More present was their mother, the irrepressible Violet Kray, who staunchly supported Ronnie and Reggie no matter what kind of trouble they found themselves in. Every bit the doting East End matriarch, Violet kept an album of press cuttings that included the twins' triumphs in the boxing ring – as well as stories of the gang wars in which her darling boys eventually became embroiled.As well as the twins, the Krays had a son seven years Ronnie and Reggie's senior, named Charlie after his father, while a sister had died in infancy in 1929.Both of their grandfathers knew their way around the sport. On their father's side, 'Mad' Jimmy Kray was described as "the sort of old-style bar fighter it was wisest to avoid." Their maternal grandfather, Jimmy 'Cannonball' Lee, was an altogether more nuanced character. Unlike the Kray side of the family, Lee was a teetotaller who swore away from alcohol after it drove his own father to an early grave at an epileptics colony in Epsom."I could punch hard with either hand, so much so that I broke eleven jaws that I know of it." – Reggie Kray
The Repton, which still teaches young boxers the sweet science today. Image via
Ronnie (left) and Reggie during their boxing days. The boys were committed athletes, avoiding alcohol and cigarettes. Photo: PA Images.
The late 'Mad' Frankie Fraser poses at the Repton. A photo of the Krays hangs on the wall behind him. Photo: PA Images
The twins brought the great Joe Louis to London where he did a spot of gambling in the West End, arguably not the best activity for a man in financial difficulty. Photo: PA Images
We can assume that there were plenty more meetings beside these. Boxing was an integral part of the Krays' world; Reggie once got off an assault charge by claiming that the blood on his jacket could plausibly have ended up there while he watched a sparring session. While on the run after escaping from prison in 1958, Ronnie would spar with his minder in the Surrey countryside (and when the newspapers reported the escape, they used Ronnie's old boxing photograph). The twins promoted boxing shows and made financial donations to the Repton. There must have been a genuine fondness for the old haunt, but like any gangsters worth their salt the Krays were keen to show the community that they were on their side; that way, when the police asked questions, the locals would remember where their loyalties lay.The Krays eventually came to see themselves as above the law. This might explain why Ronnie felt comfortable enough to shoot another man dead at the Blind Beggar pub while several witnesses watched. His latent schizophrenia and a morbid fascination with Al Capone undoubtedly contributed, too. Whatever the reasons, it would eventually be their undoing.In 1967 they bought the Carpenters Arms, a pub just a hundred yards from the house on Vallance Road, and hung their old boxing gloves behind the bar. When they stepped outside and looked east, they would have seen the Repton and their old home; they were kings of all they surveyed.But they would not be around to see it for much longer. It was from the kitchen at the Carpenters that Reggie is said to have taken the carving knife that he used to brutally murder Jack 'The Hat' McVitie at a house in Stoke Newington. Two years later, the Krays were in prison. Neither man was ever freed."We had mastered both boxing and street fighting. In boxing, obviously there are rules and regulations. In street fighting, there are no rules." – Reggie Kray
Ronnie (left) and Reggie photographed in 1982, when they were allowed to attend their mother's funeral. Photo: PA Images
