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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,680 --> 00:00:02,040 (dog barks) 2 00:00:06,600 --> 00:00:09,680 SEAN BEAN:One gang has become synonymous with Birmingham 3 00:00:09,840 --> 00:00:11,400 in the 1900s. 4 00:00:14,840 --> 00:00:18,320 But were they really the smartly dressed, ruthless family 5 00:00:18,480 --> 00:00:20,120 we've all seen on screen? 6 00:00:23,200 --> 00:00:25,240 Or was the truth much more dangerous? 7 00:00:38,840 --> 00:00:42,040 This is the story of the real Peaky Blinders. 8 00:00:44,600 --> 00:00:45,720 (sombre music) 9 00:01:06,680 --> 00:01:09,000 - In 2013, 10 00:01:09,160 --> 00:01:12,680 an award-winning television series would burst onto our screens. 11 00:01:12,840 --> 00:01:16,080 But what was the real-life inspiration? 12 00:01:16,240 --> 00:01:21,400 Who were the real Peaky Blinders? And who was the real Tommy Shelby? 13 00:01:23,760 --> 00:01:27,280 - Birmingham in the 1860s through to the '70s 14 00:01:28,520 --> 00:01:32,560 was in the process of rapid and spectacular change. 15 00:01:32,720 --> 00:01:34,640 Its population was exploding: 16 00:01:34,800 --> 00:01:37,440 it was approaching over 400,000 by 1871. 17 00:01:37,600 --> 00:01:40,600 We made anything that the world wanted. 18 00:01:40,760 --> 00:01:44,480 It was buttons, it was guns, it was jewellery, it was brassware, 19 00:01:44,640 --> 00:01:47,640 it was pens. Tell us what you wanted, we could make it. 20 00:01:47,800 --> 00:01:49,800 - Birmingham at the turn of the century 21 00:01:49,960 --> 00:01:51,600 is really a city of two halves. 22 00:01:51,760 --> 00:01:55,000 On the one hand, it's doing really well 23 00:01:55,160 --> 00:01:57,800 in relation to other industrial cities of the Midlands 24 00:01:57,960 --> 00:01:59,960 and the North. However, 25 00:02:00,120 --> 00:02:02,520 that wealth comes at the expense of the people 26 00:02:02,680 --> 00:02:05,160 who labour for it, the working class. 27 00:02:05,320 --> 00:02:06,920 Their lives are very different. 28 00:02:07,080 --> 00:02:10,880 - There was hundreds, thousands of people flooding to the area 29 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:15,200 for work, to improve their lot for themselves and their families. 30 00:02:15,360 --> 00:02:18,840 There was lots of deprivation, people coming in 31 00:02:19,000 --> 00:02:21,960 for quite poorly paid manual labour jobs 32 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:23,680 and struggling to make ends meet. 33 00:02:25,160 --> 00:02:28,280 BEAN: The living conditions for the poor were horrendous. 34 00:02:28,440 --> 00:02:33,200 Thousands of hard-working families crowded into back-to-back houses, 35 00:02:33,360 --> 00:02:37,040 three, maybe four families to one house, 36 00:02:37,200 --> 00:02:40,120 sharing one communal toilet outside. 37 00:02:40,280 --> 00:02:45,520 - They were entombed almost in this cycle of poverty. 38 00:02:45,680 --> 00:02:50,120 It was a battle every day against King Poverty, 39 00:02:50,280 --> 00:02:53,480 and that king was relentless and he was uncaring. 40 00:02:53,640 --> 00:02:55,840 - They are expected to labour 41 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:58,600 for the prosperity of the British Empire 42 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:00,960 until eventually they die. 43 00:03:02,040 --> 00:03:05,400 BEAN: Some aspects of human nature don’t seem to change 44 00:03:05,560 --> 00:03:07,320 from one age to the next. 45 00:03:07,480 --> 00:03:10,840 When people are given no opportunity, no outlet, 46 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:16,040 no escape from the situation, you will only ever get one result: 47 00:03:16,200 --> 00:03:17,760 violence. 48 00:03:17,920 --> 00:03:21,720 - Fighting was almost a leisure activity for some men. 49 00:03:21,880 --> 00:03:25,120 They’re living in poverty, they own nothing. 50 00:03:25,280 --> 00:03:27,240 They are looked down upon, disparaged. 51 00:03:27,400 --> 00:03:30,920 But the one thing that they’ve got is their fighting prowess. 52 00:03:31,080 --> 00:03:32,840 So in a poorer street, 53 00:03:33,000 --> 00:03:36,640 those men that were regarded as tough gained status. 54 00:03:36,800 --> 00:03:38,480 It was something that they had. 55 00:03:42,240 --> 00:03:45,280 BEAN: Under these circumstances it’s pretty clear 56 00:03:45,440 --> 00:03:48,520 that violence wasn’t just a means of survival, 57 00:03:48,680 --> 00:03:51,560 it was a way of expressing the frustrations 58 00:03:51,720 --> 00:03:53,640 and discontent with their lives. 59 00:03:53,800 --> 00:03:57,080 - They’re called 'sloggers’ from 1872 because they slog. 60 00:03:58,440 --> 00:04:01,120 And they are the worst gangs for violence 61 00:04:01,280 --> 00:04:05,840 and the most notorious gangs in Birmingham from late 1860s 62 00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:07,640 to the turn of the 20th century. 63 00:04:07,800 --> 00:04:10,360 - When you think about crime at that time, 64 00:04:10,520 --> 00:04:14,080 if we try to make sense of it with compassion, some of that crime 65 00:04:14,240 --> 00:04:17,080 would have in many ways seen to be out of necessity. 66 00:04:17,240 --> 00:04:20,600 So if you don’t have any food and want to keep your family alive, 67 00:04:20,760 --> 00:04:22,800 you’ll steal food for them. I think again, 68 00:04:22,960 --> 00:04:27,200 compassion for where some of that early criminal behaviour comes from. 69 00:04:31,040 --> 00:04:32,400 - It was a very violent time, 70 00:04:32,560 --> 00:04:35,080 and you can see lots of records 71 00:04:35,240 --> 00:04:37,760 and evidence of different weapons that would be used. 72 00:04:37,920 --> 00:04:40,320 They'd use anything they could get their hands on: 73 00:04:40,480 --> 00:04:44,760 steel toe-cap boots, belt buckles, any bits of brick or stones 74 00:04:44,920 --> 00:04:48,000 or anything they find on the floor, lots of evidence of assaults 75 00:04:48,160 --> 00:04:51,240 where objects and missiles have been thrown at another person. 76 00:04:51,400 --> 00:04:54,160 - Their main weapon is their belts. 77 00:04:54,320 --> 00:04:57,920 They wrap the belt round the wrist, 78 00:04:58,080 --> 00:05:01,280 they grab hold and make sure they’ve got it caught 79 00:05:01,440 --> 00:05:03,880 in the palm of the hand. And then they buckle it, 80 00:05:04,040 --> 00:05:06,400 leaving about eight inches, and then they slash, 81 00:05:06,560 --> 00:05:07,880 cause terrible injuries. 82 00:05:08,040 --> 00:05:11,320 They are not organised criminals, these are all hooligans. 83 00:05:14,880 --> 00:05:16,960 BEAN: If you’ve got to work six days a week 84 00:05:17,120 --> 00:05:19,360 from morning till night for pennies, 85 00:05:19,520 --> 00:05:23,080 and with no way out, violence is a language. 86 00:05:23,240 --> 00:05:25,520 It’s just the only way to be heard. 87 00:05:26,800 --> 00:05:29,760 But where do the Peaky Blinders fit into all this? 88 00:05:31,880 --> 00:05:33,520 Who were they? 89 00:05:33,680 --> 00:05:36,600 - The term 'peaky blinder' is a fashion statement. 