[[New Jersey]] ([[DeCavalcante crime family|DeCavalcante family]])
*[[New Orleans crime family|New Orleans family]]
*The Five Families of [[New York]] ([[Genovese Crime Family|Genovese family]], [[Gambino Crime Family|Gambino family]], [[Lucchese Family]], [[Bonanno Crime Family|Bonanno family]], [[Colombo Crime Family|Colombo family]])
*[[Northeastern Pennsylvania]] ([[Bufalino Crime Family|Bufalino family]])
*[[Philadelphia]] ([[Scarfo crime family|Scarfo family]])
*[[Pittsburgh crime family|Pittsburgh family]]
*[[Florida]] ([[Santo Trafficante, Jr.|Trafficante]] crime family)


===Prominent Italian American mafiosi===
Buckley's replacement was [[Sydney Beaumont]], who took charge for the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1927-28|1927–28]] season, but he lasted only until the spring after the club finished in nineteenth position.
''See also: [[List of Italian American mobsters]].''
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Al Capone Mafia.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Al Capone]] -->
*[[Joe Bonanno]] 'Joe Bananas': (1905&ndash;2002) First Boss of the [[Bonanno Crime Family|Bonanno Family]].
*[[Al Capone]] 'Scarface': (1899&ndash;1947) Prohibition Chicago Boss.
*[[Paul Castellano]]: (1915&ndash;1985) Gambino Boss. Assassinated on the orders of John Gotti.
*[[Charles Luciano]] 'Lucky Luciano': (1897&ndash;1962) New York Boss. Founder of the modern American Mafia. First Boss of the [[Genovese Family]].
*[[Carlo Gambino]] 'Don Carlo': (1902&ndash;1976) Boss and expander of the [[Gambino crime family]]. Seen by some as the Chairman of the [[Mafia Commission|Commission]] since 1957.
*[[Gaetano Gagliano]] 'Tommy': (1884&ndash;1951) First Boss of the [[Lucchese Family]].
*[[Sam Giancana]]: Boss of the [[Chicago Outfit]] from 1956-66.
*[[John Gotti]] 'The Dapper Don': (1940&ndash;2002) Gambino Boss. Famous for his flamboyance and media-friendly attitude.
*[[Henry Hill (mobster)|Henry Hill]]: (1943&ndash;present) Mob turncoat immortalized in the film ''[[Goodfellas]]''.
*[[Vincent Mangano]]: (1888&ndash;1951) First Boss of the [[Gambino Family]].
*[[Carlos Marcello]]: Boss of the [[New Orleans crime family]] in the 1960s.
*[[Joe Profaci]]: (1897&ndash;1962) First Boss of the [[Colombo Family]].
*[[Santo Trafficante, Jr.]] The most powerful [[mobster]] in [[Florida]] and [[Fulgencio Batista|Batista]]-era [[Cuba]].
*[[Joe Valachi]] 'Joe Cargo': (1903&ndash;1971) First [[Mafioso]] to turn government informer.
*[[Anthony Spilotro]]: (1938-1986) Intimidating [[Chicago Outfit]] enforcer, depicted in the film [[Casino (film)|Casino]].
*[[Joe Gallo]]: (1929-1972) [[Profaci crime family]] mobster who worked with [[African-American]] gang members and started a bloody war within the family.


==Law enforcement in the United States==
[[Harry Evans]] was installed as the new Blackpool manager, in an honorary capacity, for the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1928-29|1928–29]] campaign. Due in no small part to [[Jimmy Hampson]]'s 40 goals, the club finished eighth. In his [[Blackpool F.C. season 1929-30|second season]], Evans guided Blackpool to the Division Two championship (their only championship to date), finishing three points ahead of [[Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea]]. Hampson had bagged 45 of the club's 98 league goals.
=== Joint projects of the U.S. government and the Mafia===
On very rare occasions, the United States government has conspired with organized crime figures to [[assassinate]] foreign heads of state. In August 1960, Colonel Sheffield Edwards, director of the [[CIA]]'s Office of Security, proposed the assassination of [[Cuba]]n head of state [[Fidel Castro]] by mafia assassins. Between August 1960 and April 1961, the CIA, without the help of the Mafia (who had taken the money and done nothing), pursued a series of plots to [[poison]] or shoot Castro (CIA, [http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/bayofpigs/chron.html Inspector General's Report on Efforts to Assassinate Fidel Castro], p. 3, 14). Those allegedly involved included [[Sam Giancana]], [[Carlos Marcello]], [[Santo Trafficante, Jr.]], and [[John Roselli]].


===Law Enforcement and the Mafia===
Blackpool lasted only three seasons in the First Division. Two third-bottom finishes were followed by a last-placed finish, and the club returned to the Second Division.
In several Mafia families, killing a state authority is forbidden due to the possibility of extreme police retaliation. In some rare strict cases, conspiring to commit such a murder is punishable by death. The Jewish mobster [[Dutch Schultz]] was reportedly killed by his Italian peers out of fear that he would carry out a plan to kill New York City prosecutor [[Thomas Dewey]]. The Mafia did carry out hits on law enforcement in its earlier history. New York police officer [[Joe Petrosino]] was shot by Sicilian mobsters while on duty in Sicily. A statue of him was later erected across the street from a Luchhese hangout.<ref>''Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires''</ref>


The [[Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act|RICO Act]] of the 1960s made it a crime to belong to an organization that performed illegal acts, and it created programs such as the [[witness protection program]]. The Act only began to come into frequent use during the late 1970's and early 1980's. Charges of [[racketeering]] convicted scores of mobsters including 2 of New York's Godfathers ([[Anthony Corallo]] and [[Carmine Persico]]) during the [[Commission Case]] in 1985 (Although one of the convicted [[Anthony Salerno|Anthony 'Fat Tony' Salerno]] was thought of as the [[Genovese crime family|Genovese]] Godfather he was only the Underboss). The Act continued to be used to great effect up to the end of the 20th century and hurt the Mob severely. The establishment of the [[United States Organized Crime Strike Force]] made it more possible to find and prosecute the Mafia.
The club's relegation prompted the Blackpool board to install a recognised manager, and they opted for [[Alex 'Sandy' MacFarlane|Sandy MacFarlane]]. MacFarlane occupied the [[Bloomfield Road]] hot seat for just two seasons, in which the club finished eleventh and fourth, respectively. MacFarlane's final [[Blackpool F.C. season 1934-35|1934–35]] season marked [[Jimmy Hampson]]'s eighth successive (and final) season as Blackpool's top league goalscorer.


The Strike Force was established in the 1960s through a joint congressional effort led by [[Robert Kennedy]]. It was under the Office of the Inspector General in the [[Department of Labor]]. It was later disbanded at the national level, but continues at the state and local level today. It was responsible for investigating and eventually helping to bring down high level Mafiosos such as [[Joseph Aiuppa]] of the Chicago Outfit, [[Anthony Salerno]] of the Genovese Family of New York and [[Paul Castellano]] of the Gambino Family. Also, the Strike Force took down and cleaned up much of the [[Organized Crime]] in [[Teamsters for a Democratic Union|The Teamsters]] across the country.
[[Joe Smith (footballer)|Joe Smith]] was appointed Blackpool's sixth manager in August 1935, a role in which he remained for the next 23 years.
However, the Mafia is still the dominant organized crime group in the United States, despite the success of RICO. According to Selwyn Raab, author of ''Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires'', after [[9/11]] the FBI has redirected most of its attention to finding terrorists.


==See also==
The club finished tenth in Smith's first season, with [[Bobby Finan]] taking over from Hampson as top scorer, with 34 goals. It was Smith's second season in charge, however, that marked the starting point of the success to come. Blackpool finished the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1936-37|1936–37]] season as runners-up in the Second Division to [[Leicester City F.C.|Leicester City]] and were promoted back to the First Division.
* [[Gang]]
* [[Gangster]]
* [[Organized crime]]
* [[Italian organized crime]]
* [[Timeline of organized crime]]
* [[Omertà]]
* [[Vendetta]]
* [[Camorra]]
* [[Mafia-Camorra War]]
* [[List of Mafia crime families]]
* [[List of criminal organizations]]
* [[Crime in New York City]]
* [[Irish Mob]]
* [[Yakuza]] ("Japanese Mafia")
* [[Triad society]] ("Chinese Mafia")


==In Film==
Two seasons of Division One football were played before a [[World War II|second World War]] intervened. Blackpool sat atop the table at the time the abandonment occurred.<ref>[http://www.rsssf.com/engpaul/FLA/1939-40.html Football Statistics Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Regional competitions were implemented again between 1939 and 1945. For the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1945-46|1945–46]] season, after the war's conclusion, Blackpool spent one season in the [[Football League North and South|Football League North]].
* In the 1932 film ''[[Scarface (1932 film)|Scarface]]'' the rise and fall of mobster, [[Tony Camonte (character)|Tony Camonte]] is portrayed by [[Paul Muni]]. Camonte is based on [[Al Capone]].
* In the 1983 film ''[[Scarface (1983 film)|Scarface]]'' the rise and fall of mobster, [[Tony Montana]] is portrayed by [[Al Pacino]]. Montana is based on [[Al Capone]].
* The 1990 film ''[[Goodfellas]]'' (starring [[Ray Liotta]], [[Robert De Niro]], and [[Joe Pesci]]) portrays the lifes of mobsters including: [[Henry Hill]], [[Tommy DeSimone]], [[James Burke (gangster)|Jimmy Burke]], and [[Paul Vario]].
* The 1997 film ''[[Donnie Brasco]]'' (starring [[Johnny Depp]] and [[Al Pacino]]) portrays the life of undercover FBI agent [[Joseph D. Pistone]].


