Born to Irish immigrant parents, McGrath grew up in the Gashouse District on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. In contrast to other gangsters of his era, whose childhood typically consisted of street crime and juvenile detention, his upbringing was stable. McGrath served as an altar boy and sang in the choir at St. Stephen's Roman Catholic Church on East 29th Street. He dropped out of school after the 10th grade to work as an office clerk.[2]
McGrath worked as a truck driver for Owney Madden and Bill Dwyer. He was arrested numerous times throughout the 1920s and 1930s for offenses ranging from burglary to murder.
Eddie McGrath was forced to abscond from New York after Dunn and Sheridan were executed for the murder of a hiring stevedore named Andy Hintz in 1949, and the investigation of waterfront criminal activity subsequently began to escalate.
He left New York in the early 1950s and was living in Miami in 1970, when mobster Hughie Mulligan was reported to be McGrath's "on-premises manager."[3]
McGrath's biography, Dock Boss: Eddie McGrath and the West Side Waterfront, was written by Neil G. Clark and published by Barricade Books in 2017.[2]
References
^English, T.J. The Westies: Inside New York's Irish Mob.