90 00:05:36,760 --> 00:05:40,280 The Peaky Blinders are often called ‘The Bell-Bottom Crew.’ 91 00:05:40,440 --> 00:05:43,440 They wear bell-bottom trousers tight to the knee 92 00:05:43,600 --> 00:05:46,280 and then wide, 22 inches wide. 93 00:05:46,440 --> 00:05:50,320 And they have something like this scarf, called a daff, 94 00:05:50,480 --> 00:05:51,640 a silkish-type scarf. 95 00:05:51,800 --> 00:05:53,640 They're wearing a billycock. 96 00:05:53,800 --> 00:05:55,960 They have prison-cropped hair, almost bald, 97 00:05:56,120 --> 00:05:59,440 but they like a quiff. They like to show it off. 98 00:05:59,600 --> 00:06:04,000 So they steam the billycock and they make the brim 99 00:06:04,160 --> 00:06:06,640 into like a funnel, and they pull it over one eye. 100 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:09,320 Hence the brims blinding the eye. 101 00:06:09,480 --> 00:06:12,000 And when the flat cap comes in, 102 00:06:12,160 --> 00:06:15,560 all they do, they just pull the cap over the eye to blind it. 103 00:06:15,720 --> 00:06:18,280 So they’ve got a distinct fashion, 104 00:06:18,440 --> 00:06:21,000 and the first time that the term 'peaky blinder' is used 105 00:06:21,160 --> 00:06:23,040 in the press in Birmingham is March 1890. 106 00:06:23,200 --> 00:06:26,480 BEAN: The mythology surrounding the Peaky Blinders 107 00:06:26,640 --> 00:06:28,800 is that they kept razors in their caps, 108 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:31,800 and they used these as lethal weapons when required. 109 00:06:31,960 --> 00:06:35,840 - I don’t believe that any gangster ever had a razor blade 110 00:06:36,000 --> 00:06:39,120 in their cap, because it would be mentioned in the newspapers. 111 00:06:39,280 --> 00:06:41,240 I found no authoritative evidence 112 00:06:41,400 --> 00:06:43,520 that there were razor blades in caps. 113 00:06:46,920 --> 00:06:49,520 - An inoffensive chap called George Eastwood 114 00:06:49,680 --> 00:06:52,280 goes into the bar of the Rainbow pub 115 00:06:52,440 --> 00:06:55,640 on the corner of High Street, Bordsley and Adley Street, 116 00:06:55,800 --> 00:06:57,640 not far from the Bull Ring. 117 00:06:57,800 --> 00:07:00,960 He’s a teetotaller. Sadly, he’s picked the wrong night. 118 00:07:01,120 --> 00:07:02,920 He's drinking a ginger beer. 119 00:07:08,080 --> 00:07:11,760 And three hard men with an evil reputation come in, 120 00:07:11,920 --> 00:07:14,680 and they insult him for drinking a soft drink. 121 00:07:14,840 --> 00:07:18,080 And a chap called Thomas Mucklow, the captain of the gang... 122 00:07:20,200 --> 00:07:22,880 ..says “What you drinking that tak for?" He says, 123 00:07:23,040 --> 00:07:25,680 “Mind your own business, I can drink what I want." 124 00:07:43,520 --> 00:07:47,040 And a 14-year-old lad was a witness, 125 00:07:47,200 --> 00:07:51,480 and he said they shouted, “Give it to him hot, lads." 126 00:07:51,640 --> 00:07:54,640 Oh, poor George, they did give it to him hot. 127 00:08:04,480 --> 00:08:06,720 After the attack on George Eastwood, 128 00:08:06,880 --> 00:08:10,560 the next day there was an articl e in the newspaper reported on it, 129 00:08:10,720 --> 00:08:13,120 saying it was by the Peaky Blinder gang. 130 00:08:16,480 --> 00:08:21,160 - During the 1880s you get the rise of the sensationalist press, 131 00:08:21,320 --> 00:08:23,040 the kind of modern tabloid press, 132 00:08:23,200 --> 00:08:25,840 and the way in which the media reports on crime 133 00:08:26,000 --> 00:08:27,920 is completely different at this point: 134 00:08:28,080 --> 00:08:31,880 they have sensational headlines that are extremely eye-catching. 135 00:08:32,040 --> 00:08:34,760 The media is a really important part of 136 00:08:34,920 --> 00:08:37,880 the creation of a new criminal stereotype 137 00:08:38,040 --> 00:08:40,360 at the end of the 19th century. 138 00:08:41,320 --> 00:08:45,120 - So looking through the original newspaper articles, 139 00:08:45,280 --> 00:08:48,680 it would appear that there isn't one specific gang 140 00:08:48,840 --> 00:08:50,480 called the Peaky Blinders. 141 00:08:50,640 --> 00:08:54,920 Even judges start to refer to poor criminals 142 00:08:55,080 --> 00:08:56,960 as being of 'the Peaky class.' 143 00:08:57,120 --> 00:09:00,360 Any criminal involved in theft, gambling, assaults, 144 00:09:00,520 --> 00:09:04,760 attacking police officers, they’re all called Peaky Blinders. 145 00:09:04,920 --> 00:09:07,880 And among the Peaky class criminals, 146 00:09:08,040 --> 00:09:10,600 some of the very worst were the Sheldon brothers. 147 00:09:13,000 --> 00:09:16,480 Stephen Knight, the creator of the television series, 148 00:09:16,640 --> 00:09:20,200 has said that the spark for the Shelbys was the Sheldons. 149 00:09:22,040 --> 00:09:26,320 - The Sheldons had five brothers. Two of them were respectable. 150 00:09:26,480 --> 00:09:30,160 Three became three of the worst criminals 151 00:09:30,320 --> 00:09:34,400 and violent men in late Victorian and Edwardian Birmingham. 152 00:09:34,560 --> 00:09:35,640 John was the oldest. 153 00:09:35,800 --> 00:09:38,920 By 1881, when he was 15, 154 00:09:39,080 --> 00:09:43,000 he'd already got convictions and throughout the 1880s and '90s, 155 00:09:43,160 --> 00:09:47,560 he's a professional thief. He’s not a man to be messed with. 156 00:09:47,720 --> 00:09:51,800 He, on one occasion with a friend, is coming out of a pub 157 00:09:51,960 --> 00:09:55,720 and they'd taken a dislike to an Irish bloke, an old man, 158 00:09:55,880 --> 00:09:57,520 and they batter him in the street. 159 00:09:57,680 --> 00:10:00,400 He lives opposite with his daughter, the Irish bloke. 160 00:10:00,560 --> 00:10:03,720 His daughter comes over to try and stop them, pleading with them, 161 00:10:03,880 --> 00:10:06,480 "Please leave my father alone." Oh no, they don't stop. 162 00:10:06,640 --> 00:10:09,640 Sheldon grabs hold of the poor young woman by the hair, 163 00:10:09,800 --> 00:10:12,880 throws her to the ground, they drag her along, kicking her. 164 00:10:13,040 --> 00:10:14,720 That's the kind of man he was. 165 00:10:14,880 --> 00:10:16,560 The next oldest brother was Samuel. 166 00:10:18,080 --> 00:10:20,200 Only five foot one and a quarter. 167 00:10:20,360 --> 00:10:24,160 Despite his small size, he's a nasty, vicious man, 168 00:10:24,320 --> 00:10:28,880 and he’s scarred with the results of his fights, on his arms, 169 00:10:29,040 --> 00:10:32,880 on his legs, on his hands. Another man you don't mess with. 170 00:10:33,040 --> 00:10:35,800 Like his brother, he has no respect for women. 171 00:10:35,960 --> 00:10:37,360 He's one of a group of men 172 00:10:37,520 --> 00:10:40,640 that burst into the house of a 16-year-old young woman. 173 00:10:40,800 --> 00:10:43,920 They smash the door down, she flees upstairs, 174 00:10:44,080 --> 00:10:46,360 and then in court it said 175 00:10:46,520 --> 00:10:50,040 they all committed a 'most disgusting assault' on her. 176 00:10:50,200 --> 00:10:54,360 Joseph is the youngest brother. In 1899, 177 00:10:54,520 --> 00:10:58,000 he's named as a member of the feared Bar Street gang, 178 00:10:58,160 --> 00:11:01,440 and it's pretty certain that his two older brothers were in that gang. 179 00:11:01,600 --> 00:11:05,480 He's also given as a Peaky Blinder. 