My understanding was that the "Northsiders" thing in the prison system was basically done by the early 80s, as the Royals joined the Folks and rode with them inside, and the GLs the People, etc. May have depended on the joint, though, as from what I know the Northsiders thing in the 70s was mainly based in Menard and some of the medium-security prisons, while the Folks and People leadership formed in Stateville ("the White House"). For me, if it was as late as the 90s and a guy went into the joint and wasn't riding under People or Folks, his organization on the outside wasn't really a "gang" (with a couple of notable exceptions of holdout "renegade" organizations like the Almighty Saints in Back of the Yards).SonnyC wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2023 10:47 pmOne of their members beat another kid to death in Addison in the early '90s as well. Kid went to jail and a connected relative hooked him up with the Northsiders for protection. He got a reduced sentence in a plea deal about 5 years later.Patrickgold wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2023 12:56 pmItalian Playboys were big at one time but we’re definitely not in the league of the hardcore gangs. I think they died out when they got into it with MLD. MLD shot up their houses in Addison and that was the end of the Italian Playboys.SonnyC wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2023 11:55 amYou had the "Italian Playboys" in Melrose Park and Addison in the '90s but to your point, they were the same as the gangs in the city.PolackTony wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2023 11:34 amWhite gang members, yes. White street gangs as such haven’t really existed in Chicagoland in some time, just historically white organizations like the Players and Notes who have had a mixed membership for decades now. Maybe there are some crews of white kids in the burbs who call themselves a name, but we wouldn’t consider that a real “gang” in Chicago.
Boyz in the Hood gang was an Elmwood Park gang and so were the Harlem Ave Boys. Gang culture has changed significantly since the 90s and is not what it use to be.
I don't know much about the history of the Italian Playboys, as they didn't have any presence in the city, but my impression was that they went back to at least the 70s if not the 60s. Down in Cicero and Berwyn, of course, you had Italian organizations like the Arch Dukes and Park Boys that started in the 60s, with the Players forming a bit later. Dukes were gone by the 80s, but the Park Boys (of which Mike Sarno was said to have been a member) were still active to a degree in the early 90s, though by then were riding under the Players as People and seem to have been more like a crew at that time than a real gang. The only organizations from the gangbanging golden age that survived until today there are of course the Players and the Noble Knights (whose membership back in the day was mainly Slavic and Italian) around the old Grant Works.
The Harlem Boys etc, to my understanding, were more like what in the city we used to call "party crews". In other cities, these would probably be thought of as "gangs", but in Chicago, we didn't consider them as such because even though they often adopted gang-like structures and symbolism, they typically didn't engage in hardcore criminal activities (apart from some fighting) and were ephemeral, lasting for only a few years without institutionalizing themselves and recruiting new generations of members.
Again, by the '90s, "white gangs" in Chicago as such were pretty much done, but not the phenomenon of hardcore white gangbangers. The white organizations that survived did so by adapting and recruiting large numbers of Latino members: the Notes, Players, Royals. At the same time, there were always many white members and even prominent leaders in the Latin gangs. For example, in the early 90s, the street boss of the Spanish Cobras was an Irish guy, Bradley C from Artesian and Potomac, one of the roughest Cobras sections; going back to the 70s, the Cobras were even said to have had former IRA members in their ranks (as a Puerto Rican organization, this may seem surprising, but the Puerto Rican independence movement had ties to the IRA and both nationalist movements had strong bases of support in Chicago in the 1970s). People who aren't from Chicago probably read "Latino gangs" and picture Chicano cholos in Texas or California or whatever, but Chicago was totally its own thing and the composition of gang memberships reflected the micro-demographics of each gang chapter.