He explained: "You would get some underworld figures attaching themselves to the group but no one really bothered us."The Blind Beggar pub in Whitechapel was my local almost every Saturday night and it was right at the time when it became famous for Ronnie Kray shooting George Cornell."He added: "Obviously, a huge mystique has grown around the Kray brothers but they would never bother you."They were not like: 'Who are you looking at?' They didn't do that. The only aggravation was in their own world. They had no problem with the football players and it was a great time for us."He added that despite the Krays' spree of murder, armed robbery, arson, protection rackets and assaults, the area was "very safe" for normal folks."Old ladies didn't get mugged, no one was walking around carrying knives, and we could enjoy ourselves without any fear," Harry wrote.He added that because local pubs were owned by renowned hard men, it kept the regulars safe."I lived two minutes from the Blind Beggar, and it was owned by Patsy and Jimmy Quill, who I still get a card from every Christmas," he wrote."Jimmy was an ex boxer and it was one of a dozen pubs that we would go out to."They were nearly all owed by ex-boxers, who could handle themselves and look after their regulars and not want any aggravation."
'Appy 'Arry on his Westhemm playing days.I can't put the link cos it from the current bun. Lavvverrlee !QuoteHe explained: "You would get some underworld figures attaching themselves to the group but no one really bothered us."The Blind Beggar pub in Whitechapel was my local almost every Saturday night and it was right at the time when it became famous for Ronnie Kray shooting George Cornell."He added: "Obviously, a huge mystique has grown around the Kray brothers but they would never bother you."They were not like: 'Who are you looking at?' They didn't do that. The only aggravation was in their own world. They had no problem with the football players and it was a great time for us."He added that despite the Krays' spree of murder, armed robbery, arson, protection rackets and assaults, the area was "very safe" for normal folks."Old ladies didn't get mugged, no one was walking around carrying knives, and we could enjoy ourselves without any fear," Harry wrote.He added that because local pubs were owned by renowned hard men, it kept the regulars safe."I lived two minutes from the Blind Beggar, and it was owned by Patsy and Jimmy Quill, who I still get a card from every Christmas," he wrote."Jimmy was an ex boxer and it was one of a dozen pubs that we would go out to."They were nearly all owed by ex-boxers, who could handle themselves and look after their regulars and not want any aggravation."