==References==
===Post-Second World War===
{{reflist|2}}


==Sources==
Scottish defender [[Hugh Kelly (footballer)|Hugh Kelly]] had arrived at Blackpool in 1943, as had fellow defender [[Tommy Garrett]] in 1942. [[striker|Forward]] [[Stan Mortensen]] joined the club after the war in 1946. Mortensen went on to become Blackpool's top league goalscorer for the next nine seasons, sharing the honour with [[Allan Brown]] in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1952-53|1952–53]]. [[Stanley Matthews]], who became a regular source of goals for Mortensen, joined Blackpool in 1947 as did centre-forward [[Jackie Mudie]]. Goalkeeper [[George Farm]] signed in 1948 as did outside-left [[Bill Perry (footballer)|Bill Perry]] in 1949. Kelly, Garrett, Matthews, Mudie, Farm and Perry would play with the club throughout the 1950s, the most successful decade in the club's history.
*Arlacchi, Pino (1988). ''Mafia Business. The Mafia Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism'', Oxford: Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-285197-7
*Chubb, Judith (1989). [http://www.holycross.edu/departments/history/tmcbride/mafia1.htm The Mafia and Politics], Cornell Studies in International Affairs, Occasional Papers No. 23.
*Servadio, Gaia (1976), ''Mafioso. A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day'', London: Secker & Warburg ISBN 0-436-44700-2


==External links==
[[Image:Johnston and Matthews cup.jpg|thumbnail|left|Victorious Blackpool [[captain (sports)|captain]] [[Harry Johnston (footballer)|Harry Johnston]] (being carried, left) holds the [[FA Cup]] aloft with [[Stanley Matthews]].]]
* [http://www.gangrule.com Gangrule, American mafia history]

* [http://www.angelfire.com/blog/organizedcrime/italian.html American Organized Crime - La Cosa Nostra]
Post-war Blackpool reached the [[FA Cup Final]] on three occasions, losing to [[Manchester United F.C.|Manchester United]] in [[FA Cup Final 1948|1948]] and [[Newcastle United F.C.|Newcastle United]] [[FA Cup Final 1951|three years later]], and winning it in [[FA Cup Final 1953|1953]] captained by [[Harry Johnston (footballer)|Harry Johnston]].
* [http://www.fanabala.com/ Italian Mafia Terms Defined]

* [http://www.americanmafia.com/26_Family_Cities.html The 26 Original American Mafia Families- AmericanMafia.com]
In [[Blackpool F.C. season 1955-56|1955–56]], and now captained by Kelly, Blackpool attained their highest-ever league finish: runners-up to Manchester United. It was a feat that could not be matched or bettered over the following two seasons, with fourth and seventh-placed finishes, and Smith left Blackpool as the club's most successful and longest-serving manager.
* [http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/mafiamon.htm FBI Mafia Monograph]

Smith was succeeded, in May 1958, by [[Ron Suart]], the first former ''Seasiders'' player to return to the club as manager. In his first season, he led the club to eighth in the First Division and the sixth round of the [[FA Cup]]. A 23-year-old [[Ray Charnley]] topped the club's goalscoring chart with twenty, in his first season as a professional, and went on to repeat the feat for seven of the eight seasons that followed.

The [[Football League Cup|League Cup]] came into existence in [[1960-61 in English football|1960–61]]. Blackpool were knocked out in the second round, the round in which they entered. The club's First Division status came under threat, but they managed to avoid relegation by one point, at the expense of [[Newcastle United F.C.|Newcastle United]]. Local arch-rivals [[Preston North End F.C.|Preston North End]] were the other club to make the drop.

Mid-table finishes in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1961-62|1961–62]] and [[Blackpool F.C. season 1962-63|1962–63]] (and an appearance in the League Cup semi-finals during the former) were offset by another lowly finish of eighteenth in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1963-64|1963–64]], with [[Alan Ball, Jr.|Alan Ball]] top-scoring with thirteen goals. Much of the same ensued over the following two seasons, before relegation finally occurred in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1966-67|1966–67]]. Blackpool finished bottom of the table, eight points adrift of fellow demotion victims [[Aston Villa F.C.|Aston Villa]]. Suart had resigned four months before the end of the season. His replacement was another former Blackpool player, [[Stan Mortensen]].

===Late 20th century===

Mortensen picked up the pieces for the club's first season back in the Second Division in thirty years, guiding them to a [[Blackpool F.C. season 1967-68|third-placed finish]]. They had gone into the final game of the season at [[Huddersfield Town F.C.|Huddersfield Town]] knowing that a win would likely secure a return to the First Division. They won 3–1, but once the premature celebrations had ended, they discovered that their nearest rivals, [[Queens Park Rangers F.C.|Queens Park Rangers]], had scored a last-minute winner at [[Aston Villa F.C.|Aston Villa]]. Q.P.R. were promoted by virtue of a better goal-average: 1.86, to Blackpool's 1.65.

At the end of the following [[Blackpool F.C. season 1968-69|1968–69]] campaign, the Blackpool board made the decision to sack Mortensen after just over two years in the job. Their decision was met by fans with a mixture of shock and anger, as Mortensen was as popular a manager as he was a player.<ref name="Morty sacked">Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref>

[[Image:Blackpool F.C. 1969-70.jpg|thumb|right|Blackpool taking on [[Cardiff City F.C.|Cardiff City]] in a league match at [[Bloomfield Road]] on 4 October, 1969, during Blackpool's successful [[Blackpool F.C. season 1969-70|1969–70]] season.]]

[[Les Shannon]], who spent the majority of his playing career with Blackpool's [[Lancashire]] rivals [[Burnley F.C.|Burnley]], was installed as manager for the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1969-70|1969–70]] season. In his first season he succeeded where Mortensen had failed, by guiding the club back to the top flight as runners-up behind [[Huddersfield Town F.C.|Huddersfield Town]]. Their promotion had been sealed after the penultimate game of the season, a 3–0 victory at rivals Preston North End, courtesy of a [[Fred Pickering]] [[hat-trick#football|hat-trick]]. The result effectively relegated the hosts to the [[Football League Third Division|Third Division]].

As quickly as Shannon had taken Blackpool up, he saw them return whence they came. The club finished at the foot of the table and were relegated back to Division Two, along with Burnley. Before the season's conclusion, Shannon was briefly replaced in a [[caretaker-manager]] capacity by [[Jimmy Meadows]], who in turn was permanently replaced by [[Bob Stokoe]]. On 12 June, 1971, well over a month after the conclusion of the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1970-71|league season]], Blackpool won the [[Anglo-Italian Cup]] with a 2–1 victory over [[Bologna F.C. 1909|Bologna]] in the final. This was achieved without the services of [[Jimmy Armfield]], who retired in May after seventeen years and 627 appearances for the club.

Blackpool finished amongst the top ten teams in the Second Division] for six consecutive seasons, under three different managers: [[Bob Stokoe|Stokoe]], [[Harry Potts]] and [[Allan Brown]].

Brown's second season at the helm, [[Blackpool F.C. season 1977-78|1977–78]], ended with the club's relegation to the [[Football League Third Division|Division Three]] for the first time in their history.

Stokoe returned for a second stint as manager for the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1978-79|1978–79]] campaign, at the end of which Blackpool finished mid-table. Stokoe resigned during the summer.

[[Stan Ternent]] became Blackpool's seventh manager in nine years, only to replaced in February 1980 by [[Alan Ball, Jr.|Alan Ball]], the popular former Blackpool midfielder who left the club for [[Everton F.C.|Everton]] fourteen years earlier. Ball himself only lasted a year in the job, and departed when the club were relegated to the league's [[Football League Fourth Division|basement division]].

Allan Brown had taken over from Ball in February 1981, and he remained in charge for the following [[Blackpool F.C. season 1981-82|1981–82]] term. Blackpool finished twelfth in their first season in Division Four; however, unable to handle the pressure of the job,<ref name="Brown resigns">Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref> Brown resigned during the close season.

[[Sam Ellis]] took over from Brown in June 1982, three years after he finished his playing career with [[Watford F.C.|Watford]]. His first season saw Blackpool finish 21st, with [[Dave Bamber]] topping the club's goalscoring chart for the second consecutive season with ten strikes.

