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"The more things a man is ashamed of, the
more respectable he is."
-- George Bernard Shaw
The words refined and gaudy, by all practical
standards, contrast. But, somewhere between the ether of the two
words there is a fine line that, when the words blend across that
line, a rarity is created. This specimen is one of color but with an
ability to control that color to his/her advantage; to sip of the
grapes of life with a celebratory vigor and vim and always emanate
what the Parisians call en elegance.
Adam Worth steered between the earthiness of the lowlife and
the headiness of the lavish high society crowd with such ease that
he, at times, didn't seem to merely live life, but manipulate it.
Much of his actions were more instinctive than by design; he
followed his desires. For one, he was neither a parasite nor a
hypocrite, but enjoyed the beneficence offered by his company in
sunlight and in shadow. In Victorian London, he could command a
troop of Fagin-like pickpockets before sunrise, then discuss the
qualities of imported silks over domestic weave in the gentlemen's
clubs at noon.
He knew the poor and he felt comfortable with, and enjoyed, their
camaraderie; but he also relished the architecture of the wealthy
frame of mind and, yes, enjoyed their camaraderie a little more.
Adam Worth was a thief. He stole cash, he stole jewels, he stole
women's hearts and he stole a priceless work of art. Of the women he
loved most in his life, one was a duchess, albeit only on canvas.
She was the Lady Georgiana Spencer, a controversial figure of
uninhibited womanhood, and ancestor of the 20th Century's
remarkable Princess Diana.
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Adam Worth at his height (Pinkerton's, Inc.)
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Because of his combined knowledge of the streets and his aptitude
to recognize arte d'clasique -- and most of all because of
his ingenuity - Adam Worth became what the world-famous Pinkerton
Detective Agency called "the most remarkable criminal of them
all". Scotland Yard commissioned him "the Napoleon of
Crime" and mystery writer Arthur Conan Doyle used him as a
model for the fictional consummate of evil, Professor Moriarty in
his Sherlock Holmes stories. But, Adam Worth was not "a villain
of the lowest degree," to employ a piece of literary light from
the Victorian Melodrama. Worth never harmed anyone's person, never
threatened a life with knife or gun; he robbed only those whom he
considered rich enough to lose money; he stole fortunes and he lost
fortunes. He gave thousands of British pounds and French francs and
American dollars to friends who were on the skid and he never asked
to be repaid - all he asked was loyalty. |
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He performed honest jobs for probably only a few months in his
life - and became one of the wealthiest and most respected men in
Europe.
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Despite later rumors that he was the son and heir of wealthy
aristocrats - perhaps of royal English birth - Adam Worth was born
to rag-poor German-Jew parents in Germany in 1844. When he was five
years old, the family sailed to America where the elder Herr Worth
(probably Werth, or perhaps Wirtz) set up a tiny tailor shop in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. The father toiled, used his talents with
needle and thread, and sewed up enough money to barely feed a wife
and, eventually, three children; another boy, John, followed Adam,
and then a daughter, Harriet.
He grew up in the area of the city that only dreamed of the
"mighty Massachusetts rich". His playmates were children
from families like his own, sons and daughters of the sweating lower
class, German Jews all, whose parents slaved in the mills, the
factories and the backrooms of the garment shops; whose culture was
left alone and unrecognized by upper-crust Protestant Cambridge. The
children, faced with the obvious demarcation between
Anglo-Americanism and their own reputation as "stupid immigrant
Yiddish," learned early the value of that mystical American
thing called a dollar. Of how possessing many of them would remove
them from their lowly status. The ways and means of getting ahold of
one were often crooked, but, often, for them, the only way.
Into adulthood, Adam Worth would relate the foundation of his
criminal career. A schoolmate told him, then a naïve boy, that he
would trade him a new, shiny penny for two older, duller ones.
Impressed by the sheen of the recently minted coin, little Adam
accepted and ran home to show his father the great bargain he had
made. Herr Worth erupted at his son's lack of wit and chastised the
boy for the fool's play.
"From that moment on," Worth would say, "I never
again let anyone take the advantage over me."
Worth was growing into a fine looking boy of dark hair and eyes;
his once-open expression of hope had chiseled into a wiser one. His
aquiline nose seemed to be always sniffing life's experiences,
inhaling and imbedding what his eyes saw into his brain, recording
it to memory. Wandering through Cambridge, he would watch with keen
interest the behaviors and the fine clothing and conveyances of the
students from Boston who passed into and out of the gargoyle-crowned
doors of Harvard University.
"In the Harvard students who paraded through Cambridge, the
immigrant Jewish urchin had ample opportunity to observe the outward
shows of wealth and privilege," writes Ben Macintyre in his
book on Adam Worth entitled The Napoleon of Crime.