180 00:11:05,640 --> 00:11:08,400 - So it appears what we have 181 00:11:08,560 --> 00:11:10,400 is this rapid rise in street violence, 182 00:11:10,560 --> 00:11:14,400 with people like the Sheldons to the fore, a perception fuelled, 183 00:11:14,560 --> 00:11:18,200 of course, by what we could call early tabloid journalists 184 00:11:18,360 --> 00:11:21,200 fanning the flames of middle class panic. 185 00:11:21,360 --> 00:11:25,400 - In 1899, the gang problem was so bad in Birmingham 186 00:11:25,560 --> 00:11:30,040 that the Chief Constable resigned and the Birmingham Watch Committee, 187 00:11:30,200 --> 00:11:31,880 the counters that ran the police, 188 00:11:32,040 --> 00:11:35,680 fetched over from Ireland Charles Horton Rafter. 189 00:11:37,080 --> 00:11:39,560 Rafter realised, as soon as he come in, 190 00:11:39,720 --> 00:11:41,920 the Birmingham police was badly undermanned, 191 00:11:42,080 --> 00:11:46,840 so he worked on a rapid recruitment campaign. 192 00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:51,320 Rafter insisted, though, that his recruits had to be tall, 193 00:11:51,480 --> 00:11:52,520 they had to be fit. 194 00:11:52,680 --> 00:11:55,920 That meant that these young fit officers 195 00:11:56,080 --> 00:11:59,120 could now go about in pairs in the toughest districts, 196 00:11:59,280 --> 00:12:03,880 where the reign of the ruffian was imposed by the Peaky Blinders. 197 00:12:04,040 --> 00:12:07,320 Before, many of these areas only had one policeman on a beat. 198 00:12:07,480 --> 00:12:10,280 Now there's two. They're big, strong lads. 199 00:12:10,440 --> 00:12:12,840 And the story that was passed on for generations 200 00:12:13,000 --> 00:12:14,840 in the Birmingham police 201 00:12:15,000 --> 00:12:17,840 was that Rafter asked three things of his recruits: 202 00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:21,440 can you read? Can you write? Can you fight? 203 00:12:21,600 --> 00:12:23,600 Because they’d have to. 204 00:12:34,440 --> 00:12:35,840 SEAN BEAN: In 1914, 205 00:12:36,000 --> 00:12:38,760 the outbreak of the First World War drained Britain 206 00:12:38,920 --> 00:12:41,000 of a great many of its fighting age men. 207 00:12:41,160 --> 00:12:43,960 Perhaps unsurprisingly, the crimes 208 00:12:44,120 --> 00:12:47,160 that had been associated with the Peaky class dropped. 209 00:12:47,320 --> 00:12:50,880 But we know that history never gives us any short answers. 210 00:12:51,040 --> 00:12:55,160 So what else contributed to this decreasing gang activity? 211 00:12:57,320 --> 00:13:01,680 - There's organic factors that are working together. 212 00:13:01,840 --> 00:13:05,280 There's a High Church of England vicar called Father Pinshard 213 00:13:05,440 --> 00:13:07,240 who starts a rudimentary boxing club. 214 00:13:07,400 --> 00:13:11,960 They're learning respect, discipline. Football is becoming 215 00:13:12,120 --> 00:13:17,080 a really popular participation sport as well as a spectator sport. 216 00:13:17,240 --> 00:13:20,080 And instead of gathering on waste ground 217 00:13:20,240 --> 00:13:23,120 to play pitch and toss, they're playing football now. 218 00:13:24,880 --> 00:13:26,920 And just as the gangs are disappearing, 219 00:13:27,080 --> 00:13:30,560 the cinema comes in. Instead of joining a street gang, 220 00:13:30,720 --> 00:13:33,760 lads are going to the pictures two or three nights a week. 221 00:13:36,080 --> 00:13:37,560 - But of course, 222 00:13:37,720 --> 00:13:40,200 all the social programmes in the world 223 00:13:40,360 --> 00:13:43,720 wouldn’t be able to erase criminality completely. 224 00:13:43,880 --> 00:13:47,200 There were some who were already too embedded in a life of crime 225 00:13:47,360 --> 00:13:49,440 to ever step away. 226 00:13:51,640 --> 00:13:56,320 And there's one name that keeps coming up again and again 227 00:13:56,480 --> 00:14:01,280 in history books, police records and arrest warrants, 228 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:04,760 not just in Birmingham, but up and down the country. 229 00:14:07,840 --> 00:14:12,520 William Kimber, born 7th February, 1882. 230 00:14:12,680 --> 00:14:15,320 Born and raised in the tough Summer Lane area, 231 00:14:15,480 --> 00:14:18,000 notorious for its Peaky Blinders, 232 00:14:18,160 --> 00:14:21,040 it wouldn’t be long before Kimber would have his first run-in 233 00:14:21,200 --> 00:14:23,680 with the law. - His mum was an Irish Brummie. 234 00:14:23,840 --> 00:14:26,800 his dad was English. There is no suggestion that either of them 235 00:14:26,960 --> 00:14:30,040 were ever involved in any crime. But Kimber at the age of 12, 236 00:14:30,200 --> 00:14:34,240 he's birched for a petty theft. Now, that means 237 00:14:34,400 --> 00:14:38,520 that he is forced to lie down, and they pull down his trousers. 238 00:14:38,680 --> 00:14:43,520 Then they take a bunch of robust birch twigs, 239 00:14:43,680 --> 00:14:46,640 wired at one end, and whip him. 240 00:14:46,800 --> 00:14:50,760 Again, I'm not excusing Billy Kimber's later criminality, 241 00:14:50,920 --> 00:14:54,680 but at an early age the state is using violence against him. 242 00:14:54,840 --> 00:14:58,840 - It would be remiss to think that it hadn’t had an impact, 243 00:14:59,000 --> 00:15:02,880 something that significant in terms of being punished 244 00:15:03,040 --> 00:15:06,800 in that way, possibly being shamed. 245 00:15:06,960 --> 00:15:09,080 Shame is something that we don’t talk about 246 00:15:09,240 --> 00:15:12,040 when we look at these acts. We just look at the act itself, 247 00:15:12,200 --> 00:15:15,120 not about how vulnerable you are when you’re in that position, 248 00:15:15,280 --> 00:15:17,680 and the shame that comes with that. And I think 249 00:15:17,840 --> 00:15:23,840 these are all things that he used as fuel to get out, 250 00:15:24,000 --> 00:15:28,960 and do anything he could to never experience that situation again. 251 00:15:33,360 --> 00:15:35,600 - He obviously learnt to fight early on. 252 00:15:35,760 --> 00:15:40,040 The only Brummie I ever met who knew him said, 253 00:15:40,200 --> 00:15:44,440 “Carl, he was strong as an ox, and he fought like a lion." 254 00:15:44,600 --> 00:15:49,760 Then, with that reputation as the top man, the top fighter, 255 00:15:49,920 --> 00:15:52,320 he can control things. 256 00:15:52,480 --> 00:15:56,320 - When you really get down to it, on the streets, right here right now 257 00:15:56,480 --> 00:15:58,600 where it matters , violence is everything. 258 00:15:58,760 --> 00:16:01,040 But the threat of violence just in a moment 259 00:16:01,200 --> 00:16:03,040 is even more powerful. 260 00:16:03,200 --> 00:16:07,480 That's why people are very happy to let their deeds to be known, 261 00:16:07,640 --> 00:16:11,560 no matter how gruesome, because this sends a message. 