It was [[Blackpool F.C. season 1984-85|Ellis's third season]], however, that brought the success the club had been looking for. Blackpool finished second behind [[Chesterfield F.C.|Chesterfield]] and were back in Division Three.

The club managed to finish in the top half of the table for their first three seasons in the Third Division, but slipped to nineteenth in Ellis's seventh and final season in charge.

For the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1989-90|1989–90]] season, Blackpool appointed [[Jimmy Mullen (footballer born 1952)|Jimmy Mullen]] as manager. Mullen's reign last only eleven months, however, and he left the club after their relegation back to Division Four.

[[Graham Carr]] replaced Mullen, but his spell in the manager's seat was even shorter — just four months. He was sacked in November 1990 with Blackpool lying in eighteenth place.

Carr's replacement was his assistant, [[Billy Ayre]]. Ayre guided the team to a fifth-placed finish and qualification for the [[Football League Play-Offs|play-offs]]. They lost only five of their thirty league games that remained at the time of Ayre's appointment. The run included thirteen consecutive home wins in an eventual 24–game unbeaten run at [[Bloomfield Road]].<ref name="Ayre records">Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992''</ref>

After beating [[Scunthorpe United F.C.|Scunthorpe United]] in the two-legged semi-finals of the play-offs, Blackpool lost to [[Torquay United F.C.|Torquay United]] in the [[Wembley Stadium (1923)|Wembley]] final, on penalties after the score was tied 2–2 after regular and extra time (see [[Blackpool F.C. season 1990-91#Final]]).

The following [[Blackpool F.C. season 1991-92|1991–92]] season finished with Blackpool in fourth place, missing out on automatic promotion by one point, which meant another play-offs experience. This time they met [[Barnet F.C.|Barnet]] in the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1991-92#Semi-finals|semi-finals]] and won 2–1 on aggregate. They returned to Wembley, where they faced Scunthorpe United in [[Blackpool F.C. season 1991-92#Final|the final]], the team they knocked out of the play-offs twelve months earlier. Again the score was tied at the end of regular and extra time, but Blackpool were victorious in the penalty shootout and booked their place in the new Division Two.

Blackpool struggled in their first two terms back in the third tier of English football, demonstrated by eighteenth- and twentieth-placed finishes, avoiding relegation in the latter season by virtue of a 4–1 victory over [[Leyton Orient F.C.|Leyton Orient]] on the final day of the season,<ref>[http://www.soccerbase.com/results3.sd?gameid=219715 Blackpool 4–1 Leyton Orient] – Soccerbase</ref> which resulted in a pitch invasion by the Blackpool supporters. Ayre was sacked in the summer of 1994 and was replaced by [[Sam Allardyce]].

Allardyce led Blackpool to a mid-table finish in his [[Blackpool F.C. season 1994-95|first season]] and saw the club knocked out of both cup competitions at the first hurdle. [[Tony Ellis]] was the club's top scorer with seventeen league goals.

The [[Blackpool F.C. season 1995-96|1995–96]] season saw Blackpool finish third and claim a place in the play-offs for the third time in six seasons. In the semi-finals, Blackpool travelled to [[Bradford City A.F.C.|Bradford City]] and won 2–0. Three days later, they hosted the Yorkshiremen at Bloomfield Road and lost 3–0. Blackpool remained in Division Two, and Allardyce was sacked not long afterwards.

Former [[Norwich City F.C.|Norwich City]] manager [[Gary Megson]] replaced Allardyce, and attained a seventh-placed finish in his [[Blackpool F.C. season 1996-97|only season in charge]]. [[Nigel Worthington]] succeeded Megson in the summer of 1997, and in the [[Northern Ireland|Irishman]]'s two full campaigns in the hot seat, Blackpool finished twelfth and fourteenth. Worthington resigned towards the end of the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1999-2000|1999–2000]] season, and his seat was filled by the former [[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]] and [[England national football team|England]] midfielder [[Steve McMahon]].

===21st century===

McMahon arrived too late to save the club from relegation to the Third Division after a 22nd-placed finish in the league.

McMahon gained promotion via the play-offs in his [[Blackpool F.C. season 2000-01|first full season]]. Success eluded him, however, for his three remaining seasons in charge, and he resigned in the summer of 2004.

[[Image:Blackpool football club.jpg|thumb|left|[[Bloomfield Road]], Blackpool F.C.'s home since 1899, during its reconstruction phase in the early part of the 21st century. This view is looking north.]]

Blackpool chose another high-profile individual as McMahon's successor: ex-[[Blackburn Rovers F.C.|Blackburn Rovers]] and [[Scotland national football team|Scotland]] [[captain (sports)|captain]] [[Colin Hendry]], who finished his playing career with the club. Hendry's reign lasted seventeen months, though the club remained in the new [[Football League One|League One]].

Hendry was replaced by [[Simon Grayson]], who also ended his playing career at Bloomfield Road, in November of the [[Blackpool F.C. season 2005-06|2005–06]] season.

On 6 January, 2007, Blackpool reached the fourth round of the FA Cup for the first time in seventeen years, after beating [[Aldershot Town F.C.|Aldershot Town]] 4–2 at [[Bloomfield Road]]. They were knocked out in the fourth round by [[Norwich City F.C.|Norwich City]], 3–2 after a replay at [[Carrow Road]] on 13 February, narrowly missing out on a trip to [[London]] to face [[Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea]] in the last sixteen.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/fa_cup/6349599.stm Norwich 3–2 Blackpool, FA Cup 4R] – BBC Sport</ref>

On 21 April, 2007, Blackpool guaranteed themselves at least a place in the play-offs after a 2–1 win at [[Cheltenham Town F.C.|Cheltenham Town]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_2/6555275.stm Cheltenham Town 1–2 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref> Seven days later, they beat Scunthorpe United 3–1 at Bloomfield Road in the penultimate game of the regular season.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_2/6578843.stm Blackpool 3–1 Scunthorpe] – BBC Sport</ref> The visitors were crowned champions of League One despite their defeat, while Blackpool moved two points behind the second automatic-promotion place after [[Bristol City F.C.|Bristol City]] lost by a single goal at [[Millwall F.C.|Millwall]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_2/6598599.stm Millwall 1–0 Bristol City] – BBC Sport</ref>

On the final day of the regular season, Blackpool won 6–3 at [[Swansea City]],<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/eng_div_2/6603011.stm Swansea 3–6 Blackpool]</ref> a result which ensured that the Tangerines finished in third place, ended Swansea's play-off hopes, resulted in [[Oldham Athletic]]'s finishing the season in sixth position, and meant Blackpool finished the season as top scorers in League One with 76 goals.<ref>[http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?competitionid=3&seasonid=136&teamid=317 Soccerbase]</ref> Blackpool and Oldham met in the two-legged [[Blackpool F.C. season 2006-07#Semi-finals|semi-finals]] of the play-offs. Blackpool won both legs — 2–1 at [[Boundary Park]] on 13 May<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/eng_div_2/6645909.stm Oldham Athletic 1–2 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref> and 3–1 at Bloomfield Road six days later.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/eng_div_2/6649781.stm Blackpool 3–1 Oldham Athletic] – BBC Sport</ref> On 27 May they met [[Yeovil Town F.C.|Yeovil Town]] in [[Blackpool F.C. season 2006-07#Final|the final]] at the new [[Wembley Stadium]], their first appearance at [[England national football team|England]]'s national stadium in fifteen years. Blackpool won 2–0, a club-record tenth consecutive victory, and were promoted to [[Football League Championship|The Championship]] in their 100th overall season in the Football League.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_2/6686991.stm Yeovil 0–2 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref>

===Recent events===
On 11 August, 2007, Blackpool beat [[Leicester City F.C.|Leicester City]] by a single goal at the [[Walkers Stadium]] in their first game in The Championship, and their first game in the second tier of English football for 29 years.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_1/6931092.stm Leicester 0–1 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref> It was also the first time the club had won their opening league game since the [[Blackpool F.C. season 2000-01|2000–01]] season.<ref>[http://www.soccerbase.com Soccerbase]</ref>

Seven days later, the club's run of twelve consecutive wins ended after they drew with Bristol City at Bloomfield Road.<ref>[http://www.skysports.com/football/match_facts/0,,11065_2846820,00.html Blackpool 1–1 Bristol City] – Sky Sports</ref> Their thirteen-game unbeaten run was ended the following game, with defeat at Wolves on 25 August.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_1/6952799.stm Wolves 2–1 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref>

Blackpool knocked [[Premier League]] side [[Derby County F.C.|Derby County]] out of the [[Football League Cup|League Cup]] at the second-round stage on 28 August, 2007. The match ended 1–1 after ninety minutes and 2–2 after extra time. ''The Seasiders'' won the resulting penalty shootout 7–6.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/league_cup/6963495.stm Derby 2–2 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref> On 25 September, Blackpool beat [[Southend United F.C.|Southend United]] 2–1 after extra time<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/league_cup/7008008.stm Blackpool 2–1 Southend (aet)] – BBC Sport</ref> to reach the fourth round for the first time in 35 years. They were drawn away to Premiership side [[Tottenham Hotspur F.C.|Tottenham Hotspur]] in the last sixteen, a match they lost 2–0.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/league_cup/7065202.stm Tottenham 2–0 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref> Tottenham went on to [[2008 Football League Cup Final|win the competition]].

