*** Welcome to piglix ***

Chicago May

Mary Anne Churchill Sharpe
Born Mary Anne Duignan
1871
Edenmore, Ballinamuck County Longford, Ireland
Died 1929 (aged 57–58)
Detroit, Michigan
Other names Chicago May, Queen of crooks
Occupation Prostitute
Criminal charge Robbery; Attempted Murder
Criminal penalty 5 years imprisonment; 15 years imprisonment
Criminal status Deceased
Spouse(s) Jim Sharpe (????–????)

Chicago May (1871-1929) was the nickname of Mary Anne Duignan, an Irish-born criminal who became notorious in America, Britain and France. She referred to herself as the "Queen of crooks".

She was born in Edenmore, Ballinamuck, County Longford, Ireland. In 1890, at the age of 19, she stole her parents' life-savings and ran away to Liverpool, England where she bought new clothes and booked a ticket to America. Upon arrival in New York she supported herself by prostitution and picking pockets. She moved to Nebraska to stay with her uncle, where she met a criminal, Dal Churchill, whom she married, but the marriage was brought to a sudden end when her husband was lynched after an attempted train robbery. The marriage gave her American citizenship.

She moved to Chicago, to take advantage of the large influx of visitors at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. She teamed up with another prostitute. One would rob customers while the other was having sex with them. She returned to New York City, where she worked as a dancer, but was soon arrested for stealing a wallet, earning her first jail sentence. She briefly married a friend, Jim Sharpe, but the couple separated after a short while. After this she called herself May Churchill Sharpe. She soon established herself with the local criminal underworld, becoming involved in various crimes, mostly of a petty nature, including fraud, assault, , drunk and disorderly behavior, beggary and pickpocketing.

She had various criminal lovers, but she graduated from petty criminality to major crime when she met Eddie Guerin, who organised a robbery of the American Express office in Paris. May was imprisoned for her role in the crime. She operated her schemes on four continents and in nine countries. She reached the height of her career in England, when she was taken up by aristocrat Sir Sidney Hamilton Gore, who is said to have proposed marriage to her - shortly before he shot himself.

After Geurin escaped from a French prison island, he made his way to London where he met May again, but the relationship turned sour. She took up with a burglar named Charley Smith. In 1907, during an altercation with Geurin, Smith shot him, wounding him in the foot. Smith and May were both accused of attempted murder. May was convicted and sentenced to fifteen years. She was released in 1917, and returned to America.


...
Wikipedia

...