Exposed at last by The New York Times, the satiric cartoons of Thomas Nast in Harper’s Weekly, and the efforts of a reform lawyer, Samuel J. Tilden, Tweed was tried…
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Scandal.Tweed's downfall began in 1871. James Watson, who was a county auditor in Comptroller Dick Connolly's office and who also held and recorded the ring's books, died a week…
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William Magear “Boss” Tweed, leader of New York City’s corrupt Tammany Hall political organization during the 1860s and early 1870s, is delivered to authorities in New York City after his…
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BossTweed was brought down in large part by an expose by the New York Times and Harper’s political cartoonist Thomas Nast, who were investigating the large scale of corruption…
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1. BossTweed helped get the project started. William M. “ Boss” Tweed, the infamously corrupt head of New York City’s Tammany Hall political machine, latched on to the Brooklyn Bridge
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Tammany Hall leader William “ Boss” Tweed and his cronies stole between $45 million and $200 million in city funds (a figure in the billions of dollars today), and Tweed accumulated…
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By some estimates, the Democratic boss William M. Tweed’s ring stole $45 million (nearly $1 billion today). Photo: Thomas Nast, Harper's Weekly. Thomas Nast’s Harper’s Weekly cartoons helped ...
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William ‘ Boss’ Tweed is a man often defined as the very symbol of cronyism and political corruption. Yet, there is far more to the story of Tweed than his greed.…
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Joseph DeVincenzo, a mayoral assistant whose duties include oversight of the Tweed Courthouse, said the five- to six-year rebuilding would include the constructing of at least two enclosed fire ...
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Mary McMahon. BossTweed was an infamous figure in New York politics who dominated New York City in the mid-1800s, and essentially controlled the Democratic Party in New York state…
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BossTweed was arrested in October 1871 and indicted shortly thereafter. He was tried in 1873, and after a hung jury in the first trial, he was found guilty in…
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Scandal 23: William “ Boss” Tweed Political Scandals. History. At the height of his power in the 1860s, William “ Boss” Tweed was the head of Tammany Hall, the Democratic political machine…
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William Magear Tweed , often erroneously referred to as William "Marcy" Tweed (see below),[1] and widely known as "Boss" Tweed, was an American politician most notable for being the political boss of Tammany Hall, the Democratic Party's political machine that played a major role in the politics of 19th-century New York City and state. At…