Following in the footsteps of the Razor Gangs: Charlotte Lane
On 22 June 1927, the original razor gangster, Norman Bruhn, was shot to death by a gunman lurking in the shadows outside Mac’s sly-grog shop in Charlotte Lane, just around the corner from Stanley Street in Darlinghurst.
Bruhn had come from Melbourne and formed the first razor gang, comprising ‘Razor Jack’ Hayes, George ‘the Midnight Raper’ Wallace (pictured above) and ‘Snowy’ Cutmore (pictured below).
Their aim was to forcibly divest Tilly and Kate of their lucrative criminal enterprises, and for a time they ran riot. ‘Two women running crime in Sydney?’ Bruhn had scoffed. ‘How easy is this going to be!’ Bruhn’s razor men set about ransacking Tilly’s and Kate’s premises and beating up their customers.
On his last day alive, Bruhn had spent the afternoon drinking at the Court House Hotel in Oxford Street, then caught a cab to Mac’s. When he left, just after 10pm, he was shot down. When dying, true to the criminal code, Bruhn refused to name his assailant to police, and his murderer was never apprehended. But the word on the mean streets of Darlinghurst was that Tilly Devine ordered Frank Green to pull the trigger.
The remaining members of Bruhn’s gang fled: Wallace to Perth, where he was knifed to death; Cutmore to Melbourne, where, the following year, he was involved in a shootout with Melbourne gangster Squizzy Taylor that proved fatal to both men; Hayes served in World War II, from which, it is believed, he never returned.
Battle to become Sydney’s unchallenged crime boss
From 1927 to the introduction of the consorting laws in 1930, Tilly Devine’s and Kate Leigh’s mobs went at each other. The women’s criminal activities rarely overlapped, and while Tilly’s stamping ground was Darlinghurst, Paddington, Woolloomooloo and Kings Cross, Kate’s kingdom was headquartered in Surry Hills, but they had a fierce personal rivalry and genuinely despised each other. Each longed to be known as Sydney’s unchallenged crime boss, with all the wealth, power, fear and headlines that status guaranteed.
Whenever Leigh or Devine gang members met, such as in Kellett Street in August 1929, there was a strong chance that violence would ensue. Kate would order the beating up and slashing of Tilly’s men and women. Tilly’s minions, in turn, ransacked Kate’s grog shops and attacked her cocaine peddlers. Kate stationed snipers with rifles on Surry Hills rooftops to ward off Tilly’s troops. In Kate’s pay were such hair-trigger hoodlums as her lover Wally Tomlinson, Gregory ‘the Gunman’ Gaffney, Bruce Higgs, Bill ‘the Octopus’ Flanagan and Barney Dalton. Protecting Tilly’s interests were her violent and drunken husband ‘Big Jim’ Devine (who shot Gaffney dead and is pictured below), Frankie ‘the Little Gunman’ Green (who dispatched Dalton), Guido Calletti, Sid McDonald, and the lethal, and beautiful, prostitute Nellie Cameron. In the Leigh–Devine gang wars, at least six were slain and scores maimed and wounded.
As well as plotting attacks, Tilly and Kate ratted on each other to the police, and published scathing denunciations in the letters columns of the daily press. After Kate accused Tilly of, among many atrocities, stealing her dog and adding it to her kennel of Pomeranians, Tilly fired off a rebuttal to the Truth:
Kate Leigh lies. They are my dogs! I have their pedigree and they are a class above hers. I don’t wish to know her class. Kate Leigh! That thing of a virago! She is jealous of my youth and prosperity. I know too much for her, that is why she hates me … Well, I think myself a class above her. The underworld all take their hats off to me and class me as a lady beside her. Why is it she can do as she likes? She is handy for the police. She is the biggest police top-off in Australia!
Former policewoman Peg Fisher spoke to me in 2000 about her first assignment, 70 years before, in 1930, to go out and gather information about Tilly and Kate. Peg told me, ‘In a lane near Palmer Street, Darlinghurst, I came face to face with Tilly. She was blocking the footpath, preventing me from proceeding. She said, “You’re the new copper, ain’t you? Well, you’re not comin’ down this bloody street …” She grabbed me and started shaking me. Next thing, a woman wearing a big black hat got off a tram. It was Kate Leigh. She came up to where Tilly was shaking me like a rag doll and, without a word, she king-hit Tilly Devine and then sat on her in the road’.
But Tilly could handle herself. Peg Fisher told me, ‘Oh, she was a dirty fighter and very strong. I saw her and Kate have a blue in Oxford Street. Tilly had Kate’s hat off and was pummelling her on the ground. Kate got much the worst of it’.
Larry is a Sydney-based author. His book Razor, the saga of Kate Leigh and Tilly Devine and the razor gangs of Sydney in the 1920s and ’30s, was a national bestseller, won the Ned Kelly Award for best Australian True Crime book of 2002 and was the basis of the top-rating 2011 Underbelly series, Underbelly Razor.
Razor was also named in The Sydney Morning Herald’s, The Age’s, the Courier-Mail’s and The Australian’s roundup of the best books of the year.
His other books include 2011’s Bumper, a biography of the legendary Sydney policeman Frank “Bumper” Farrell, 2014’s Dangerous Games: Australia at the 1936 Nazi Games and 2016’s Pitched Battle, a history of the anti-apartheid demonstrations that accompanied the 1971 Springbok rugby tour of Australia. >In 2006 Pleasure And Pain, his biography of rock star Chrissy Amphlett, was a popular and critical success. In 1995 Larry wrote Never Before, Never Again about growing up a child in a rugby league world and what happened to the stars of the 11-premiership-winning St George rugby league sides of the ‘50s and ‘60s after their glory days were over. He also collaborated on the autobiographies of sports stars Rod Laver, Margaret Court, John Newcombe, Petero Civoniceva, Rex Mossop and undercover drug squad policeman and rugby international, Dan Crowley.
Larry’s biography of Olympian and World War I hero Cecil Healy (Stoke Hill Press 2019) was awarded the NIB Military History Prize 2019. Larry’s new book, The Shipwreck: The True Story of the Dunbar, the Wreck that Broke the Colony’s Heart and Forged a Nation’s Spirit, will be published by Allen & Unwin in August 2022.
Join Bruce Smythe Senior Project Designer, as he takes us behind the scenes of the design of our 'Underworld: mugshots from the Roaring Twenties' publication
It’s almost 100 years since New South Wales police used glass-plate negatives to photograph suspects in custody. These negatives are a direct link to that moment in time, and provide evidence about photographic technology and methods in the 1920s
As part of a workshop with Ellie Young at Gold Street Studios in Trentham, Victoria, I had the opportunity to take my own photographs using dry glass plate negatives
Love can make people do crazy things, risking their reputations, careers and even their freedom. New research into the NSW Police Forensic Photography Archive has revealed some unexpected stories behind the images
Step into Sydney’s seedy underworld with Larry Writer, author of Razor: Tilly Devine and the razor gangs as he explores the mean streets of Kings Cross, Woolloomooloo, East Sydney and Darlinghurst as featured on his Razorhurst walking tours