On 8 December, 2007, Blackpool beat [[Preston North End F.C.|Preston North End]] at [[Deepdale (stadium)|Deepdale]] by a single goal in the first [[West Lancashire derby]] since 1 April, 2000.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/eng_div_1/7122594.stm Preston 0–1 Blackpool] – BBC Sport</ref>

Blackpool finished the [[Blackpool F.C. season 2007-08|2007–08]] season in 19th place, escaping relegation by two points and ensuring their safety in a 1–1 draw with [[Watford F.C.|Watford]] on the final day of the Championship season.<ref>[http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=317 The Championship's final table for the 2007-08 season] - Soccerbase</ref>

==Players==
===Current squad===
:''As of 4 September, 2008.''<!--<ref name="Profiles">{{cite web
| title = Profiles
| url = http://www.blackpoolfc.premiumtv.co.uk/page/ProfilesDetail/0,,10432,00.html
| publisher = Blackpool FC
| accessdate = 2008-07-31}}</ref>--><ref name="Seasiders Announce Squad Numbers">{{cite news
| title = Seasiders Announce Squad Numbers
| url = http://www.blackpoolfc.premiumtv.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10432~1355114,00.html
| publisher = Blackpool FC
| date = [[2008-07-31]]
| accessdate = 2008-07-31}}</ref>

{{football squad start}}
{{football squad player| no=1| nat=USA | pos=GK| name=[[Paul Rachubka]]}}
{{football squad player| no=2| nat=England | pos=DF| name=[[Danny Coid]]}}
{{football squad player| no=3| nat=Scotland| pos=DF| name=[[Stephen Crainey]]}}
{{football squad player| no=4| nat=England | pos=MF| name=[[Keith Southern]]}}
{{football squad player| no=5| nat=England| pos=DF| name=[[Marlon Broomes]]}}
{{football squad player| no=6| nat=England| pos=DF| name=[[Ian Evatt]]}}
{{football squad player| no=7| nat=England| pos=MF| name=[[Adam Hammill]]| other=on loan from [[Liverpool F.C.|Liverpool]]}}
{{football squad player| no=8| nat=Scotland | pos=FW| name=[[Stephen McPhee]]}}
{{football squad player| no=10| nat=England| pos=MF| name=[[Stuart Green]]}}
{{football squad player| no=11| nat=Wales | pos=MF| name=[[David Vaughan (footballer)|David Vaughan]]}}
{{football squad player| no=12| nat=England | pos=MF| name=[[Gary Taylor-Fletcher]]}}
{{football squad player| no=14| nat=England | pos=MF| name=[[David Fox (footballer)|David Fox]]}}
{{football squad player| no=15| nat=England| pos=DF| name=[[Alex Baptiste]]}}
{{football squad player| no=16| nat=Faroe Islands|pos=MF | name=[[Claus Bech Jørgensen]]}}
{{football squad player| no=17| nat=England | pos=DF| name=[[Jermaine Wright]]}}
{{football squad mid}}
{{football squad player| no=18| nat=England | pos=MF| name=[[Joe Martin (footballer)|Joe Martin]]}}
{{football squad player| no=19| nat=England | pos=FW| name=[[Steve Kabba]]| other=on loan from [[Watford F.C.|Watford]]}}
{{football squad player| no=20| nat=Guinea | pos=DF| name=[[Mohammed Camara]]| other=on loan from [[Derby County F.C.|Derby County]]}}
{{football squad player| no=21| nat=England | pos=GK | name=[[Matthew Gilks]]}}
{{football squad player| no=22| nat=Pakistan | pos=DF| name=[[Zesh Rehman]]| other=on loan from [[Queens Park Rangers F.C.|QPR]]}}
{{football squad player| no=23| nat=Wales | pos=FW| name= [[Daniel Nardiello]]}}
{{football squad player| no=24| nat=Wales | pos=DF| name=[[Rob Edwards (footballer born 1982)|Rob Edwards]]}}
{{football squad player| no=25| nat=England | pos=DF| name=[[Shaun Barker]]}}
{{football squad player| no=26| nat=Scotland | pos=MF| name=[[Alan Gow]]| other=on loan from [[Rangers F.C.|Rangers]]}}
{{football squad player| no=27| nat=Republic of Ireland | pos=FW | name=[[Ben Burgess]]}}
{{football squad player| no=28| nat=Canada| pos=MF| name=[[Michael D'Agostino]]}}
{{football squad player| no=29| nat=England | pos=MF| name=[[Matty Kay]]}}
{{football squad player| no=31| nat=England | pos=FW| name=Danny Mitchley}}
{{football squad player| no=32| nat=England | pos=MF| name=Ross Lloyd}}
{{football squad player| no=33| nat=England | pos=MF| name=Dominic Merrella}}
{{football squad end}}

====Out on loan====
{{football squad start}}
{{football squad player| no=30| nat=England| pos=DF| name=Ashton Bayliss| other=to [[Fleetwood Town F.C.|Fleetwood Town]]}}
{{football squad end}}

See also:
*[[List of Blackpool F.C. players]]
*[[:Category:Blackpool F.C. players|List of Blackpool F.C. players with a Wikipedia article]]
*[[List of notable Blackpool F.C. players]]

===One-club men===
Eight players spent their entire professional playing career with Blackpool:

<!--List should include only FORMER players-->
{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Apps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Harry Stirzaker]] || 1894–1903 (9) || 154 || 13
|-
| [[Bob Birkett]] || 1896–1906 (10) || 215 || 44
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Bert Tulloch]] || 1914–1924 (10) || 178 || {{0}}0
|-
| [[Harry Johnston (footballer)|Harry Johnston]] || 1934–1955 (21) || 398 || 11
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Hugh Kelly (footballer)|Hugh Kelly]] || 1943–1960 (17) || 428 || {{0}}8
|-
| [[Jimmy Armfield]] || 1954–1971 (17) || 569 || {{0}}6
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Glyn James]] || 1960–1975 (15) || 399 || 22
|-
| [[Mike Davies (footballer)|Mike Davies]] || 1984–1995 (11) || 310 || 16
|}

{{see also|List of one-club men}}

===Internationals===
Blackpool has had 35 full-international representatives. Their first was F.J. Griffiths, for [[Wales national football team|Wales]], in 1899. Their most recent was [[David Vaughan (footballer)|David Vaughan]] in 2008, also for Wales.

:''Many players won additional caps with other clubs, but the totals given below apply solely to appearances made while with Blackpool.''

{{flagicon|England}} '''England'''

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Caps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Harry Bedford]] || 1923–1924 || {{0}}{{0}}2 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|-
| [[Jimmy Hampson]] || 1930–1932 || {{0}}{{0}}3 || {{0}}{{0}}5
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Harry Johnston (footballer)|Harry Johnston]] || 1946–1953 || {{0}}10 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Stan Mortensen]] || 1946–1954 || {{0}}25 || {{0}}23
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Stanley Matthews]] || 1946–1957 || {{0}}36 || {{0}}{{0}}3
|-
| [[Eddie Shimwell]] || 1949 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Tommy Garrett]] || 1951–1954 || {{0}}{{0}}3 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Ernie Taylor]] || 1953–1954 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Bill Perry (footballer)|Bill Perry]] || 1955–1956 || {{0}}{{0}}3 || {{0}}{{0}}2
|-
| [[Jimmy Armfield]] || 1958–1966 || {{0}}43 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Ray Charnley]] || 1962–1963 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Tony Waiters]] || 1963–1965 || {{0}}{{0}}5 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Alan Ball, Jr.|Alan Ball]] || 1964–1966 || {{0}}14 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|}

{{flagicon|Scotland}} '''Scotland'''

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Caps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Phil Watson (footballer)|Phil Watson]] || 1933 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Alex Munro]] || 1938 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Frank O'Donnell]] || 1938 || {{0}}{{0}}2 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Jimmy Blair]] || 1946 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Allan Brown]] || 1951–1954 || {{0}}11 || {{0}}{{0}}3
|-
| [[George Farm]] || 1952–1959 || {{0}}10 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Hugh Kelly (footballer)|Hugh Kelly]] || 1952 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Jackie Mudie]] || 1956–1978 || {{0}}17 || {{0}}{{0}}9
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Tony Green (footballer)|Tony Green]] || 1971 || {{0}}{{0}}4 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|}

{{flagicon|Wales}} '''Wales'''

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Caps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| F.J. Griffiths || 1899–1900 || {{0}}{{0}}2 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Dai Astley]] || 1938–1939 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Glyn James]] || 1965–1971 || {{0}}{{0}}9 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Wyn Davies]] || 1973–1974 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[David Vaughan (footballer)|David Vaughan]] || 2008 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|}

{{flagicon|Northern Ireland}} '''Northern Ireland'''<br>
Prior to 1924, there was only one Irish national team. In that year, the Republic of Ireland began playing separate matches, and that position is reflected here.