"Ashamed of his lowly origins, frustrated by impecunity, the
young Worth clearly felt himself to be the equal of the fine young
gentlemen strutting Boston Commons. Their wealth and sophistication
provoked ambivalent feelings of envy, resentment and anger, and also
of admiration and desire. Worth resolved to 'better' himself."
At the age of 14, Adam Worth ran away from home to find his
portal into society.
He drifted around Boston for a time with no apparent direction,
then in 1860 strayed to New York City, which to a boy his age and in
his stature must have gleamed as Utopia. Inspired to a new ambition
at the site of the Goliath, of promised gold, the by-then
16-year-old Worth took what Macintyre calls "his first and only
honest job," that of a clerk in a department store. He remained
in this position only one month.
That staying at this job longer might have led to a different
future for Worth is an intriguing, but superfluous, proposition.
Fuming over what they felt were limited states' rights and the right
to practice their beloved institution of slavery, Southerners ceded
from the Union, and President Abraham Lincoln sent millions of armed
troops below the Mason-Dixon line to squelch the rebellion. Civil
war had come to America. With the first blast of insurgent cannons,
the North summoned all grown males to answer her country's call for
restoration. Young Worth responded, not so much for a sense of
patriotism, but for the yearning of adventure. And pay. Enlisting,
he was guaranteed an attractive bounty of $1,000.
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Union soldiers
indicative of young Adam
Worth (Matthew Brady
collection) |
Signing up on November 28, 1861, he lied about his age (recording
it as 21, not 17), then marched off to boot camp along with other
raw recruits of the 34th Light Artillery out of Flushing,
New York. After a month of drilling on Long Island, the regiment
headed south to converge with the Grand Army of the Potomac under
General Pope. Evidently, Worth proved to be eager and able; his
captain, the erstwhile Jacob Roemer, quickly promoted him to
corporal, then to sergeant in a span of several months. Worth found
himself in charge over a cannon battery. |
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The 34th New York repeatedly skirmished with General
Robert E. Lee's forces of Northern Virginia in the hills below
Washington, D.C. Worth's cannoneers distinguished themselves in the
face of the enemy. In August, 1862, the Northern blues and
Confederate grays clashed head-on, hand-to-hand, bayonet-to-bayonet,
in what was to be one of the fiercest engagements of the Civil War
-- Manassas Junction, also known as Bull Run. "Bullets, shot
and shell fell like hail in a heavy rain storm," wrote Captain
Roemer, "Men were tumbling, horses were falling and it
certainly looked as though 'de kingdom was a-comin'.'"
Certainly, the kingdom tapped Worth's shoulder and, in doing so,
played him a fortuitous trick. Rebel shrapnel felled him, not
severely, and along with thousands of other stricken comrade, he was
shipped off to Georgetown Hospital in the suburbs of Washington.
While recuperating, he learned that back on the battlefield he had
been accidentally listed as dead. This time, he would not be the
recipient of a shiny new penny. This time, he would master the ruse
and take the extra cent where a cent could be made. The army be
damned, he literally walked out of convalescence a free man, free of
all obligations to Captain Roemer and the New York 34th,
free from the cause of liberty, and free from all but his own goal:
to get rich.
He contrived to start bankrolling himself immediately. "Over
the coming months, Worth established a system," pens Macintyre,
"(to) enlist in one regiment under an assumed name, collect
whatever bounty was being offered, and then promptly desert."
But, author and researchist Macintyre is quick to point out that,
despite these forsakings, Worth was not a coward, his design being
financial not timid: "He repeatedly found himself in the thick
of battle, including the Battle of the Wilderness in May, 1864, an
engagement scarcely less ferocious than Bull Run." Considering
that Worth detested violence, and remained armed throughout several
conflicts, is a testimony to his loyalty, a trait that was to become
more apparent in his business dealings as the years passed.
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Pinkerton
detectives were he Scourge
of runaway soldiers (Ben
Macintyre) |
His chosen occupation was, despite its monetary virtues, an
unsafe one. The Pinkerton Detective Agency, which was charged with
nabbing runaways, had gotten wise to men like Worth who, in many
creative ways, were partaking of the war's spoils. Agents were fast
closing in and Worth, remaining a step ahead, had effected several
narrow escapes.
Quitting this enterprise, he fled to New York City where general
sentiment was one of anti-war anyway. (In late 1864, a large portion
of the city was burned to the ground when an intense weekend of
draft rioting got out of hand.) By the time he reached the gotham,
General Lee had surrendered and the war was over.
The Union was preserved, but Adam Worth's private fight was only
beginning. He determined to prove that a German Jew from the slums
of Cambridge could reach the pinnacle. Glory, glory hallelujah.
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