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Charles Dean “Dion” O'Banion

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Charles Dean “Dion” O'Banion Famous memorial

Birth
Maroa, Macon County, Illinois, USA
Death
10 Nov 1924 (aged 32)
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Burial
Hillside, Cook County, Illinois, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.8664894, Longitude: -87.9080353
Plot
Section L, Block 1, Lot S 7
Memorial ID
View Source
Irish-American Gangster. He was the head of the North Side Gang in Chicago during the bootlegging wars of the 1920s. Until his death he was the leader of the gang that was the chief rival of the South Side Gang lead by Johnny Torrio and also included Al Capone. O'Banion ran his operation out of the Scofield Flower Co. across the street from the Holy Name Cathedral where he had once sung as a choir boy. He was brought down via a double-cross that he had perpetrated on South Side leader Torrio. They agreed to meet at the flower shop to discuss a lucrative bootleg deal (alcohol was, at the time, illegal) and as they were making the deal the police raided the place and took Torrio to jail. O'Banion, who had no priors for bootlegging was released but Torrio who did have prior recieved a jail sentence. This infuriated Capone who dispatched three gunmen, Frankie Yale, John Scalise and Albert Anselmi to the flowershop under the guise of customers who had arrived to pick up an order. Yale greeted him with a handshake and held him while the gunmen shot O'Banion six times, twice in the chest, twice in the throat and twice in the face. O'Banion's death sparked the bloody Chicago Gang wars that would culminate in the St. Valentine's Day Massacre in 1929. He is buried in the Mt. Carmel Cemetary next to his allies and his rivals from the south side.
Irish-American Gangster. He was the head of the North Side Gang in Chicago during the bootlegging wars of the 1920s. Until his death he was the leader of the gang that was the chief rival of the South Side Gang lead by Johnny Torrio and also included Al Capone. O'Banion ran his operation out of the Scofield Flower Co. across the street from the Holy Name Cathedral where he had once sung as a choir boy. He was brought down via a double-cross that he had perpetrated on South Side leader Torrio. They agreed to meet at the flower shop to discuss a lucrative bootleg deal (alcohol was, at the time, illegal) and as they were making the deal the police raided the place and took Torrio to jail. O'Banion, who had no priors for bootlegging was released but Torrio who did have prior recieved a jail sentence. This infuriated Capone who dispatched three gunmen, Frankie Yale, John Scalise and Albert Anselmi to the flowershop under the guise of customers who had arrived to pick up an order. Yale greeted him with a handshake and held him while the gunmen shot O'Banion six times, twice in the chest, twice in the throat and twice in the face. O'Banion's death sparked the bloody Chicago Gang wars that would culminate in the St. Valentine's Day Massacre in 1929. He is buried in the Mt. Carmel Cemetary next to his allies and his rivals from the south side.

Bio by: Selk



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/769/charles_dean-o'banion: accessed ), memorial page for Charles Dean “Dion” O'Banion (8 Jul 1892–10 Nov 1924), Find a Grave Memorial ID 769, citing Mount Carmel Catholic Cemetery, Hillside, Cook County, Illinois, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.