- Source: George Appo
George Washington Appo (July 4, 1856 – May 17, 1930) was a pickpocket and fraudster whose manner of speech in a testimony became influential in depictions of criminals . George himself wrote an autobiography, unpublished, and became the subject of a book.
Quimbo Appo
Appo's father was a Chinese immigrant from Ningbo city with various names ("Quimbo Appo" or "Chang Quimbo Appo", Chinese name "Lee Ah Bow"), while his mother, Catherine Fitzpatrick, was an Irish American. His father spent time in prison, while his mother and sister died enroute to California to visit her brother.
His mixed ancestry led a Louis Beck to present Appo as a story warning against miscegenation.
Incarceration and life of crime
Appo served time in various New York penitentiaries including Sing Sing, the Blackwell's Island Penitentiary, and the upstate penitentiary in Dennamora. In a biography by Timothy Gilfoyle, the prison system of New York in the later half of the 19th century is depicted as being based upon the spoils system and largely corrupt. In the description of Sing Sing, Gilfoyle outlines the stove manufacturing operation the inmates were forced to carry out. Gilfoyle describes the penitentiary at Blackwell's Island (now Roosevelt Island) as having lax security, with inmates commonly escaping if they knew how to swim. Appo was also involved in a green goods scam in Poughkeepsie at one point in his life.
See also
Rebecca Salome Foster - an advocate for the rehabilitation of prisoners who would take on Appo as an assistant
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- George Appo
- George (given name)
- Clinton Correctional Facility
- Sing Sing
- List of con artists
- Poughkeepsie, New York
- Roosevelt Island
- Green goods scam
- List of identities in The Gangs of New York (book)
- Clone trooper