262 00:16:11,720 --> 00:16:14,760 It's like psychological warfare. - He came from a place 263 00:16:14,920 --> 00:16:18,560 where fear lived all the time. 264 00:16:18,720 --> 00:16:21,400 I imagine he lived in a state of fear. 265 00:16:21,560 --> 00:16:24,200 "Am I gonna get my next meal? Am I going to be beaten up? 266 00:16:24,360 --> 00:16:29,360 Are we going to be attacked as a family?" So fear fuelled this. 267 00:16:29,520 --> 00:16:31,480 He felt fear as a young person, 268 00:16:31,640 --> 00:16:34,560 and then he wanted to become the instigator of fear, 269 00:16:34,720 --> 00:16:36,600 because that’s how you’d stay safe. 270 00:16:37,560 --> 00:16:40,120 - His favourite punch was to the solar plexus. 271 00:16:40,280 --> 00:16:43,440 Once you hit somebody really hard in the stomach, 272 00:16:43,600 --> 00:16:46,640 it makes them soil themselves. Now, can you imagine that? 273 00:16:46,800 --> 00:16:51,120 Not only have you been beaten up, not only you're bent over in pain, 274 00:16:51,280 --> 00:16:53,320 but you have been humiliated. 275 00:16:53,480 --> 00:16:57,120 - He was very brutal, but the difference, you know, 276 00:16:57,280 --> 00:16:59,160 with him was he just had a polish 277 00:16:59,320 --> 00:17:01,720 that showed so much more street smarts. 278 00:17:04,600 --> 00:17:09,920 - Billy Kimber was a fighting man, a feared fighting man, 279 00:17:10,080 --> 00:17:14,680 who through his physicality, 280 00:17:14,840 --> 00:17:17,200 his fierceness, his viciousness, 281 00:17:17,360 --> 00:17:22,680 became the leader of a group of the most feared criminals 282 00:17:22,840 --> 00:17:25,240 in England at the time, the Birmingham Gang. 283 00:17:26,320 --> 00:17:29,360 - According to police reports, by 1918 284 00:17:29,520 --> 00:17:33,920 Kimber has become the leader of several small gangs. 285 00:17:34,080 --> 00:17:36,680 But street fighting was no longer the name of the game. 286 00:17:36,840 --> 00:17:39,960 Kimber was after money, real money. 287 00:17:40,120 --> 00:17:42,240 And where was he gonna find that? 288 00:17:49,520 --> 00:17:51,200 CHINN: Racing booms 289 00:17:51,360 --> 00:17:53,720 in the immediate aftermath of the First World War. 290 00:17:53,880 --> 00:17:57,680 Lots of men are coming home with payments from the Army, Navy. 291 00:17:57,840 --> 00:18:00,560 A lot want to drink and gamble and enjoy themselves. 292 00:18:00,720 --> 00:18:03,600 There's masses of people going to racecourses. 293 00:18:03,760 --> 00:18:06,560 - So all the money populated there 294 00:18:06,720 --> 00:18:08,840 and of course all the people who wanted money 295 00:18:09,000 --> 00:18:12,360 populated there behind them. - And by the early 20th century 296 00:18:12,520 --> 00:18:17,440 he's got a gang with his brothers Joe and Harry, and other hard men 297 00:18:17,600 --> 00:18:21,720 who are going to the racecourses of the Midlands 298 00:18:21,880 --> 00:18:24,320 and the North. They're known as the Brummager Boys. 299 00:18:24,480 --> 00:18:27,640 They pickpocket, and if you know you've been pickpocketed 300 00:18:27,800 --> 00:18:31,120 and try to stop it, they're going to duff you up badly, 301 00:18:31,280 --> 00:18:33,920 because there's hardly any racecourse security 302 00:18:34,080 --> 00:18:36,800 and the few policemen there are scared. 303 00:18:38,360 --> 00:18:41,280 These gangs also blackmail bookmakers. 304 00:18:41,440 --> 00:18:44,320 “You want to stand on that pitch? That's a good pitch, 305 00:18:44,480 --> 00:18:46,080 you've got to give us a fiver." 306 00:18:46,240 --> 00:18:48,400 “You've got a stall you're standing on, 307 00:18:48,560 --> 00:18:51,520 two and sixpence." That's 12.5 pence a race. Six races, 308 00:18:51,680 --> 00:18:53,320 that's 15 shillings, 75 pence. 309 00:18:53,480 --> 00:18:55,760 That's as much as a poor man could earn in a week. 310 00:18:55,920 --> 00:18:58,480 "You've got a blackboard, you write on the blackboard 311 00:18:58,640 --> 00:19:01,400 the names of the horses. What do you need for that?" 312 00:19:01,560 --> 00:19:04,320 A stick of chalk, two and a tanner, two and sixpence a race. 313 00:19:04,480 --> 00:19:08,680 At Epsom, Doncaster, the big meetings, 314 00:19:08,840 --> 00:19:12,400 there could be hundreds of bookmakers. This is big income. 315 00:19:12,560 --> 00:19:16,640 - Billy Kimber and his gang made at least £400 a day, 316 00:19:16,800 --> 00:19:22,200 which translates to £22,000 a day, about eight million a year 317 00:19:22,360 --> 00:19:23,360 in today's money. 318 00:19:23,520 --> 00:19:28,840 - Now, Billy Kimber and the Birmingham Gang 319 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:31,680 ran the racecourse rackets in the Midlands and the North. 320 00:19:31,840 --> 00:19:33,920 No challengers in the Midlands and the North, 321 00:19:34,080 --> 00:19:36,400 up towards Newcastle they've got their own gang. 322 00:19:36,560 --> 00:19:39,520 They don't bother with Scotland, Glasgow gangs run courses there. 323 00:19:39,680 --> 00:19:42,880 - So it's no longer just fighting each other over territory, 324 00:19:43,040 --> 00:19:47,240 but actually the organisation of criminal rackets around betting, 325 00:19:47,400 --> 00:19:50,360 gambling, liquor licences. 326 00:19:50,520 --> 00:19:55,520 So they're a really distinctive new period of organised crime 327 00:19:55,680 --> 00:19:58,880 in the city. BEAN: So in a short space of time, 328 00:19:59,040 --> 00:20:01,640 Kimber's influence had become widespread. 329 00:20:01,800 --> 00:20:04,760 His gang, known as the Birmingham Gang, 330 00:20:04,920 --> 00:20:08,040 are terrorising racecourses up and down the country 331 00:20:08,200 --> 00:20:10,400 with no regards for the consequences. 332 00:20:15,360 --> 00:20:18,600 Could this man be the real Tommy Shelby? 333 00:20:25,400 --> 00:20:29,040 SEAN BEAN: By the beginning of the 1920s, 334 00:20:29,200 --> 00:20:32,120 almost all British racecourses are under the control of one man: 335 00:20:32,280 --> 00:20:33,720 Billy Kimber. 336 00:20:33,880 --> 00:20:38,240 - The Birmingham Gang and their London allies 337 00:20:38,400 --> 00:20:40,800 are extorting money from the bookmakers, 338 00:20:40,960 --> 00:20:43,200 but they're racist. They're anti-Semitic. 339 00:20:43,360 --> 00:20:46,120 - They would target Jewish bookmakers in the East End. 340 00:20:46,280 --> 00:20:49,320 - One of whom is a man called Alfie Solomon. 341 00:20:51,720 --> 00:20:56,600 Now, compared to Kimber and most other members of the gangs 342 00:20:56,760 --> 00:21:00,640 who deserted in the First World War, Solomon served with honour. 343 00:21:00,800 --> 00:21:03,360 He received three service medals 344 00:21:03,520 --> 00:21:05,920 and he comes out and he becomes a bookmaker. 345 00:21:06,080 --> 00:21:09,560 He's a secular Jewish man. His dad's got a greengrocer's 346 00:21:09,720 --> 00:21:12,320 in Covent Garden. They had a servant growing up. 347 00:21:12,480 --> 00:21:14,600 But he's bookmaking. 348 00:21:15,520 --> 00:21:19,280 BEAN: One event will change the course of Alfie Solomon’s life 349 00:21:19,440 --> 00:21:20,720 like no other. 350 00:21:20,880 --> 00:21:26,360 - And a really vile man called Tommy Armstrong, 351 00:21:26,520 --> 00:21:28,520 slogger, member of the Birmingham Gang, 352 00:21:28,680 --> 00:21:34,200 comes past, and he's offering 11 to 4 on a horse. 