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Mean Streets


More "Mean Streets"
And Some Are Even Meaner Than The First 20!

ALL BLOCK SECTION PDF'S ARE $10.00 Each


Full details of businesses and features in each Block Section appear with their photos via these links.

The Slums

Block Section 21 Block Section 22
Block Section 23 Block Section 24

The Harbor

Block Section 29 Block Section 30 Block Section 31
Block Section 32 Block Section 33

Little Italy

Block Section 2 Block Section 34
Block Section --
Block Section --

Click Here To Skip Ahead to Visit "Mean Streets" Accessories: Streets, Sidewalks, Alleys, Streetcar, Graphic Files, & Multi-Block Deals

Click Here To Revisit "Mean Streets" Block Sections 1-20

THE SLUMS!
The hatchery of generations of petty criminals and future gang lords, no city of the era was without them. Rows of crumbling tenements and abandoned properties, with litter strewn alleys and cold stoops in front of overcrowded rooms where domestic violence and poverty bred rage and envy. Once decent, middle-class neighborhoods, their fortunes faded as the waves of immigrants from the farms and foreign lands came for industrial employment in the City, only to find those jobs were filled. Families and individuals were trapped in ever decaying tenements that became warehouses of despair.

For many, the easiest way out was through crime. Gangs of children became students of theft, violence and murder in the class room of the streets. Most would never graduate to anything more, but the truly talented would become the Capone's, Lepke's, and Lansky's to rule cities and syndicates, with police and politicians on their payrolls.

This is the neighborhood where beat cops might never walk and detectives visit only in search of witnesses and suspects of the most recent outrage. But here the P.I.'s can meet contacts and hear the latest about who pulled off the heist, kidnapping, or killing that the police have given up on. If there is going to be crime to confront or mysteries to be solved, the heart of darkness will be in...THE SLUMS!


Block Section 21-- The first in this collection of four blocks which can be clustered around an intersection or laid out in one long or two parallel rows, providing a set large enough to be the scene for most any action your scenario permits. Two adjoining tenements are set back from the sidewalk to accommodate the characteristic "stoops" they featured. They are the front face of the block while two abandoned factory spaces are to their rear. Empty and decaying, they can hide almost anyone--or thing--behind the dead eyes of their empty windows.

Front
Right side
Rear face
Left Side
Overhead view
Not a quiet neighborhood...

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Block Section 22-- Two more Tenements, the "Morrison" and the "Savoia," relics from the 1880's, with the obligatory "stoops" set back from the sidewalk. On the rear side are some businesses befitting the neighborhood: "Clancy's Pool Parlor," "The Blue Note," a Bar where the only music played is--not surprisingly--the Blues, and "O'Malley-Green Grocer" whose fruits and vegetables have GOT to be fresher than his building.

Right Side of Block
Rear Side of Block
Left Side of Block
Busy Day
Busy Sidewalk

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Block Section 23-- An even older block with three Tenements, the "Hamilton," "Arcadia," and "Weathersby," each predating the "stoop," and already old enough to catch fire, fall over, and then sink in the swamp. On the rear face is the older "Columbia" rooming house, and the even older "General Ben Butler Hotel," with a basement bar that may still sell Civil War Era "fire water."

Front Entrance
Right Side and Rear Face
Rear Side of Block
Left Side Wall/Gen. Ben Butler Hotel & Bar
One Noisy Neighborhood

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Block Section 24-- Four separate buildings housing three small industries (one derelict), and a greasy spoon diner, "The Workers' Hash House," which may give you an idea of Pavel Drashko's, the owner and cook, politics!

Front Side
Block Left Side
Rear of Block
The Greasy Spoon
Acme Body Shop Entrance
Overhead View
Back In The Alley
Trouble Brewing at Al's

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Block Section 25--The Hawthorne Hotel/Inn, the site of the most spectacular attempted mob hit of all time when Hymie "The Pole" Weiss sent a convoy of cars tooling by and poured hundreds of rounds into the Hawthorne Inn where his arch-rival, Al Capone, was taking lunch. The Hawthorne Hotel was "Big Al's" headquarters in Cicero, the Chicago suburb he ruled as a private fiefdom. He escaped unharmed, much to Hymie's regret not long after in front of Holy Name Cathedral (Block Section #11, above).