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Caps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Sammy Jones (footballer)|Sammy Jones]] || 1933–1934 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|-
| [[Peter Doherty (footballer)|Peter Doherty]] || 1934–1936 || {{0}}{{0}}4 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| Malcolm Butler || 1938–1939 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|-
| [[Derek Spence]] || 1976–1980 || {{0}}15 || {{0}}{{0}}3
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[James Quinn (footballer)|James Quinn]] || 1996–1998 || {{0}}10 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|}

{{flagicon|Republic of Ireland}} '''Republic of Ireland'''

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Caps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Mickey Walsh]] || 1975–1977 || {{0}}{{0}}4 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|-
| [[Wes Hoolahan]] || 2008 || {{0}}{{0}}1 || {{0}}{{0}}0
|}

{{flagicon|Latvia}} '''Latvia'''

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Caps
!bgcolor=silver|Goals
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| [[Kaspars Gorkšs]] || 2006-2008 || {{0}}14 || {{0}}{{0}}1
|}

===Hall of Fame===
The Blackpool F.C. Hall of Fame was established on 22 August, 2006, with a plaque unveiled by [[Jimmy Armfield]].<ref name="Hall of Fame">[http://www.bsaweb.info/HOF.aspx Blackpool Supporters Association Hall of Fame]</ref> Organised by the Blackpool Supporters Association, Blackpool fans around the world can vote on their all-time heroes.<ref name="Hall of Fame">[http://www.bsaweb.info/HOF.aspx Blackpool Supporters Association Hall of Fame]</ref> Five players per decade are inducted.

'''Pre-1950s:'''
*[[Jack Parkinson (footballer born 1869)|Jack Parkinson]]
*[[Harry Bedford]]
*[[Jimmy Hampson]]
*[[Jock Dodds]]
*[[Georgie Mee]]

'''1950s:'''
*[[Stan Mortensen]]
*[[Stanley Matthews]]
*[[Bill Perry (footballer)|Bill Perry]]
*[[Harry Johnston (footballer)|Harry Johnston]]
*[[Allan Brown]]

'''1960s:'''
*[[Jimmy Armfield]]
*[[Alan Ball, Jr.|Alan Ball]]
*[[Tony Green (footballer)|Tony Green]]
*[[Ray Charnley]]
*[[Glyn James]]

'''1970s:'''
*[[Alan Suddick]]
*[[Mickey Walsh]]
*[[Tommy Hutchison]]
*[[John Burridge]]
*[[Mickey Burns]]

'''1980s:'''
*[[Paul Stewart (footballer)|Paul Stewart]]
*[[Alan Wright]]
*[[Eamon O'Keefe]]
*[[Andy Garner]]
*[[Mike Davies (footballer)|Mike Davies]]

'''1990s:'''
*[[Trevor Sinclair]]
*[[Dave Bamber]]
*[[Tony Ellis]]
*[[Andy Morrison]]
*[[Phil Clarkson]]

==Non-playing staff==
:''As of 25 January, 2008.''<ref name="BFC080119">
{{cite journal
| title = Who's Who
| journal = BFC the official matchday programme, 2007–08
| volume =
| issue = Blackpool vs Ipswich Town
| pages = 3
| publisher = Blackpool F.C.
| date = [[2008-01-19]]
| accessdate = 2008-01-27}}</ref>

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Role
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|Latvia}} [[Valeri Belokon]] || President
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Karl S. Oyston|Karl Oyston]] || Chairman
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Owen Oyston]] || Director
|-
| {{flagicon|Latvia}} Normund Malnacs || Director
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} Gavin Steele || Director
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} Matt Williams || Club secretary
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Simon Grayson]] || First-team manager
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Tony Parkes]] || Assistant manager
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Steven Thompson (English footballer)|Steve Thompson]] || First-team coach
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Peter Fox (footballer)|Peter Fox]] || Goalkeeping coach
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} Steve Thompson|| Reserve-team coach
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Gary Parkinson]] || Youth-team coach
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Phil Horner]] || Physiotherapist
|-
|}

==Managers past and present==

[[Image:BFC managers by years of service.jpg|thumb|right|A pie chart displaying Blackpool's managers (in chronological order clockwise) and their years of service to the club. <small>Note: [[caretaker-manager]]s have been omitted; multiple terms have been combined</small>]]

There have been 28 different managers of Blackpool. The longest-serving manager was [[Joe Smith (football manager)|Joe Smith]] (23 years). The club has, on average, appointed a new manager every 3.6 years.

:''The statistics in the table below account for Football League games only.''

:''Updated: 27 September, 2008

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|From
!bgcolor=silver|To
!bgcolor=silver|Games
!bgcolor=silver|Won
!bgcolor=silver|Drawn
!bgcolor=silver|Lost
!bgcolor=silver|Win%
!bgcolor=silver|Honours
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| ''No manager'' || 1896 || 1903 || 196 || 63 || 38 || 95 || 32.14 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Tom Barcroft]]{{fn|1}} (secretary-manager) || 1903 || 1909 || 220 || 61 || 55 || 104 || 27.73 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Jack Cox]]{{fn|1}} ([[player-manager]]) || 1909 || 1911 || 76 || 30 || 18 || 28 || 39.47 ||
|-
| ''No manager'' || 1911 || 1915 || 152 || 48 || 35 || 69 || 31.58 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Bill Norman (football manager)|Bill Norman]]{{fn|2}} || c. 1 August, 1918 || c. 31 May, 1923 || 168 || 74 || 36 || 58 || 44.05 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Major Frank Buckley]] || 1 July, 1923 || c. 31 May, 1927 || 168 || 67 || 41 || 60 || 39.88 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Sydney Beaumont]] || c. 1 August, 1927 || c. 31 May, 1928 || 42 || 13 || 8 || 21 || 30.95 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Harry Evans]] (honorary manager) || c. 1 August, 1928 || c. 31 May, 1933 || 210 || 83 || 35 || 92 || 39.52 || [[Football League Second Division|Division Two]] championship ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1929-30|1929–30]])
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Sandy MacFarlane]] || 1 July, 1933 || 31 July, 1935 || 84 || 36 || 24 || 24 || 42.86 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Joe Smith (footballer)|Joe Smith]] || c. 1 August, 1935 || 30 April, 1958 || 714 || 306 || 164 || 244 || 42.86 || Promotion to [[Football League Division One|Division One]] ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1936-37|1936–37]]), [[FA Cup Final|FA Cup]] ([[1953 FA Cup Final|1953]])
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Ron Suart]]{{fn|1}} || 1 May, 1958 || 1 February, 1967 || 363 || 116 || 91 || 156 || 31.96 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Stan Mortensen]]{{fn|1}} || 1 February, 1967 || 30 April, 1969 || 99 || 40 || 27 || 32 || 40.40 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Les Shannon]] || 1 May, 1969 || 26 October, 1970 || 56 || 22 || 17 || 17 || 39.29 || Promotion to Division One ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1969-70|1969–70]])
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Jimmy Meadows]] ([[caretaker-manager]]) || 26 October, 1970 || 20 December, 1970 || 8 || 1 || 1 || 6 || 12.50 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Bob Stokoe]] || 20 December, 1970 || 23 November, 1972 || 80 || 28 || 24 || 28 || 35.00 || [[Anglo-Italian Cup]] ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1970-71|1971]])
|-
| ''No manager'' || 23 November, 1972 || 1 January, 1973 || 7 || 4 || 0 || 3 || 57.14 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Harry Potts]] || 1 January, 1973 || 5 May, 1976 || 143 || 52 || 47 || 44 || 36.36 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Allan Brown]]{{fn|1}} || 5 May, 1976|| 6 February, 1978 || 69 || 28 || 23 || 18 || 40.58 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| ''No manager'' || 6 February, 1978 || 7 March, 1978 || 2 || 0 || 1 || 1 || 00.00 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Jimmy Meadows]] (caretaker-manager) (second time) || 7 March, 1978 || 20 May, 1978 || 13 || 1 || 6 || 6 || 07.69 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Bob Stokoe]] (second time) || 20 May, 1978 || 17 August, 1979 || 46 || 18 || 9 || 19 || 39.13 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Stan Ternent]] || 19 September, 1979 || 1 February, 1980 || 29 || 9 || 7 || 13 || 31.03 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Alan Ball, Jr.|Alan Ball]]{{fn|1}} || February 1980 || 28 February, 1981 || 51 || 13 || 14 || 24 || 25.49 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Allan Brown]]{{fn|1}} (second time) || 1 March, 1981 || 31 May, 1982 || 58 || 17 || 17 || 24 || 29.31 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Sam Ellis]] || 1 June, 1982 || 30 April, 1989 || 317 || 118 || 89 || 110 || 37.22 || Promotion to [[Football League Third Division|Division Three]] ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1984-85|1984–85]])
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Jimmy Mullen (footballer born 1952)|Jimmy Mullen]] (caretaker-manager) || 30 April, 1989|| 20 May, 1990 || 5 || 4 || 1 || 0 || 80.00 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Jimmy Mullen (footballer born 1952)|Jimmy Mullen]] || 20 May, 1989|| 30 April, 1990 || 45 || 10 || 16 || 19 || 22.22 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Tom White (Scottish footballer)|Tom White]]{{fn|1}} (caretaker-manager) || 30 April, 1990 || 11 June, 1990 || 1 || 0 || 0 || 1 || 00.00 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Graham Carr]] || 11 June, 1990 || 30 November, 1990 || 16 || 5 || 3 || 8 || 31.25 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Billy Ayre]] || 30 November, 1990 || 10 June, 1994 || 164 || 68 || 37 || 59 || 41.46 || Promotion to (new) Division Two ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1991-92|1991–92]])
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Sam Allardyce]] || 19 July, 1994 || 29 May, 1996 || 92 || 41 || 23 || 28 || 44.57 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Gary Megson]] || 5 July, 1996 || 1 July, 1997 || 46 || 18 || 15 || 13 || 39.13 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|Northern Ireland}} [[Nigel Worthington]]{{fn|1}} || 8 July 1997 || 23 December, 1999 || 113 || 34 || 32 || 47 || 30.09 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Steve McMahon]] || 7 January, 2000 || 6 June, 2004 || 209 || 72 || 54 || 83 || 34.45 || Promotion to Division Two ([[Blackpool F.C. season 2000-01|2000–01]]), [[Football League Trophy|League Trophy]] ([[Blackpool F.C. season 2001-02|2002]] and [[Blackpool F.C. season 2003-04|2004]])
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|Scotland}} [[Colin Hendry]]{{fn|1}} || 7 June, 2004 || 10 November, 2005 || 62 || 18 || 19 || 25 || 29.03 ||
|-
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Simon Grayson]]{{fn|1}} (caretaker-manager) || 10 November, 2005 || 5 June, 2006 || 30 || 9 || 10 || 11 || 30.00 ||
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| {{flagicon|England}} [[Simon Grayson]]{{fn|1}} || 5 August, 2006 || present || 100 || 39 || 31 || 30 || 39 || Promotion to [[Football League Championship|The Championship]] ([[Blackpool F.C. season 2006-07|2006–07]])
|-
| '''Totals''' || || || '''4,254''' || '''1,566''' || '''1,068''' || '''1,620''' || '''36.81''' ||
|}

