Esmeralda's Barn

Last updated

Esmeralda's Barn, with its sign based on a roulette wheel Esmeralda's Barn.jpg
Esmeralda's Barn, with its sign based on a roulette wheel

Esmeralda's Barn was a nightclub in Wilton Place, Knightsbridge, London, that was owned by the Kray twins from 1960 [1] until its closure in 1963. [2] The Krays used the club as a way of expanding their criminal activities into London's West End. [3]

Contents

1950s

Esmeralda's Barn [4] was conceived, designed (with murals by Pietro Annigoni) and owned by Mrs. Esme Noel Smith, and opened in February 1955 as a members theatre club. Tragically Mrs. Noel Smith ( née  Gullan) died a few weeks later having been overcome by gas at home. Afterwards it became a conventional nightclub run by Stefan de Faye. After the Betting and Gaming Act 1960 legalised gambling in the United Kingdom from 1961, [5] de Faye turned Esmeralda's Barn into a gambling club. According to John Pearson, the Act, which was intended to drive criminals out of gambling, instead proved a boon to them as it enabled them to expand their empires legally. [6]

Acquired by the Krays

The Kray twins were London gangsters Ronnie and Reggie Kray. They acquired Esmeralda's Barn as a result of their attempt to extort landlord Peter Rachman [3] [7] [8] although the exact nature of Rachman's interest in the club, if any, is unclear. Ronnie Kray had become aware of the wealth that Rachman was accumulating through his property empire and wanted a share of it. With his associates he visited Rachman in Soho and succeeded in extracting a cheque from Rachman. The cheque bounced and when Ronnie tried to collect the money Rachman was not to be found. Rachman knew that if he started to pay the Krays for protection they would continue to milk him indefinitely, so he needed to buy them off permanently. [7] He therefore arranged for the Krays, through one of their front men Leslie Payne (whom Ronnie later tried to have killed), [3] to buy Esmeralda's Barn from Stefan de Faye for the sum of £1,000. [6]

Charlie Kray, however, the older brother of the twins, later told a different version of events in which he played a key role in negotiating the purchase from the owners for the sum of £2,000 and the sale was introduced by a Commander Diamond without any involvement by Rachman. [9]

Management by the Krays

The club became a lucrative venture for the twins and enabled Reggie to play the part of the celebrity gangster, as he had always aspired to be like his filmstar hero George Raft. [6] Regular visitors included the artists Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud. [10] The club also became a useful front for the Krays' criminal activities, including the prostitution of young boys whom they used to entrap blackmail targets. [10]

If customers sometimes got carried away and accumulated large debts, that was not necessarily a bad thing as it put them in the power of the Krays. One of their associates, David Litvinoff, accumulated debts of £3,000, which Ronnie Kray agreed to waive in return for what was left of the lease on Litvinoff's flat at Ashburn Gardens, near the Gloucester Road in Kensington and taking over Litvinoff's lover Bobby Buckley, who became a croupier at the club. Litvinoff continued to live in the property as part of the deal. [10]

Ronnie was able to choose the waiters and croupiers to suit his own preferences for attractive young men, and, according to John Pearson, the Barn became the centre of Ronnie's own "private vice ring", which included private sex shows at Ashburn Gardens. [11]

Although the Krays made a lot of money from the club they could never resist extending credit to their criminal friends, who ran up large debts, cancelling other debts on a whim and dipping into the club's money whenever they wanted cash. Eventually the manager, Laurie O'Leary, [9] offered the twins £1,000 per week to stay away from the club. They refused. [7]

Effingham

Leslie Payne came up with the idea of adding the dissolute Lord Effingham to the new board of directors in return for a stipend of £10 per week. [6] Effingham was of distinguished lineage, being descended from Howard of Effingham who helped to defeat the Spanish Armada in 1588, but always short of cash. The Krays wanted the social status they thought an Earl on the board would bring. They either did not know or more likely did not care about his poor reputation and past criminal convictions, bankruptcy, bounced cheques, assaults, a dropped charge of manslaughter and the imprisonment of an ex-wife in Holloway as a threat to the British state. Effingham attended a couple of times each week and also mixed with guests at the Krays' Kentucky Club. The Krays referred to him as "Effing Effingham". [12]

Cellar Club

Under the gambling club was the Cellar Club, run by Ginette, which was a lesbian club open to people of all sexual orientations. [6]

Staff

The resident singer was Cy Grant. [6] Other musicians who regularly played there included Noel Harrison and Lance Percival. [13]

