Al Capone
By: Bred • Research Paper • 2,166 Words • March 11, 2010 • 1,090 Views
Al Capone
AIN'T WE GOT FUN
Bill collectors gather
'Round and rather
Haunt the cottage next door
Men the grocer and butcher sent
Men who call for the rent
But with in a happy chappy
And his bride of only a year
Seem to be so cheerful
Here's an earful
Of the chatter you hear
Just to make their trouble nearly double
Something happen'd last night
To their chimney a gray bird came
Mister Stork is his name
And I'll bet two pins
A pair of twins
Just happen'd in with the bird
Still they're very gay and merry
Just at dawning I heard
Every morning
Every evening
Ain't we got fun
Not much money
Oh but honey
The rent's unpaid dear
We haven't a bus
But smiles were made dear
For people like us
In the winter in the Summer
Don't we have fun
Times are bum and getting bummer
Still we have fun
There's nothing surer
The rich get rich and the poor get children
In the meantime
In the between time
Ain't we got fun.
Every morning
Every evening
Don't we have fun
Twins and cares dear come in pairs dear
Don't we have fun
We've only started
As mommer and pop
Are we downhearted
I'll say that we're not
Landlords mad and getting madder
Ain't we got fun
Times are so bad and getting badder
Still we have fun
There's nothing surer
The rich get rich and the poor get laid off
In the meantime
In between time
Ain't we got fun.
- Gus Kahn, Raymond B. Egan / Richard A. Whiting, 1921
The 1920's were a time of great economic, social, and cultural change in the United States. World War I had just ended which helped increase the public’s optimism and energy. During this time returning soldiers, unskilled laborers and displaced farmers moved to soon overcrowded northern cities. Chicago was one of these cities (Rebman, 44). It was this unique environment of Chicago in the 1920's that helped Al Capone become the most notorious crime figure in history. He was the first gangster to achieve celebrity status. Capone used his many abilities and intelligence to lead a successful career in crime. He could be a ruthless monster yet along the way he would do things to show compassion for the poor, from killing people with baseball bats to opening the first soup kitchen during the great depression with his own money. It was a tumultuous time when people rebelled against the rules and conventions of traditional lifestyles. For the first time, anything could be bought with credit; cars, sofas, iceboxes, pianos, property, even new exciting items like the radio. Almost anything could be bought with the use of deferred payment. Before the use of credit, most people could not buy luxury goods, but now with credit they could. This helped contribute to the growth of organized crime. The 1920's in America brought