{{fnb|1}} – Also played for Blackpool<br>
{{fnb|2}} – Norman was the club's first full-time manager

==Honours==
===League===
*'''Championships (1)''':
**[[Football League Second Division|Division Two]] ([[Blackpool F.C. season 1929-30|1929–30]])

*'''Automatic promotions (3)''':
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 1936-37|1936–37]] (Division Two to [[Football League First Division|Division One]])
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 1969-70|1969–70]] (Division Two to Division One)
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 1984-85|1984–85]] ([[Football League Division Four|Division Four]] to [[Football League Division Three|Division Three]])

*'''Promotions via play-offs (3)''':
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 1991-92|1991–92]] (Division Four)
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 2000-01|2000–01]] (Division Three)
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 2006-07|2006–07]] ([[Football League One|League One]])

===Cups===
*'''[[FA Cup]] (1)''':
**[[1953 FA Cup Final|1953]]
*'''[[Anglo-Italian Cup]] (1)''':
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 1970-71|1971]]
*'''[[Football League Trophy]] (2)''':
**[[Blackpool F.C. season 2001-02|2002]], [[Blackpool F.C. season 2003-04|2004]]
*'''[[Football League War Cup|League War Cup]] (1)''':
**1943
*'''[[Lancashire Senior Cup]] (6)''':
**1936, 1937, 1954, 1994, 1995, 1996
*'''[[Lancashire Junior Cup]] (2)''':
**1888, 1891

==Shirts and sponsors==
Blackpool first began wearing tangerine for the [[Blackpool F.C. season 1923-24|1923–24]] season, after a recommendation from referee Albert Hargreaves, who officiated a [[Netherlands national football team|Holland]]–[[Belgium national football team|Belgium]] international match and was impressed by the Dutchmen's colours.<ref name="Calley p.18">Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992'', p. 18</ref>

Before changing to tangerine permanently, the team tried several different colours: blue-and-white striped shirts in the 1890s; a mixture of red or white shirts at the turn of the twentieth century; and even red, yellow and black during [[World War I]]. After the war, they wore all-white. The board introduced another change in 1934 when the team appeared in alternating dark- and light-blue stripes (which have been reintroduced as the club's away shirt several times since the mid-1990s), but they bowed to public pressure in 1939 and settled on tangerine.<ref name="Calley p.18">Calley, Roy (1992). ''Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992'', p. 18</ref>

[[Image:Blackpool home shirt 1992-93.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Lytham St Annes]]-based energy-conservation company, Inenco, sponsored Blackpool for three seasons in the early 1990s.]]

Below is a list of Blackpool's shirt sponsors:

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Sponsor(s)
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1979 – 1981 || Easywear
|-
| 1981 – 1982 || ''None''
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1982 – 1983 || Pembroke Hotel
|-
| 1983 – 1984 || ''None''
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1984 – 1985 || JK Brown
|-
| 1985 – 1986 || ''None''
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1986 – 1988 || Harry Feeney Autos
|-
| 1988 – 1990 || Bass
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1990 – 1991 || Vaux
|-
| 1991 – 1994 || Inenco
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1994 – 1997 || Rebecca's Jewellers of Southport
|-
| 1997 – 2001 || Telewest
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 2001 – 2003 || Electricity Direct
|-
| 2003 – 2004 || Life Repair Group
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 2004 – 2005 || Pricebusters
|-
| 2005 – 2007 || Pointbetgames.com (home and away); Kimmel Lager (third)
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 2007 – 2008 || Floors-2-Go
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 2008 – 2009 || Carbrini Sportswear
|}

Back-of-shirt sponsors:

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Sponsor(s)
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 2005 – 2008 || Glyn Jones Estate Agents (home); JMB Properties, LTD. (away)
|}

Shorts sponsors:

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Years
!bgcolor=silver|Sponsor(s)
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 2005 – 2007 || Derek Woodman BMW (home); Derek Woodman Mini (away)
|-
| 2007 – 2008 || Blackpool Leisure
|}

<small>[http://www.historicalkits.co.uk/Blackpool/Blackpool.htm Source]</small>

==Matchday programmes==
Blackpool's home-game matchday programmes have been given several titles over the years. Below is a list of their titles, if any, and their prices.

{{incompletelist}}

{| class="toccolours"
!bgcolor=silver|Era
!bgcolor=silver|Name
!bgcolor=silver|Price
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| Early 1970s || ''Blackpool Football Club'' || one [[Shilling (British coin)|shilling]]
|-
| Circa 1972 || ''The Seasiders'' || 7 [[pence]] (75th anniversary season of their debut in the [[Football League]])
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| Mid-1970s || ''Tangerine News'' || 8 pence
|-
| Circa 1976 || ''The Seasider'' || 15 pence
|-bgcolor=#eeeeee
| 1980s || ''Seasiders Scene'' || 20 pence
|-
| 1990s || '''Pool Review '' || [[Pound sterling|£]]1.10
|}

==See also==
*[[West Lancashire derby]]

== Notes ==
{{reflist|2}}

==References==
*{{cite book | first=Roy | last=Calley| coauthors= | title=[[Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992]] | publisher=Breedon Books Sport | location= | year=1992 | editor= | id=ISBN 1-873626-07-X}}


== External links ==
* [http://www.blackpoolfc.co.uk Official site]
* BBC Sport:
: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/b/blackpool/fixtures/default.stm Fixtures]
: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/b/blackpool/results/default.stm Results]
: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/b/blackpool/tables/default.stm Table]
: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/b/blackpool/club_stats/default.stm Statistics]
* [http://blackpool.rivals.net Blackpool Rivals]
* [http://www.blackpool.vitalfootball.co.uk Blackpool.VitalFootball]
* [http://www.btinternet.com/~stephen.yarwood/vftt.htm View from the Tower]
{{s-start}}
{{succession box |
before=[[Port Vale F.C.|Port Vale]] |
title=[[Football League Trophy]] Winners|
years=2001–02 |
after=[[Bristol City F.C.|Bristol City]]
}}
{{succession box |
before=[[Bristol City F.C.|Bristol City]] |
title=[[Football League Trophy]] Winners|
years=2003–04 |
after=[[Wrexham F.C.|Wrexham]]
}}
{{end}}