William Ives, a former boxer and, before his death in 2017, one of the richest men in Britain, worked as a doorman at the club during the Kray era. [14]

Closure

By 1963, the Krays' business interests in the West End had grown significantly and were becoming difficult to control. Esmeralda's Barn was closed at the end of that year. [2]

Today

The site is now home to The Berkeley, a five-star hotel. [15]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kray twins</span> British criminal duo during 1950s and 1960s

Ronald "Ronnie" Kray and Reginald "Reggie" Kray were English organised crime figures, and identical twin brothers from Haggerston, who operated mostly in the East End of London from the late 1950s until their arrest in 1968. With their gang, known as the Firm which was based in Bethnal Green, the Kray twins were involved in murder, armed robbery, arson, protection rackets, gambling and assaults. At their peak in the 1960s, they gained a certain measure of celebrity status by mixing with prominent members of London society, being photographed by David Bailey and interviewed on television.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Rachman</span> Polish property mogul (1919–1962)

Perec "Peter" Rachman was a Polish-born landlord who operated in Notting Hill, London, England in the 1950s and early 1960s. He became notorious for his exploitation of his tenants, with the word "Rachmanism" entering the Oxford English Dictionary as a synonym for the exploitation and intimidation of tenants.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dave Courtney</span> English author and gangster (1959–2023)

David John Courtney was an English self-proclaimed gangster who became both an author and an actor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Boothby, Baron Boothby</span> British Conservative politician (1900–1986)

Robert John Graham Boothby, Baron Boothby,, often known as Bob Boothby, was a British Conservative politician.

William Charles "Billy" Hill was an English criminal, linked to smuggling, protection rackets and extreme violence. He was one of the foremost perpetrators of organised crime in London from the 1920s through to the 1960s. His gang managed cash robberies and, in a scam, defrauded London's high society of millions at the card tables of John Aspinall's Clermont Club.

The Richardson Gang was an English crime gang based in South London, England in the 1960s. Also known as the "Torture Gang", they had a reputation as some of London's most sadistic gangsters. Their alleged specialities included pulling teeth out using pliers, cutting off toes using bolt cutters and nailing victims to floors using 6-inch nails.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frankie Fraser</span> English gangster

Francis Davidson Fraser, better known as "Mad" Frankie Fraser, was a diminutive English gangster who spent 42 years in prison for numerous violent offences.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Last of the Famous International Playboys</span> 1989 single by Morrissey

"The Last of the Famous International Playboys" is a song by British solo artist Morrissey. Co-written by Morrissey and former Smiths producer Stephen Street, the song was Morrissey's third release after the Smiths break-up. Morrissey was inspired lyrically by the East End gangster brothers the Kray Twins, whom he believed to be an example of the media glamourizing violent criminals. Street took influence from the Fall for the song's music, with the intro resembling that of "The Man Who Sold the World" by David Bowie. The single was the first Morrissey solo single to feature his former Smiths bandmates Andy Rourke, Mike Joyce, and Craig Gannon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Whitechapel Road</span> Street in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets

Whitechapel Road is a major arterial road in Whitechapel, Tower Hamlets, in the East End of London. It is named after a small chapel of ease dedicated to St Mary and connects Whitechapel High Street to the west with Mile End Road to the east. The road is part of the historic Roman road from London to Colchester, now the A11.

The one-armed bandit murder was a criminal case in the north east of England. The case involved the murder of Angus Sibbet in 1967. The ensuing trial resulted in life sentences for Dennis Stafford and Michael Luvaglio. Both men were released on licence 12 years later.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mowbray Howard, 6th Earl of Effingham</span> British peer

Mowbray Henry Gordon Howard, 6th Earl of Effingham, styled Lord Howard of Effingham from 1927 to 1946, was a British peer.

Freddie Foreman is an English publican, gangster, former associate of the Kray twins and convicted criminal.

British firms are organised crime groups originating in the United Kingdom.

<i>Legend</i> (2015 film) 2015 film by Brian Helgeland

Legend is a 2015 biographical crime thriller film written and directed by American director Brian Helgeland. It is adapted from John Pearson's book The Profession of Violence: The Rise and Fall of the Kray Twins, which deals with their career and the relationship that bound them together, and follows their gruesome career to life imprisonment in 1969.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Litvinoff</span> British film industry consultant

David Litvinoff was a consultant for the British film industry who traded on his knowledge of the criminal elements of the East End of London. A man for whom there are few truly reliable facts, it is unclear how genuine his expertise really was, though he certainly knew the Kray Twins and was particularly friendly with Ronnie Kray, according to a biography published in 2016. He entertained his showbiz friends with stories of the Krays' activities and his niece Vida described him as "the court jester to the rich, smart Chelsea set of the sixties".