353 00:21:34,360 --> 00:21:37,960 And Armstrong says, "I'll have 12 quid on that 354 00:21:38,120 --> 00:21:40,960 on the nod." That meant he wanted it on credit. 355 00:21:41,120 --> 00:21:43,760 If it loses, is he going to pay up? 356 00:21:43,920 --> 00:21:47,440 Of course he's not. But if it wins, does he want paying? 357 00:21:47,600 --> 00:21:50,880 Of course he does. Solomon says, "No I ain't taking the bet. 358 00:21:51,040 --> 00:21:55,040 I'm not having that." Anyway, it kicked off. 359 00:21:59,440 --> 00:22:01,200 The horse won. 360 00:22:01,360 --> 00:22:03,840 Armstrong's mucky drunk by now. 361 00:22:04,000 --> 00:22:06,640 He comes back, demands his money. 362 00:22:06,800 --> 00:22:09,040 Solomon refuses. 363 00:22:09,200 --> 00:22:13,520 Armstrong took his field glasses, his heavy viewing glasses, 364 00:22:13,680 --> 00:22:17,880 smashed 'em into the face of Alfie Solomon. 365 00:22:18,040 --> 00:22:21,240 He collapsed on the floor in a bloody mess, 366 00:22:21,400 --> 00:22:27,200 and then Armstrong slammed him in his face with his boots. 367 00:22:32,840 --> 00:22:34,960 Solomon's left there, prone, 368 00:22:35,120 --> 00:22:39,720 his face a bloody mass, and with several teeth missing. 369 00:22:39,880 --> 00:22:43,480 This attack on Alfie Solomon transforms him. 370 00:22:43,640 --> 00:22:47,120 I've got no evidence at all before the attack 371 00:22:47,280 --> 00:22:48,800 that he was a vicious criminal, 372 00:22:48,960 --> 00:22:51,560 but afterwards he certainly becomes one. 373 00:22:51,720 --> 00:22:55,080 - Alfie Soloman seems to suddenly become violent 374 00:22:55,240 --> 00:22:58,320 out of absolutely nowhere. That shows to me underlying rage, 375 00:22:58,480 --> 00:23:03,320 and it needed to be unlocked. Someone doesn’t just become violent 376 00:23:03,480 --> 00:23:06,880 one day out of absolutely nowhere, for no reason. 377 00:23:07,040 --> 00:23:09,600 I mean, he had a reason, he was beaten up. 378 00:23:09,760 --> 00:23:12,560 But that’s not a reason to start a criminal career. 379 00:23:12,720 --> 00:23:15,040 So I think that unlocked a rage in him that he had 380 00:23:15,200 --> 00:23:16,200 for a very long time. 381 00:23:17,680 --> 00:23:20,280 - Alfie Solomon was just another link in the chain. 382 00:23:20,440 --> 00:23:23,720 There are different groups. So you have the money earners 383 00:23:23,880 --> 00:23:26,920 and you have the people who need to enforce that, enforcers. 384 00:23:27,080 --> 00:23:30,360 They'll go out, do the street work, and they'll break arms, 385 00:23:30,520 --> 00:23:33,080 and they'll kill people, and dominate people, 386 00:23:33,240 --> 00:23:36,400 and they'll collect the money. But that’s all they’re good for. 387 00:23:36,560 --> 00:23:38,880 But the bosses, the real organised crime figures 388 00:23:39,040 --> 00:23:41,560 that do very well at this and rise up, they can do both. 389 00:23:47,160 --> 00:23:51,960 BEAN: Billy Kimber had gone from a backstreet thug, petty criminal 390 00:23:52,120 --> 00:23:55,680 to one of the first organised crime bosses in England. 391 00:23:55,840 --> 00:24:00,440 - I think some of the crimes that we see Kimber engage in 392 00:24:00,600 --> 00:24:04,360 are narcissistically driven. He became a little bit addicted 393 00:24:04,520 --> 00:24:07,120 to what he was getting, and it felt really good, 394 00:24:07,280 --> 00:24:09,480 and he felt he deserved more because of that, 395 00:24:09,640 --> 00:24:12,120 and I think that drove him to then want to go to London 396 00:24:12,280 --> 00:24:14,240 and kind of pursue crime there as well. 397 00:24:14,400 --> 00:24:18,080 BEAN: Kimber and his boys had been raking in money 398 00:24:18,240 --> 00:24:22,840 working the country's racecourses like their own personal gold mine. 399 00:24:23,000 --> 00:24:25,720 But one thing we know about organised crime 400 00:24:25,880 --> 00:24:29,080 is that when money's flowing, you'd better watch your back. 401 00:24:32,120 --> 00:24:37,760 London bookmaker Alfie Solomon has just been severely beaten 402 00:24:37,920 --> 00:24:41,640 by Billy Kimber's lieutenant, Tommy Armstrong. 403 00:24:41,800 --> 00:24:44,240 CHINN: Alfie Solomon then turns to 404 00:24:44,400 --> 00:24:46,880 the governor of the Jewish East End underworld, 405 00:24:47,040 --> 00:24:48,320 Edward Emmanuel. 406 00:24:50,280 --> 00:24:53,360 - He was king of the underworld with the Jewish people of the time 407 00:24:53,520 --> 00:24:55,320 in the East End. He was really cunning, 408 00:24:55,480 --> 00:24:57,800 he knew how to put things together. - Like Kimber, 409 00:24:57,960 --> 00:25:02,840 he's a fearsome fighter, a thug, a man who people are scared of. 410 00:25:03,000 --> 00:25:06,280 On one occasion he has a fight, he gets shot. 411 00:25:06,440 --> 00:25:09,600 Even though he's shot, he chases the bloke down the street 412 00:25:09,760 --> 00:25:13,360 and batters him. But he's also, like Kimber, 413 00:25:13,520 --> 00:25:16,400 got something up here. He’s got a brain. 414 00:25:16,560 --> 00:25:20,160 - Edward Emmanuel is a very clever figure. 415 00:25:20,320 --> 00:25:21,880 He's very good at what he does. 416 00:25:22,040 --> 00:25:24,080 Cos he's one of them people who understands 417 00:25:24,240 --> 00:25:26,640 to keep in the background is where the real power is. 418 00:25:26,800 --> 00:25:29,080 He was very good at moving guys around, 419 00:25:29,240 --> 00:25:32,680 which is another real trait of an organised crime boss. 420 00:25:32,840 --> 00:25:38,160 - In my opinion, Edward Emmanuel is England's first godfather. 421 00:25:39,360 --> 00:25:42,400 He wants to get rid of Kimber and his London allies. 422 00:25:42,560 --> 00:25:47,280 He's got a team of Anglo-Jewish tearaways, 423 00:25:47,440 --> 00:25:49,800 but on their own they're not strong enough. 424 00:25:49,960 --> 00:25:54,760 Things move very rapidly after Solomon turns to Emmanuel 425 00:25:54,920 --> 00:25:59,000 for help. Emmanuel turns to an up and coming young gangster. 426 00:26:01,360 --> 00:26:04,560 His mum is English, his dad was Italian, 427 00:26:04,720 --> 00:26:07,680 but came to England as a youngster from Parma in northern Italy. 428 00:26:07,840 --> 00:26:10,720 - The Sabini Gang were quite interesting. 429 00:26:10,880 --> 00:26:14,880 They was vicious thugs. There was about 300 members of the Sabini gang 430 00:26:15,040 --> 00:26:19,040 at its prime. Where they settled was in Clerkenwell, 431 00:26:19,200 --> 00:26:21,400 in Little Italy of course, 432 00:26:21,560 --> 00:26:24,640 just the other side of the East End of London. 433 00:26:24,800 --> 00:26:29,960 And he started off as a bouncer, that was his first kind of innings 434 00:26:30,120 --> 00:26:33,360 into that world. He was a very rough and tumble, 435 00:26:33,520 --> 00:26:36,280 very in your face street brawler. 436 00:26:36,440 --> 00:26:40,440 - And they're called in to back up Alfie Solomon 437 00:26:40,600 --> 00:26:43,120 and Emanuel's Anglo-Jewish tearaways 438 00:26:43,280 --> 00:26:47,560 against Kimber's Birmingham Gang and their London mates. 