Closely modeled down to the smallest details, this Block Section is a faithful reproduction of the original Hawthorne Hotel, including the twin businesses operated on the ground floor, the infamous Inn and the Hawthorne Men's Wear Shop where "Snorky" Capone had all his muscle buy their nattiest suits.


Hotel Front
Left Front Corner
Rear Face
Left Rear
Overhead
Right Front
Hawthorne Restaurant
Hawthorne Men's Wear

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Block Section 26--General Hospital, the place that most residents of "Mean Streets" will visit sooner or later! Occupying the full 10" area, it has an Emergency Entrance for Ambulances and "limp in" street customers. The Ground floor has offices for doctor's, administration, a waiting room and locker room for nurses. The second floor has private rooms for those who can afford them, while the top floor has public wards --and most befitting "Mean Streets"--a high security area for holding wounded police prisoners and/or the insane.

Front Entrance
Right Front Corner
Rear Entrance
Emergency Entrance
Busy Day At The Hospital
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<P> Models and Photos Courtesy of Alan Lockhart </CENTER>
  

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Mean Set #27-- The Clarion Building --Home of The Clarion, the city's Newspaper, and Radio Station KYJ. This is where your crime fighting reporters and photographers come back to have their stories and pictures published every day. From Torchy Blaine to Clark Kent to Brenda Starr, famous newspaper men and women have always been on the forefront of the war on crime, and now your own characters can join the fight from their own Bastion of Truth!

Besides the power of the printed page, Radio KYJ is the voice of the city heard by everyone within earshot of a radio. Covering live-breaking news as well as broadcasting entertainment programming by local actors and writers, this station can affect public opinion for and against politicians, law enforcement, and the underworld.

The Ground Floor Annex has two popular businesses in the Downtown area--Signorelli's Sweetshop and Papadapolous's Tobacco Shop. The former provides candy, pastry, ice cream, and the latter cigars, cigarettes, and pipe tobacco--making each providers of the lesser vices in town under the thumb of the greater ones.

Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison






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Block Section 28--Dullard's Department Store The largest and oldest Department Store in the city. The Dullard family has operated this enterprise through three generations to the present, and has never sold anything but for hard cash. Their unadvertised motto is "Credit Cheerfully Refused," and it has always been true--except for the "cheerful" part. Their buying power gives them an unfair advantage over most small retailers, and their rapacious practices have kept them profitable, if not popular.

Given the family's archly conservative views and practices, it seems odd to not a few that the only renter of space in the building is the Kit Kat Klub, the swankiest and hottest Jazz Night Club in town. Only the very best acts perform here, and the city's high rollers come for the first class food, drink, and entertainment. These include the flashiest and most notorious gangsters--even rivals--who (usually) observe an unofficial truce when they bring their women and associates. And, though it's one of the city's open secrets, it appears that high stakes gambling is available on site--somewhere--as well.

Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison







(Owners of the Kit Kat Klub interior as part of "Mean Sets" will recognize that its exterior front wall is identical to that shown here in the full context of the building it is located in.)

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A major employer and source of customs and other revenues, a busy harbor allows for a busy city! But wherever ships deliver and load rich cargoes, there are those elements lurking to steal what they can. And wherever longshoremen are needed, there are corrupt labor interests trying to control everything.

But more than organized crime, there are other risks to visiting sailors and landsmen who come to the Harbor. Various businesses offer services of all kinds not available elsewhere, and they're not above taking advantage of the unwise and unwary.

Still, when an expedition to some far away land must be outfitted, here is where one can find all that is needed. People needing to leave the country as quietly as possible can come down here to book passage on a Tramp Steamer, or privately arrange for secret cargoes--of all sizes--to be sent out or brought into the country. Everyone is willing to deal for extra money on the side, in good faith or bad, but the Harbor is where all adventurers eventually go!