{{fb start}}
{{Blackpool F.C.}}
{{Football League Championship teamlist}}
{{English football league system cells | level = 2 | promotion = [[FA Premier League]] | relegation = [[Football League One]]}}
{{Football in England table cells}}
{{fb end}}


[[Category:Blackpool F.C.| ]]
[[Category:American Mafia| ]]
[[Category:English football clubs]]
[[Category:Sport in Lancashire]]
[[Category:Football (soccer) clubs established in 1887]]
[[Category:Football League clubs]]
[[Category:FA Cup winners]]


[[ca:Blackpool Football Club]]
[[de:La Cosa Nostra]]
[[fr:Mafia italo-américaine]]
[[da:Blackpool F.C.]]
[[de:FC Blackpool]]
[[nl:Amerikaanse maffia]]
[[fi:Yhdysvaltain mafia]]
[[el:Μπλάκπουλ Φ.Κ.]]
[[es:Blackpool Football Club]]
[[fr:Blackpool Football Club]]
[[ko:블랙풀 FC]]
[[id:Blackpool F.C.]]
[[it:Blackpool F.C.]]
[[he:מועדון הכדורגל בלקפול]]
[[lb:Blackpool FC]]
[[lt:Blackpool FC]]
[[hu:Blackpool FC]]
[[nl:Blackpool FC]]
[[ja:ブラックプールFC]]
[[no:Blackpool FC]]
[[pl:Blackpool F.C.]]
[[pt:Blackpool Football Club]]
[[simple:Blackpool F.C.]]
[[fi:Blackpool FC]]
[[sv:Blackpool FC]]
[[zh:黑池足球俱乐部]]

Revision as of 22:20, 10 October 2008

The American Mafia (also known as American Cosa Nostra or Italian-American Mafia) is an Italian-American criminal society and offshoot of the Sicilian Mafia. It emerged on the East Coast of the United States during the late 19th century following waves of Sicilian and Southern Italian emigration (see also Italian diaspora). In North America, the Mafia often refers to Italian organized crime in general, rather than just traditional Sicilian organized crime. For example the five main Mafia families include Gambino, Lucchese, Genovese, Bonanno and Colombo crime families with only Italian-American made members. The Italian-American Mafia continues to dominate organized crime in the U.S. It uses this status to maintain control over much of Chicago, Detroit, Boston, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Providence, New Jersey and New York City's organized criminal activity, as well as criminal activity in other cities in the Northeast and across the country, such as Las Vegas, New Orleans, St. Louis, Miami, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Seattle, Kansas City and many others.

The Italian-American Mafia, specifically the Five Families of New York, has its roots in the Sicilian Mafia, but has been a separate organization in the United States for many years. Today, the Italian American Mafia cooperates in various criminal activities with different Italian organized crime groups other than just the Sicilian Mafia, such as Camorra and Ndrangheta, which are headquartered in Italy. In 1986, according to government reports, it was estimated that there are 1,700 members of "Cosa Nostra" and thousands of associate members. Reports also are said to include the Italian-American Mafia as the largest organized crime group in the United States and continues to hold dominance over the National Crime Syndicate, despite the increasing numbers of street gangs and other organizations of neither Italian nor Sicilian ethnicity. Many members refer to the Italian Mafia as the "original Mafia", although it was neither the oldest criminal organization, nor the first to act in the U.S.

The Italian American Cosa Nostra is most active in the New York metropolitan area, Philadelphia, New England (see the Patriarca crime family), Detroit (see the Detroit Partnership), and Chicago (see the Chicago Outfit), but there are actually around 26 Cosa Nostra family cities around the United States, with many more offshoot and splinter groups as well as associates in other cities.[1].

History

Origins: The Black Hand

Mafia groups in the United States first became influential in the New York City area, gradually progressing from small neighborhood operations in poor Italian ghettos to citywide and eventually international organizations. The American Mafia started with La Mano Nera, "The Black Hand", extorting Italians (and other immigrants) around New York city. Black Hand gangsters would threaten them by mail if their extortion demands were not met. The threats were sometimes marked with a hand-print in black ink at the bottom of the page. As more Sicilian gangsters immigrated to the U.S., they expanded their criminal activities from extortion to loan-sharking, prostitution, drugs and alcohol, robbery, kidnapping, and murder. Many poor Italian immigrants embraced the Mafia as a possible way of gaining power and rising out of the poverty and anti-Italianism they experienced in America.

Giuseppe Esposito was the first known Sicilian Mafia member to emigrate to the United States. He and six other Sicilians fled to New York after murdering eleven wealthy landowners as well as the chancellor and a vice chancellor of a Sicilian province. He was arrested in New Orleans in 1881 and extradited to Italy.

New Orleans was also the site of the first Mafia incident in the United States that received both national and international attention. On October 15 1890, New Orleans Police Superintendent David Hennessey was murdered execution-style. It is still unclear whether Italian immigrants actually killed him or whether it was a frame-up against the feated underclass immigrants. Hundreds of Sicilians were arrested on mostly baseless charges, and nineteen were eventually indicted for the murder. An acquittal followed, with rumors of bribed and intimidated witnesses. The outraged citizens of New Orleans organized a lynch mob and proceeded to kill eleven of the nineteen defendants. Two were hanged, nine were shot, and the remaining eight escaped. The lynching was the largest mass lynching in American history.[2].

In the 1910s and 1920s in New York City, the Sicilian Mafia developed into the Five Points Gang. In Chicago, the 19th Ward, which was an Italian neighborhood, became known as the "Bloody Nineteenth" due to the frequent violence in the ward, mostly as a result of Mafia activity, feuds, and vendettas.

The rising: the Prohibition

Charles "Lucky" Luciano, one of the most infamous American bosses

Mafia activities were restricted until 1920, when they exploded because of the introduction of the prohibition. Al Capone's Syndicate in the 1920s ruled Chicago.

By the end of the 1920s, two factions of organized crime had emerged, causing the Castellamarese war for control of organized crime in New York City. With the murder of Joseph Masseria, the leader of one of the factions, the war ended uniting the two sides back into one organization now dubbed Cosa Nostra. Salvatore Maranzano, the first leader of American Mafia, was himself murdered within six months and Charles "Lucky" Luciano became the new leader. Maranzano had established the code of conduct for the organization, set up the "family" divisions and structure, and established procedures for resolving disputes. Luciano set up the "Commission" to rule their activities. The Commission included bosses from six or seven families.

Post World War II

In 1951, a U.S. Senate Committee, led by Democratic Tennessee Senator Estes Kefauver, determined that a "sinister criminal organization", with ties to the USSR, also known as the Mafia operated around the United States. There is, however, no evidence that the USSR worked with the American Mafia.

In 1957, the New York State Police uncovered a meeting of major American Cosa Nostra figures from around the country in the small upstate New York town of Apalachin. This gathering has become known as the Apalachin Conference. Many of the attendees were arrested and this event was the catalyst that changed the way law enforcement battles organized crime.

In 1963, Joseph Valachi became the first American Cosa Nostra member to provide a detailed look at the inside of the organization. Having been recruited by FBI Special Agents, and testifying before the US Senate McClellan Committee, Valachi exposed the name, structure, power bases, codes, swearing-in ceremony, and members of this organization. All of this had been secret up to this point.

Today, Cosa Nostra is involved in a broad spectrum of illegal activities. These include murder, extortion, drug trafficking, corruption of public officials, gambling, infiltration of legitimate businesses, labor racketeering, loan sharking, prostitution, pornography, tax fraud schemes, and most notably today, stock manipulation schemes.

Union corruption

In the mid-20th century, the Mafia was reputed to have infiltrated many labor unions in the United States, notably the Teamsters, whose president Jimmy Hoffa disappeared and is widely believed to have been murdered by Mateo Bari, enforcer for the Cleveland crime family. In the 1980s, the United States federal government made a determined effort to remove Mafia influence from labor unions.

Structure

The Mafia had eventually expanded to twenty-six crime families nationwide in the major cities of the United States, with the center of organized crime based in New York and its surrounding areas. After many turf wars, the Five Families ended up dominating New York, named after prominent early members: the Bonanno family, the Colombo family, the Gambino family, the Genovese family, and the Lucchese family. These families held underground conferences with other mafia notables like Joe Porrello from Cleveland, and other gang leaders, such as Al Capone.

