He was even offering some of them jobs.Ĭapone milked his good works for all the favorable publicity they were worth. Telling the newspapers that Capone was doing more for the poor than the entire U.S. An army of ragged, starving men assembled three times a day beside a storefront at 935 South State Street, feasting on the largesse of Al Capone. Al Capone’s soup kitchen became one of the strangest sights Chicagoans had ever seen.
#Chicago 1930 bad fps free#
“120 000 meals are served by Capone Free Soup Kitchen” the Chicago Tribune headlined on December 1931.
But it’s well-known that he had brutal methods murdering enemies, extorting local businesses, bribing public officials, intimidating witnesses.Īl Capone’s intentions were an effort to clean up his image. He had a bit of the Robin Hood mystique by being charitable from some of the money he made running his criminal enterprise.īeing a bootlegger (made/distributed illegal alcohol) during Prohibition (the period in the USA from 1920-1933 when alcohol was illegal) was seen as an acceptable, glamorous, even brave thing to do by the public. One of the first and obvious benefits of a soup kitchen was to provide a place where the homeless and poor could get free food and a brief rest from the struggles of surviving on the streets.Īl Capone was a gangster who made a fortune during the prohibition through bootlegging.
In fact, preceding the passage of the Social Security Act, “soup kitchens” like the one Al Capone founded, provided the only meals that some unemployed Americans had. The kitchen employed a few people but fed many more. Unemployed men outside a soup kitchen opened in Chicago by Al Capone, 1931.Īl Capone started one of the first soup kitchens.