Block Section 29--The Wharf-- Another unique offering, this piece is a 30" long, 8" wide, and 2" high above the water key portion of The Harbor, along which vessels of all kinds can tie up prior to loading or unloading whatever cargoes a Pulp or Gangster scenario might involve. It comes with an optional and equal length of "night water" textures to lay down in front, though builders may substitute their preferred water surfaces. Judicious printing permits the Wharf to be any length desired.

Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison










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Block Section 30--Uranium Steamship Company Warehouse--The newest warehouse along the Harbor, it is the property of equally new Uranium which has recently opened an office here. With ambitious plans to dominate the shipping industry along the coast--if not the world--its owners, ship captains, crews, and longshoremen aggressively compete with any and all others, but particularly Stromberg. Rivalry extends to brawls between employees of both companies, and even claims of sabotage. While owning a growing fleet of its own freighters, Uranium seems willing to do business with even the most disreputable tramp steamers carrying cargoes of uncertain legality, as well as dealings with a number of unfriendly foreign governments, in order to claim every available nickel of seaborn commerce. Longshoremen frequently-- and mysteriously--work late many nights offloading odd cargoes and furtive passengers from some of these tramps, often with heavy security.

The Warehouse is 9.5" square and 7" high, with three floors. Three loading doors face the Wharf, and three more the street behind for maximum storage and dispatching speed.

Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison








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Block Section 31--Stromberg World Wide Shipping & Freight-- The oldest, best established shipping company in the Harbor, they are significant employers of longshoremen and a major source of revenues to the city. Founded three generations ago by a Swedish Captain, the Stromberg family is part of the city's heritage, despite their support of Prohibition and with no evidence of engagement in bootlegging, no matter the potential for huge profit. Indeed, the family supports a variety of charities and is the largest contributor to the City Mission soup kitchen. However, the increasingly bitter rivalry between Stromberg and Uranium is beginning to wear even on this family's patience and goodwill.

The Stromberg Warehouse is considerably smaller than Uranium's at 5.5" high, 9" wide, 8" deep, with two floors, and two large loading doors facing the pier and the street behind.

Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison








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Block Section 32--Shanghai Lil's-- The most dangerous saloon on the coast, where more people are sent to the hospital, jail, and morgue in the entire city. And then there are those who simply are never heard of again. Widely believed to be the heart of criminal activity in the Harbor, it's flamboyant namesake owner is herself without a police record. Believed to be involved in activities in Chinatown, too, her wealth and influence provide her a special status in the City's Underworld.

The block is 10" square and Lil's is 7" high, while the shops along side are all 3" high at their roof peaks. Besides Lil's, other businesses in the Block include Israel Hawkins, seller of maps and navigation equipment, Lloyd and Bridges Marine Salvage, Burlyman's Tattoo Parlor, and Sven Torgersen, Ship Chandler.

Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison









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Block Section 33 Kravitz & Blume' Fishmarket -- This Block has the Harbor Master's Office next to Kravitz & Blume, a Waterman's flop house (the Backwater Inn), the Uranium Steamship Company's Offices, and the "Joe Hill" Union Hall for the Local Dock Workers Union, as well as district HQ for the International Workers of the World (I.W.W.). Between agitating Socialists on the one hand, and Mob attempts to control Labor Unions on the other, all kinds of action can be played out here. The 10" square Block is just under 6" high all around, though the Inn has a slightly higher gabled roof.


Model and photos courtesy of Mr. Glen Allison






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Block Section 34 Italian Business Block and the Metro Diner-- The second "Mean Streets" Block emphasizing the Italian Neighborhood common to so many great American cities. Here will be found the Nitti's Drug Store, the Garibaldi Brothers Barber Shop, and a Locksmith's Shop run by Mr. Capelleti. Behind them all is the Metro Diner occupying a converted street car.






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Click Here To See "Mean Streets" Accessories: Streets, Sidewalks, Alleys,
Streetcar, Graphic Files, & Multi-Block Deals

Click Here To Revisit "Mean Streets" Block Sections 1-20



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