  • Boss—The head of the family, usually reigning as a dictator, sometimes called the don or "godfather". The Boss receives a cut of every operation taken on by every member of his family. Depending on the family, the Boss may be chosen by a vote from the Caporegimes of the family. In the event of a tie, the Underboss(es) must vote. In the past, all the members of a family voted on the Boss, but by the late 1950s, any gathering such as that usually attracted too much attention.[3]
  • Underboss—The Underboss, usually appointed by the Boss, is the second in command of the family. The Underboss is in charge of all of the Capos, who are controlled by the Boss. The Underboss is usually first in line to become Acting Boss if the Boss is imprisoned or dies. There are normally no more than two or three Underbosses in a family, if there's more than one at all.
  • Consigliere—The Consigliere is an advisor to the family and sometimes seen as the Boss's "right-hand man". They are often low profile gangsters that can be trusted. They are used as a mediator of disputes or representatives or aides in meetings with other families. They often keep the family looking as legitimate as possible and are sometimes, themselves, legitimate apart from some minor gambling or loan sharking. Some do not have crews of their own, but still wield great power in the family. They are also often the liaison between the Don and important 'bought' figures, such as politicians or Judges.
  • Caporegime (or Capo)—A Capo (sometimes called a Captain) is in charge of a crew. There are usually four to six crews in each family, possibly even seven to nine crews, each one consisting of up to ten Soldiers. Capos run their own small family but must follow the limitations and guidelines created by the Boss, as well as pay him his cut of their profits. Capos are nominated by the Underboss, but typically chosen by the Boss himself.
  • Soldier—Soldiers are members of the family, and can only be of Italian background (although a few families, including the Gambinos, require men to be of only half Italian descent on their father's side). Soldiers start as Associates that have proven themselves. When the books are open, meaning that there is an open spot in the family, a Capo (or several Capos) may recommend an up-and-coming Associate to be a new member. In the case that there is only one slot and multiple recommendations, the Boss will decide. The new member usually becomes part of the Capo's crew that recommended him. Some soldiers work by themselves, earning money for the Family alone though most are part of crews. Sometimes a soldier will be called a button man, because, in theory, when a capo presses a button, someone dies. They are also called made men, who have made their bones, by committing a murder in front of Mafia witnesses or committed a murder by orders from a high member of the family (a Capo, an Underboss, a Consigliere or Boss). This ensures the soldier's reliability: he will never testify against a man who could testify against him. Being made is the beginning but not the end of a Mafia career. (The definitions of made man and making one's bones are inferred: Most books on the Mafia—fiction or nonfiction—assume these terms but never define them.) [citation needed]
  • Associate—An Associate is not a member of the mob, and an Associate's role is more similar to that of an errand boy. They are usually a go-between or sometimes deal in drugs to keep the heat off the actual members, or they are people the family does business with (restaurant owners, etc.). In other cases, an associate might be a corrupt labor union delegate or businessman.[4] Non-Italians will never go any further than this. However, occasionally an associate will become powerful within his own family, for example Joe Watts, a close associate of John Gotti.

The American Mafia's organizational structure and system of control were created by Salvatore Maranzano (who became the first "capo di tutti capi" in the US, though he was killed after holding the position for only six months, by Lucky Luciano).

Most recently there have been two new positions in the family leadership: the family messenger and Street Boss. These positions were created by former Genovese leader Vincent Gigante.

Each faction was headed by a caporegime, who reported to the boss. When the boss made a decision, he never issued orders directly to the soldiers who would carry it out, but instead passed instructions down through the chain of command. In this way, the higher levels of the organization were effectively insulated from incrimination if a lower level member should be captured by law enforcement. This structure is depicted in Mario Puzo's famous novel The Godfather. In The Godfather: Part II, These links are called "buffers": they provide what the intelligence community calls plausible deniability.

Rituals

The initiation ritual emerged from various sources, such as Roman Catholic confraternities and Masonic Lodges in mid-nineteenth century Sicily[5] and has hardly changed to this day. The Chief of Police of Palermo in 1875 reported that the man of honor to be initiated would be led into the presence of a group of bosses and underbosses. One of these men would prick the initiate's arm or hand and tell him to smear the blood onto a sacred image, usually a saint. The oath of loyalty would be taken as the image was burned and scattered, thus symbolising the annihilation of traitors. This was confirmed by the first pentito, Tommaso Buscetta.

A hit, or assassination, of a "made" man had to be preapproved by the leadership of his family, or retaliatory hits would be made, possibly inciting a war. In a state of war, families would go to the mattresses — rent vacant apartments and have a number of soldiers sleeping on mattresses on the floor in shifts, with the others ready at the windows to fire at members of rival families.

Symbolism in murders

  • There are many symbolic deeds done during certain gangland executions that are requested by the don. For allowing Joseph Pistone into the Bonanno crime family caporegime Dominick Napolitano had his hands severed. Later during the attempted murder of Joseph Ianuzzi this is what Tommy Agro attempted to do.
  • As in the murder of Lucchese crime family soldier Bruno Facciolo, a dead canary was stuffed inside his mouth after he was shot to death.
  • A mobster who was thought to be skimming from gambling profits was shot dead and found with a twenty-dollar bill shoved into his rectum.
  • An associate gave a powerful capo in the Colombo crime family the middle finger and although his life was spared, his middle fingers were severed by a dull knife and sent to him preserved in vinegar in a hollowed out monkey's head.

American Mafia Families by city

Note that the Mafia has members, associates, and families in others cities as well. The organization is not limited to these cities. Many of these families have influence in other cities also.

Prominent Italian American mafiosi

See also: List of Italian American mobsters.

Law enforcement in the United States

Joint projects of the U.S. government and the Mafia

On very rare occasions, the United States government has conspired with organized crime figures to assassinate foreign heads of state. In August 1960, Colonel Sheffield Edwards, director of the CIA's Office of Security, proposed the assassination of Cuban head of state Fidel Castro by mafia assassins. Between August 1960 and April 1961, the CIA, without the help of the Mafia (who had taken the money and done nothing), pursued a series of plots to poison or shoot Castro (CIA, Inspector General's Report on Efforts to Assassinate Fidel Castro, p. 3, 14). Those allegedly involved included Sam Giancana, Carlos Marcello, Santo Trafficante, Jr., and John Roselli.

Law Enforcement and the Mafia

In several Mafia families, killing a state authority is forbidden due to the possibility of extreme police retaliation. In some rare strict cases, conspiring to commit such a murder is punishable by death. The Jewish mobster Dutch Schultz was reportedly killed by his Italian peers out of fear that he would carry out a plan to kill New York City prosecutor Thomas Dewey. The Mafia did carry out hits on law enforcement in its earlier history. New York police officer Joe Petrosino was shot by Sicilian mobsters while on duty in Sicily. A statue of him was later erected across the street from a Luchhese hangout.[6]

The RICO Act of the 1960s made it a crime to belong to an organization that performed illegal acts, and it created programs such as the witness protection program. The Act only began to come into frequent use during the late 1970's and early 1980's. Charges of racketeering convicted scores of mobsters including 2 of New York's Godfathers (Anthony Corallo and Carmine Persico) during the Commission Case in 1985 (Although one of the convicted Anthony 'Fat Tony' Salerno was thought of as the Genovese Godfather he was only the Underboss). The Act continued to be used to great effect up to the end of the 20th century and hurt the Mob severely. The establishment of the United States Organized Crime Strike Force made it more possible to find and prosecute the Mafia.

The Strike Force was established in the 1960s through a joint congressional effort led by Robert Kennedy. It was under the Office of the Inspector General in the Department of Labor. It was later disbanded at the national level, but continues at the state and local level today. It was responsible for investigating and eventually helping to bring down high level Mafiosos such as Joseph Aiuppa of the Chicago Outfit, Anthony Salerno of the Genovese Family of New York and Paul Castellano of the Gambino Family. Also, the Strike Force took down and cleaned up much of the Organized Crime in The Teamsters across the country.

However, the Mafia is still the dominant organized crime group in the United States, despite the success of RICO. According to Selwyn Raab, author of Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires, after 9/11 the FBI has redirected most of its attention to finding terrorists.

See also

In Film

References

  1. ^ Rick Porrello's AmericanMafia.com - 26 Mafia Families and Their Cities
  2. ^ Welcome to the Best of New Orleans! Blake Pontchartrain 03 02 04
  3. ^ Capeci, Jerry. The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia. Indianapolis: Alpha Books, 2002
  4. ^ Capeci, Jerry. The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia. Indianapolis: Alpha Books, 2002
  5. ^ "Mafia's arcane rituals, and much of the organization's structure, were based largely on those of the Catholic confraternities and even Freemasonry, colored by Sicilian familial traditions and even certain customs associated with military-religious orders of chivalry like the Order of Malta." The Mafia from bestofsicily.com
  6. ^ Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires

Sources

  • Arlacchi, Pino (1988). Mafia Business. The Mafia Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Oxford: Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-285197-7
  • Chubb, Judith (1989). The Mafia and Politics, Cornell Studies in International Affairs, Occasional Papers No. 23.
  • Servadio, Gaia (1976), Mafioso. A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day, London: Secker & Warburg ISBN 0-436-44700-2

External links