439 00:26:54,000 --> 00:26:58,600 - So began the biggest gang war this country had ever known. 440 00:26:58,760 --> 00:27:01,920 - So the Birmingham Gang and their London allies 441 00:27:02,080 --> 00:27:05,000 realise Sabini's been called in. They corner him 442 00:27:05,160 --> 00:27:07,440 at Greenford trotting track. They’re shouting, 443 00:27:07,600 --> 00:27:10,400 “We're gonna murder him." They've got wood, planks of wood. 444 00:27:10,560 --> 00:27:13,240 They're hitting him. Somebody says, “Get a gun, shoot him." 445 00:27:13,400 --> 00:27:16,000 Luckily, he's saved by the police. 446 00:27:16,160 --> 00:27:19,640 It turns out that the gun wasn't registered. 447 00:27:19,800 --> 00:27:21,920 He should have really been prosecuted for it, 448 00:27:22,080 --> 00:27:26,600 but he got away with it. Throughout spring and summer of '21, 449 00:27:26,760 --> 00:27:31,360 there are shootings, beatings at racecourses, 450 00:27:31,520 --> 00:27:35,120 and in London and around railway stations in the capital. 451 00:27:35,280 --> 00:27:38,320 It really was dangerous. Things are getting out of hand. 452 00:27:38,480 --> 00:27:41,560 This isn't good for business . The newspapers pick up on this. 453 00:27:41,720 --> 00:27:44,720 Racecourse ruffians, ruffs of the turf, 454 00:27:44,880 --> 00:27:46,760 all these kinds of phrases are being used. 455 00:27:46,920 --> 00:27:51,280 Too much attention from the police. BEAN: It's interesting, isn't it? 456 00:27:51,440 --> 00:27:53,400 Press attention only really gets going 457 00:27:53,560 --> 00:27:54,720 once there's a spectacle. 458 00:27:54,880 --> 00:27:57,400 When ordinary bookmakers were getting extorted, 459 00:27:57,560 --> 00:27:59,240 no-one really paid attention. 460 00:28:01,120 --> 00:28:04,560 CHINN: So someone calls a meeting. 461 00:28:06,640 --> 00:28:08,840 It's going to be at Collier Street, 462 00:28:09,000 --> 00:28:11,520 the house in King's Cross where Sabini’s now living. 463 00:28:14,360 --> 00:28:17,240 They decide that they’ll have to make peace 464 00:28:17,400 --> 00:28:19,360 for the sake of their businesses. 465 00:28:23,360 --> 00:28:26,240 Billy Kimber turns up with some of the McDonalds. 466 00:28:31,600 --> 00:28:34,360 They’re having a good drink, and he's going to leave 467 00:28:34,520 --> 00:28:36,480 Who turns up but Alfie Solomon? 468 00:28:36,640 --> 00:28:38,520 Now, they’re racist. 469 00:28:38,680 --> 00:28:42,920 They hate Jewish men and women, and Kimber goes for him. 470 00:28:43,080 --> 00:28:48,080 Pulls a revolver and he calls him racist names. 471 00:28:48,240 --> 00:28:51,400 There's a scuffle, and in the scuffle, 472 00:28:51,560 --> 00:28:55,680 as Alfie Solomon is trying to stop Kimber from shooting him... 473 00:28:55,840 --> 00:28:56,960 the gun goes off... 474 00:28:57,120 --> 00:28:59,080 (gunshot) ..and the bullet actually goes 475 00:28:59,240 --> 00:29:01,960 into Kimber's back. Everybody disperses. 476 00:29:02,120 --> 00:29:05,280 Kimber's found unconscious on the street outside. 477 00:29:05,440 --> 00:29:07,040 He's sent to hospital. 478 00:29:07,200 --> 00:29:11,280 Allies of Kimber told me that that night 479 00:29:11,440 --> 00:29:13,320 members of the London gang 480 00:29:13,480 --> 00:29:15,720 supporting Kimber and the Birmingham Gang 481 00:29:15,880 --> 00:29:17,680 surrounded the hospital. 482 00:29:17,840 --> 00:29:20,760 It tells you the power that Kimber had. 483 00:29:22,920 --> 00:29:24,120 They go to court. 484 00:29:24,280 --> 00:29:28,040 Solomon admits that he accidentally shot Kimber. 485 00:29:28,200 --> 00:29:31,960 Billy Kimber is a witnes s who refuses to testify, 486 00:29:32,120 --> 00:29:33,760 and all he says is this: 487 00:29:33,920 --> 00:29:36,600 “If he says he shot me, well, that's up to him. 488 00:29:36,760 --> 00:29:39,520 But only cowards use revolvers, 489 00:29:39,680 --> 00:29:42,040 and I would rather blow my brains out 490 00:29:42,200 --> 00:29:44,880 than use a shooter." The case is dismissed. 491 00:29:46,600 --> 00:29:49,200 BEAN: But the worst was yet to come. 492 00:29:57,040 --> 00:29:59,520 - What do we actually know about Billy Kimber? 493 00:30:04,800 --> 00:30:08,320 We know that Billy Kimber and the Birmingham Gang 494 00:30:08,480 --> 00:30:11,560 are determined to maintain their dominance down south. 495 00:30:11,720 --> 00:30:15,960 But Edward Emmanuel and Darby Sabini have other ideas. 496 00:30:16,120 --> 00:30:19,280 - Epsom. Probably the biggest meeting of the year. 497 00:30:19,440 --> 00:30:23,840 The Birmingham Gang decide they're gonna really show 498 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:25,040 who's in charge. 499 00:30:25,200 --> 00:30:26,680 BEAN: The Epsom Derby, 500 00:30:26,840 --> 00:30:29,200 one of the biggest racing events of the year, 501 00:30:29,360 --> 00:30:35,320 was attended by over 200,000 people. But get this: they had no security. 502 00:30:35,480 --> 00:30:37,800 This is a gift for Billy Kimber. 503 00:30:37,960 --> 00:30:40,480 - Birmingham Gang members are going down there, 504 00:30:40,640 --> 00:30:42,360 terrorising bookmakers. 505 00:30:42,520 --> 00:30:46,360 After racing, some Leeds bookmakers are leaving 506 00:30:46,520 --> 00:30:50,280 when they get attacked by 20-odd 507 00:30:50,440 --> 00:30:54,720 really vicious, horrible men from Birmingham. 508 00:30:54,880 --> 00:30:57,560 They had been paying protection to Kimber before, 509 00:30:57,720 --> 00:31:02,400 but it looks like they're moving towards Sabini and to Solomon. 510 00:31:02,560 --> 00:31:07,680 The Birmingham Gang inflict terrible injuries on them, 511 00:31:07,840 --> 00:31:11,320 and then they decide to go for a drink in a pub, 512 00:31:11,480 --> 00:31:14,240 which is where they're eventually arrested. 513 00:31:14,400 --> 00:31:18,080 Out of the 20-odd, 17 men are sent down. 514 00:31:18,240 --> 00:31:21,160 These 17 men belong to different little crews 515 00:31:21,320 --> 00:31:23,000 within the Birmingham Gang. 516 00:31:23,160 --> 00:31:29,120 That weakens Kimber. He's lost 17 of his most feared fighters. 517 00:31:29,280 --> 00:31:34,240 He then decides he's gonna make a massive show of strength 518 00:31:34,400 --> 00:31:36,680 at Bath in the summer. 519 00:31:36,840 --> 00:31:40,360 The railway station at Bath 520 00:31:40,520 --> 00:31:46,240 suddenly is surrounded by a horde of Birmingham hardmen. 521 00:31:46,400 --> 00:31:48,720 Many of them are not part of the Birmingham Gang, 522 00:31:48,880 --> 00:31:54,160 but are attracted to Bath by the opportunity of having a pop, 523 00:31:54,320 --> 00:31:57,480 having a go at the Londoners, particularly the Jewish Londoners. 524 00:31:57,640 --> 00:31:59,720 Kimber's there. 525 00:31:59,880 --> 00:32:03,320 His main fighters who are not in prison are there. 