The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Peaky Blinder mobster tells all

Amazing Inside Story: The Truth About The Glasgow Gangs*

- By Stevie Gallacher sgallacher@sundaypost.com

Sporting a dapper suit and tie and two shiners, Billy Fullerton looks every inch the gangster.

Staring out from the pages of The Weekly News, the leader of the notorious Billy Boys gang was in 1932 one of Britain’s most notorious hoodlums.

Fullerton had just been released from Barlinnie prison after a conviction for yet another gangland battle when he told his story in what was then the biggest-selling paper outside of London.

In an article, Fullerton revealed what life was like inside one of the biggest criminal organisati­ons in Britain – and one which has featured in hit BBC series Peaky Blinders over the past few weeks.

He claimed to have put his criminal past behind him and explained how he joined the gang, rose through the ranks and ran a protection racket.

According to Dr Andrew Davies, razor gang historian, Fullerton’s forgotten piece is a remarkable insight into his life, and how razor gangs worked.

It’s also an early example of a British criminal being glamorised in the British press.

“Readers in the 1930s would have been very familiar with stories about Chicago gangster Al Capone,” explained Dr Davies. “In 1932, Scarface had been released so readers would have been familiar with gangsters. The Scottish press was full of

stories about Al Capone and murders in Chicago – it was a big deal at the time.

“The headline wr iter descr ibed Fullerton as being like Al Capone. There’s almost a yearning to find a Glaswegian Capone.

“There was a glamour to gangs and Fullerton was one of the people who traded on that.

“In the article, he tells the story of how he was recruited into the Billy Boys. That’s significan­t because previously people believed he had founded the gang, but it was already in existence – the name of the gang referred to King Billy, William of Orange.

“He says he joined the gang for protection after being targeted by rivals, and because he had stood up for himself, the Billy Boys were keen to recruit him.

“This piece in The Weekly News is really rare. And for me, as a researcher, that made it incredibly precious.”

Despite the reputation of the razor gangs as simple, street-fighting thugs, Fullerton talked about how he took part in organised crime.

He boasted how he took payment from a man to beat up a business rival but, instead of going through with it, Fullerton instead played both sides off against each other.

“Fullerton talks to the guy and says, ‘Hey, guess what I’ve come to do. What do you reckon?’,” said Dr Davies.

“He takes the payment from both sides, and the supposed victim parades around with sticking plasters on his head for a couple of weeks.

“But this is interestin­g because when people talk about these gangs, they nor mally think they exist on the margins and they’re disconnect­ed from

the mainstream world. This shows that’s not the case at all.

“We’ve not seen this anywhere else – you’ve got somebody who, from the way Fullerton recounts, is a legitimate businessma­n, coming to the leader of the Billy Boys, and saying, ‘ if I pay you, will you beat up the competitio­n?’.

“So in 1932 in Glasgow, someone from the legitimate world of business is using the Billy Boys as hired thugs.

“At that point, the distinctio­n between the kind of respectabl­e side of Glasgow and the gangs just collapses.”

As well as protection racketeeri­ng and battles with rivals, Fullerton talks about working at Ibrox stadium, which became a site of one of the gang’s main sources of inspiratio­n.

“One fascinatin­g aspect is how he talks about Rangers fan culture. Fullerton describes how the gang had a poet on the terraces at Ibrox, who they paid a wage,” said Dr Davies. “Fullerton mentions selling poems and songs at Ibrox – he says he sold 36 dozen copies at 2p each. I would love to know if Celtic fans did something similar on the terraces of Celtic Park.”

Despite his celebrity status, Fullerton was mainly concerned with convincing readers of The Weekly News, then and now published, like The Sunday Post, by DC Thomson, that he was desperatel­y trying to leave his lawless past behind. Although subsequent conviction­s and brushes with right- wing politics followed, Dr Davies, author of City of Gangs: Glasgow And The Rise Of The British Gangster, believed Fullerton was being genuine.

“It was a desperate plea by Fullerton, and I think it was genuine for two reasons,” added Dr Davies. “He was 26 and had just come out of Barlinnie.

“There are appalling accounts in the article of how he was being continuall­y attacked, and of the danger his children were in. He’s clearly very acutely aware of the effect of his gang involvemen­t on his wife and his children. That makes his claims credible.

“And at the time the police struggled to get witness statements about these gangs. There was a kind of code of silence from people refusing to cooperate with the police – almost a kind of Omerta.

“Billy is breaking this code by revealing informatio­n about the Billy Boys. This is informatio­n that had not been put into the public main domain before.

“This must have been an attempt to break from the gang.

“But from what he’s saying, reading between the lines, something went on with his gang.

“It is a plea for his enemies to leave him alone – but to me it also appears that it is a plea to his former followers to leave him alone, too.

“Fullerton was back in Barlinnie more times in the 1930s.

“In 1935 he went to Belfast with a flute band, during terrible sectarian strife. According to authoritie­s, he made the situation much worse.

“If the article was a bid to escape his criminal life, it didn’t work.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Brian Gleeson as fictional Billy Boys leader Jimmy Mccavern in Peaky Blinders
Brian Gleeson as fictional Billy Boys leader Jimmy Mccavern in Peaky Blinders
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom