Meet the Cranston man who was barber to the mob

From Federal Hill barber chair to Rhode Island mob lore, Vinny “Vinny D” DeQuattro recalls decades of cutting hair for criminals and community leaders alike

Share
Meet the Cranston man who was barber to the mob
Copy
Vinny DeQuattro of Cranston was a barber to The Don and beyond.
Vinny DeQuattro
Ocean State Media

Vinny DeQuattro of Cranston held the heads of some of the most ruthless Rhode Island criminals in his hands – as he lopped “a little off the top” at his Federal Hill barber shop.

Nicknamed “Vinny D”, DeQuattro spent more than half a century styling the hair of members of the mob.

“A lot of people call them mafia, but for me, it’s regular people. I respect them. I never call them mafioso, I treat them like a regular person,” he said.

One of the “regulars” at Vinny D’s barber shop was the late, notorious New England crime lord, Raymond L.S. Patriarca.

Late New England Crime Boss Raymond LS Patriarca
Late New England Crime Boss Raymond LS Patriarca
Provided

What kind of cut did the Patriarca prefer? “He didn’t have much hair, so not much you can do,” DeQuattro said laughingly.

Despite Patriarca’s fierce reputation, DeQuattro described him as nice.

And he says they didn’t talk much while he was in the barber’s chair. According to DeQuattro, anything that was spoken between them was confidential, their own code of silence.

Vinny D opened his babershop on Federal Hill in Providence in the 1970's
Vinny D opened his barber shop on Federal Hill in Providence in the 1970s.
Provided

DeQuattro came to Rhode Island as an immigrant from Italy in his early twenties to work as a barber in downtown Providence. Later, he would open his own shop in the Federal Hill neighborhood.

Another of his longtime customers was Gerry Tillinghast, a dapper enforcer for the Patriarca crime family. They met in the late 1960s and Tillinghast began bringing some of his friends to DeQuattro for haircuts. One was George Basmajian, a loan shark for the New England mob.

George Basmajian were members of the Patriarca Crime Family
George Basmajian and Gerald Tillinghast were members of the Patriarca Crime Family.
Provided

DeQuattro remembers Tillinghast asking him to stay late one night so he and Basmajian could get haircuts. The next morning on his drive into work, DeQuattro heard Tillinghast and his brother had killed Basmajian. The Tillinghasts went to prison.

“I thought, ‘jeeze, I lost two customers,’” said DeQuattro.

DeQuattro says not all of his patrons were “wise guys,” many were the good guys, such as local doctors, lawyers and police. Even the late beloved traffic judge Frank Caprio was a client.

It was Caprio who dubbed DeQuattro “The Singing Barber” because DeQuattro would often serenade his customers with songs in his native Italian.

But for now, the octogenarian does most of his singing at his Cranston home. “In the shower, I’m the best! My neighbor across the street says, ‘Who’s this guy?’” said a smiling DeQuattro.

This week on Possibly, we’re taking a closer look at how plastics have given the fossil fuel industry a new business platform — with hardly anyone noticing they’re even in the market
A family tradition from southern Italy has grown into a culinary calling card for a Rhode Island community
Charged with turning around a struggling Florida program, the three-time A-10 Coach of the Year leaves URI after a historic run that delivered a school-record 28 wins and the Rams’ first NCAA tournament berth in three decades
It takes around 40 gallons of sap to make just one gallon of syrup
Only charitable organizations can legally host bingo games in Rhode Island. Lawmakers consider a bill that would allow the game at casinos
An experiment in participatory budgeting — a process where voters directly decide how to spend public money — got off to a promising start in Providence, until the entire staff working on the project was suddenly laid off