526 00:32:03,480 --> 00:32:06,120 They start beating up Jewish bookmakers, 527 00:32:06,280 --> 00:32:10,400 and Kimber and another horrible Birmingham Gang member 528 00:32:10,560 --> 00:32:14,440 batter Alfie Solomon, who goes down. 529 00:32:14,600 --> 00:32:17,440 They also attack his clerk, 530 00:32:17,600 --> 00:32:19,760 an inoffensive bloke called Charles Bild. 531 00:32:19,920 --> 00:32:23,840 They hit him with everything, and then somebody smashes him 532 00:32:24,000 --> 00:32:26,880 with a sandbag! The poor bloke goes down 533 00:32:27,040 --> 00:32:30,560 and eventually, when the police come to save him, he's unconscious, 534 00:32:30,720 --> 00:32:33,520 covered in blood. BEAN: Billy Kimber gets charged 535 00:32:33,680 --> 00:32:37,240 for that assault. But in September 1921, 536 00:32:37,400 --> 00:32:39,720 when it goes to court, no-one shows up 537 00:32:39,880 --> 00:32:43,760 to give evidence against him. So the case is dismissed. 538 00:32:43,920 --> 00:32:47,720 But before they leave, Kimber's lawyer announces to the court, 539 00:32:47,880 --> 00:32:51,000 “Don't worry, there'll be no more of this trouble, 540 00:32:51,160 --> 00:32:53,920 because this has all been sorted out." 541 00:32:54,080 --> 00:32:55,240 - Cleverly, 542 00:32:55,400 --> 00:33:00,040 Edward Emanuel starts the Bookmakers Protection Association 543 00:33:00,200 --> 00:33:02,560 to stop the ruffianism on the turf, 544 00:33:02,720 --> 00:33:06,160 to stop the blackmailing of bookmakers. 545 00:33:06,320 --> 00:33:09,720 Well, what then happens is the Jockey Club like this, 546 00:33:09,880 --> 00:33:13,040 they're really upset by all the bad newspaper reports, 547 00:33:13,200 --> 00:33:15,480 people are going to stop coming racing, 548 00:33:15,640 --> 00:33:18,240 so they back this new organisation, 549 00:33:18,400 --> 00:33:21,200 which appears to be legitimate. The police are quite happy, 550 00:33:21,360 --> 00:33:23,720 cos they can say, this is a legitimate organisation. 551 00:33:23,880 --> 00:33:25,480 But what does he do? 552 00:33:25,640 --> 00:33:30,080 He employs Derby Sabini and his men as stewards 553 00:33:30,240 --> 00:33:31,960 to enforce order. 554 00:33:32,120 --> 00:33:34,080 - But this was a very clever strategic move 555 00:33:34,240 --> 00:33:37,400 to protect the Jewish bookmakers that are constantly being threatened 556 00:33:37,560 --> 00:33:41,880 and attacked, and preyed upon by, of course. Billy Kimber. 557 00:33:42,040 --> 00:33:45,560 This also legitimised Darby Sabini 558 00:33:45,720 --> 00:33:48,320 and everything that they needed to do next, 559 00:33:48,480 --> 00:33:51,440 including protecting all their organisation. 560 00:33:51,600 --> 00:33:55,080 - Essentially, the Sabinis are untouchable, 561 00:33:55,240 --> 00:33:58,000 because the Jockey Club, in control of flat racing, 562 00:33:58,160 --> 00:34:02,360 and the police like the idea of an official organisation 563 00:34:02,520 --> 00:34:03,680 which they can support. 564 00:34:03,840 --> 00:34:05,360 BEAN: Emmanuel has won. 565 00:34:07,640 --> 00:34:09,960 The Birmingham boys have been outwitted. 566 00:34:10,120 --> 00:34:13,160 They can't operate down south anymore. 567 00:34:13,320 --> 00:34:17,200 So the boys insist that no Southern bookmakers 568 00:34:17,360 --> 00:34:20,560 can operate in the Midlands or the North ever again. 569 00:34:20,720 --> 00:34:24,920 It says here, a meeting is finally called 570 00:34:25,080 --> 00:34:28,440 at Beresford's House to discuss terms of a truce. 571 00:34:31,880 --> 00:34:35,040 By September, newspapers are reporting 572 00:34:35,200 --> 00:34:38,760 that the gangs have divided England between them, 573 00:34:38,920 --> 00:34:41,920 that the Sabinis would have the south of England, 574 00:34:42,080 --> 00:34:43,680 and that the Birmingham Gang 575 00:34:43,840 --> 00:34:46,040 would have the Midlands and the North. 576 00:34:46,200 --> 00:34:48,720 - This means that until the mid-1920s 577 00:34:48,880 --> 00:34:53,280 the Sabinis rule supreme on Southern England's racecourses 578 00:34:53,440 --> 00:34:54,760 and those in London. 579 00:34:54,920 --> 00:34:57,920 - But that was the time for Billy Kimber to walk away. 580 00:35:02,400 --> 00:35:06,240 - What's fascinating about Kimber and the Birmingham Gang 581 00:35:06,400 --> 00:35:11,560 is that as soon as he steps away, the organisation disintegrates. 582 00:35:11,720 --> 00:35:15,640 They’re all fighting each other again, just like the slogging gangs. 583 00:35:15,800 --> 00:35:19,960 Without him at the centre, it all just falls apart. 584 00:35:20,120 --> 00:35:25,080 - Now, Emmanuel is moving slowly away from gangsterism 585 00:35:25,240 --> 00:35:29,000 into legitimacy, and he sees an opportunity 586 00:35:29,160 --> 00:35:32,400 to start up a legitimate printing company, 587 00:35:32,560 --> 00:35:36,960 which will print all printing needs of the racecourse bookmakers: 588 00:35:37,120 --> 00:35:40,480 their tickets, instead of the chalk, runners, 589 00:35:40,640 --> 00:35:43,880 racing lists. He’s clever enough to step back, 590 00:35:44,040 --> 00:35:46,840 pull the strings of the Sabinis, make money, 591 00:35:47,000 --> 00:35:50,000 but start up a legitimate printing company, 592 00:35:50,160 --> 00:35:52,920 the Portsea Printing Press. Now, down south 593 00:35:53,080 --> 00:35:56,280 the Jockey Club have decided they've got to take action. 594 00:35:56,440 --> 00:35:58,920 They bring in a new force of security men 595 00:35:59,080 --> 00:36:01,520 and the Sabinis are gradually pushed out. 596 00:36:01,680 --> 00:36:06,160 But what they do, they regroup in Soho. 597 00:36:06,320 --> 00:36:10,760 They take over protection rackets of the illegal drinking clubs 598 00:36:10,920 --> 00:36:15,320 and the spielers. They also extorted protection money 599 00:36:15,480 --> 00:36:20,560 from restaurant owners, publicans, not only in Soho, 600 00:36:20,720 --> 00:36:24,080 but in their heartlands of King's Cross and Clerkenwell. 601 00:36:29,440 --> 00:36:32,280 Albert Dimes and Bert Marsh, 602 00:36:32,440 --> 00:36:35,840 leading towards Jack Spott and Billy Hill. 603 00:36:36,000 --> 00:36:38,920 He dies a broken man in 1950. 604 00:36:39,080 --> 00:36:42,080 Alfie Soloman was targeted by other gangs 605 00:36:42,240 --> 00:36:46,360 into the mid-1930s, and unable to get police protection, 606 00:36:46,520 --> 00:36:47,640 he then disappeared. 607 00:36:49,960 --> 00:36:53,120 Kimber, so it's said, about 1926 608 00:36:53,280 --> 00:36:55,440 shoots through the windows of The Griffin, 609 00:36:55,600 --> 00:36:59,160 one of the Sabinis' hangouts, and flees to America, 610 00:36:59,320 --> 00:37:03,880 where it’s said he kills a man, and then he goes off to Chicago. 611 00:37:04,040 --> 00:37:07,880 Well, who’s running Chicago in '26? Al Capone. 612 00:37:08,040 --> 00:37:10,800 - Billy Kimber had a real depth of a person 613 00:37:10,960 --> 00:37:13,280 and you see this all the way through his journey 614 00:37:13,440 --> 00:37:15,840 from the street smarts to the brutality 615 00:37:16,000 --> 00:37:20,880 to the real CEO managerial decisions that he made even back then, 616 00:37:21,040 --> 00:37:23,840 which of course positioned him as one of the leading lights 617 00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:27,160 of organised crime in the UK. - Kimber comes back. 618 00:37:27,320 --> 00:37:31,680 By now he's married to Elizabeth Garnham, 619 00:37:31,840 --> 00:37:36,000 the sister of one of his pals from Chapel Market. 