William Ives was a British steel magnate who was a major donor to the British Conservative Party.

The Astor Club was a nightclub which operated in Mayfair, London from the 1930s to the late 1970s. The haunt of royals and car dealers, gangsters and landed aristocrats, it was a fixture in London nightlife, with the most famous years of the club being the decades between 1950 and 1970. The Astor was one of the most prestigious of a number of nightclubs and "hostess clubs" which flourished particularly in the period between the end of the Second World War in 1945 and the opening of the 1960s and 1970s discothèques. Such watering-holes had almost all disappeared by the 1980s, when discos and nightclubs merged into the nocturnal "clubs" of those years, a situation which led up to the present-day London night-time economy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gangster film</span> Film genre

A gangster film or gangster movie is a film belonging to a genre that focuses on gangs and organized crime. It is a subgenre of crime film, that may involve large criminal organizations, or small gangs formed to perform a certain illegal act. The genre is differentiated from Westerns and the gangs of that genre.

<i>The Profession of Violence</i> 1972 John Pearson book

The Profession of Violence: The Rise and Fall of the Kray Twins is a 1972 biography of the Kray twins by John Pearson. It details the life of the twins from their births, childhood, criminal careers, and eventual arrest. It was nominated for the 1974 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Fact Crime. It was followed by The Cult of Violence: The Untold Story of the Krays in 2001 and Notorious: The Immortal Legend of the Kray Twins in 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joey Pyle</span> English gangster

Joseph Henry Pyle, known as Joey Pyle or Joe Pyle, was an English gangland boss, convicted criminal, and pioneer and promoter of unlicensed boxing, who operated in London from the 1950s until his final arrest and conviction in 1992. An associate of the Krays and the Richardsons, and "one of the most feared members of the London underworld", he was known as the "London Don of Dons" by the New York Mafia. Less well known to the general public than many of his contemporaries in the underworld, Pyle was a key police target during his criminal career, but although arrested and charged many times, he seldom served time in prison, unlike many of the gangland figures with whom he was associated.

References

  1. The Krays: A history of violence. BBC News, 4 April 2000. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  2. 1 2 The Kray Twins: Brothers in Arms. Big-Time Gangsters. Thomas L. Jones, crimelibrary. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 The Krays. Metropolitan Police. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  4. Belfast Telegraph 24 Dec 1954
  5. On this day: 1 September 1960 Game on for British betting shops. BBC. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Pearson, John (2013). The Cult of Violence: The Untold Story of the Krays. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 67–70. ISBN   978-1-4482-1152-4.
  7. 1 2 3 The Kray Twins: Brothers in Arms. Good Times Rolling. Archived 2014-10-12 at the Wayback Machine Thomas L. Jones, crimelibrary. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  8. Thomas, Donald. (2006). Villains' Paradise: A History of Britain's Underworld. New York: Pegasus Books. p. 408. ISBN   978-1-933648-17-0.
  9. 1 2 Kray, Charlie & Colin Fry. (2011). Doing the Business: The Final Confession of the Senior Kray Brother. John Blake Publishing. p. 68. ISBN   978-1-84358-442-1.
  10. 1 2 3 Buck, Paul. (2012). Performance: The Biography of a 60s Masterpiece. London: Omnibus Press. pp. 65–66. ISBN   978-0-85712-791-4.
  11. Pearson, John. (2011). Notorious: The Immortal Legend of the Kray Twins. London: Arrow Books. p. 108. ISBN   978-0-09-950534-1.
  12. "The Earl of Effingham." The Times , 1 March 1996, p. 19.
  13. McNally, Peter. (2013). The Time of My Life: Triumph and Tragedy at London Weekend Television. Cirencester: Memoirs Publishing. p. 62. ISBN   978-1-909304-61-1.
  14. The Cameron crony and the Kray twins: Tory donor admits working as gangsters' doorman. James Lyons & David Collins, Mirror , 11 April 2012. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  15. About the hotel. Berkeley London. Retrieved 2 October 2014.

51°30′07″N0°09′23″W / 51.5020°N 0.1563°W / 51.5020; -0.1563