620 00:37:36,160 --> 00:37:40,040 And he was then clever enough to realise when he was beaten 621 00:37:40,200 --> 00:37:43,240 that he needed to go legitimate. I think he was pushed into that 622 00:37:43,400 --> 00:37:46,480 as well by his wife, who like Sabini's wife, 623 00:37:46,640 --> 00:37:49,440 wanted middle-class respectability for their children. 624 00:37:51,640 --> 00:37:55,600 BEAN: Kimber would eventually settle in Devon in Torquey, 625 00:37:55,760 --> 00:38:00,680 in a house overlooking the bay. He too would reinvent himself 626 00:38:00,840 --> 00:38:02,880 as a legitimate racecourse bookmaker. 627 00:38:03,040 --> 00:38:06,120 An advert he took out with a local paper would read, 628 00:38:06,280 --> 00:38:09,480 "Bet with Bill Kimber, a man who's reliable." 629 00:38:11,560 --> 00:38:13,560 - And there's a real irony here, 630 00:38:13,720 --> 00:38:15,880 because he becomes a leading member 631 00:38:16,040 --> 00:38:21,400 of the local Devon Bookmakers Protection Association, 632 00:38:21,560 --> 00:38:25,200 the very organisation that in effect brought him down, 633 00:38:25,360 --> 00:38:28,240 started by Kimber's nemesis Edward Emmanuel 634 00:38:28,400 --> 00:38:31,960 as a means for him to take over down south, 635 00:38:32,120 --> 00:38:36,000 but the BPA by the '30s has become a legitimate, 636 00:38:36,160 --> 00:38:37,800 respectable organisation. 637 00:38:37,960 --> 00:38:41,400 - We know that eventually Billy did retire, 638 00:38:41,560 --> 00:38:45,440 but prior to that, psychologically he was on guard his whole life, 639 00:38:45,600 --> 00:38:48,080 right from the beginning, the slums in Birmingham 640 00:38:48,240 --> 00:38:50,640 and throughout his entire kind of criminal career. 641 00:38:50,800 --> 00:38:54,600 I think what that does to a person is it sets them 642 00:38:54,760 --> 00:38:57,720 in this constant sense of fight or flight, which means 643 00:38:57,880 --> 00:39:00,440 your adrenal system is activated, which means 644 00:39:00,600 --> 00:39:03,960 that you can never really rest. I think that is only sustainable 645 00:39:04,120 --> 00:39:08,120 for so long in terms of a person's lifespan, 646 00:39:08,280 --> 00:39:10,920 I don’t think it’s something you can do forever. 647 00:39:14,560 --> 00:39:18,880 - Kimber eventually dies in 1945 in a nursing home. 648 00:39:19,040 --> 00:39:24,560 He died one of the last of the real Peaky Blinders. 649 00:39:24,720 --> 00:39:29,000 If we look at how Darby Sabini, Alfie Solomon, 650 00:39:29,160 --> 00:39:31,720 Billy Kimber are portrayed in the series, 651 00:39:31,880 --> 00:39:35,760 there is a fundamental difference. Darby Sabini is depicted 652 00:39:35,920 --> 00:39:39,000 as a bella figura, like a Sicilian Mafia don, 653 00:39:39,160 --> 00:39:41,480 elegantly dressed, 654 00:39:41,640 --> 00:39:42,760 with a walking cane. 655 00:39:42,920 --> 00:39:47,200 He wasn't. He didn't wear fancy clothes. He wasn't elegant. 656 00:39:47,360 --> 00:39:49,560 He wasn't a bella figura. 657 00:39:49,720 --> 00:39:52,840 He wore a flat cap, a collarless shirt, 658 00:39:53,000 --> 00:39:54,520 working man's clothes. 659 00:39:54,680 --> 00:39:56,120 He didn't speak Italian. 660 00:39:56,280 --> 00:39:58,000 He regarded himself as an Englishman. 661 00:39:58,160 --> 00:40:02,240 Alfie Solomon is portrayed as an Orthodox Jewish man. 662 00:40:02,400 --> 00:40:05,520 He wasn't. He was from a secular Jewish background, 663 00:40:05,680 --> 00:40:09,320 a family settled in England for generations. Billy Kimber 664 00:40:09,480 --> 00:40:12,040 is given as a Londoner, a small Londoner. He wasn't. 665 00:40:12,200 --> 00:40:16,040 He was a Brummie. - People like the romanticism, 666 00:40:16,200 --> 00:40:18,320 the glamour of it all, 667 00:40:18,480 --> 00:40:24,200 and this suggestion of a different society 668 00:40:24,360 --> 00:40:27,600 in Birmingham that people might not have otherwise been aware of. 669 00:40:27,760 --> 00:40:31,320 - I think people will always be drawn to gangsters, 670 00:40:31,480 --> 00:40:35,120 because in many ways they feel like the stuff of myth, 671 00:40:35,280 --> 00:40:39,880 partly because these men that we see, 672 00:40:40,040 --> 00:40:43,800 and it’s usually men, sometimes women but usually men, 673 00:40:43,960 --> 00:40:49,200 are very good at creating stories, 674 00:40:49,360 --> 00:40:52,680 and very good at creating legacy, 675 00:40:52,840 --> 00:40:54,600 and human beings, we like stories. 676 00:40:54,760 --> 00:40:59,720 They create a mystery. I think we’re drawn to understanding that. 677 00:40:59,880 --> 00:41:03,480 - What lessons should we take from the real Peaky Blinders 678 00:41:03,640 --> 00:41:07,120 and the gangs of the 1920s? 679 00:41:07,280 --> 00:41:12,200 - Most importantly, gang members and organised gangsters 680 00:41:12,360 --> 00:41:15,000 are not meant to be admired. BEAN: These were not 681 00:41:15,160 --> 00:41:17,840 glamorous anti-heroes who people looked to for support. 682 00:41:18,000 --> 00:41:22,040 They weren't Robin Hood characters that looked after the poor: 683 00:41:22,200 --> 00:41:24,040 they preyed upon the poor. 684 00:41:24,200 --> 00:41:26,480 - They were feared members of the working class. 685 00:41:26,640 --> 00:41:29,240 They didn't look after the poor, the Peaky Blinders, 686 00:41:29,400 --> 00:41:32,560 they beat them up, bullied them. Sabini, Kimber, Emmanuel 687 00:41:32,720 --> 00:41:36,360 took money from poorer people whenever they could. 688 00:41:36,520 --> 00:41:38,880 - I suppose it's not really surprising 689 00:41:39,040 --> 00:41:42,000 that a fictional portrayal of a criminal organisation 690 00:41:42,160 --> 00:41:43,920 doesn't match with the reality. 691 00:41:44,080 --> 00:41:47,080 After all, it's the job of historical fiction 692 00:41:47,240 --> 00:41:51,920 to impart glamour to the everyday, to make it exciting. 693 00:41:53,040 --> 00:41:57,400 But what's fascinating isn't so much that a brilliant television series 694 00:41:57,560 --> 00:42:01,920 found a devoted audience, it's how little attitudes have changed. 695 00:42:02,080 --> 00:42:04,880 We're still convinced that criminality 696 00:42:05,040 --> 00:42:08,000 is largely a working class phenomenon, 697 00:42:08,160 --> 00:42:11,000 and street gangs, they're not a thing of the past, 698 00:42:11,160 --> 00:42:15,840 they exist today in every city in the world. But why? 699 00:42:16,000 --> 00:42:18,480 Perhaps there is something innate in people 700 00:42:18,640 --> 00:42:22,920 that makes them want to seek out fellowship, community, 701 00:42:23,080 --> 00:42:25,720 and where none exists, construct their own. 702 00:42:25,880 --> 00:42:28,960 But I suppose that's why we need the legends. 703 00:42:29,120 --> 00:42:31,360 But when reality is not to our taste, 704 00:42:31,520 --> 00:42:35,680 legends don't often leave room for ordinary folk. 705 00:42:38,400 --> 00:42:40,280 (jangly guitar music, male vocal) 706 00:43:08,240 --> 00:43:10,080 Subtitles by Sky Accessible Services 60515

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