In early 1873, the first of many trials against Tweed was held. Later that year, he was sent to prison for corrupt behavior related to improper audit bills to earn more money for himself. Tweed may have done a lot of good for New York City but his insatiable greed caused him to lose that and he was wounded up in jail. He died on April 12, 1878 because of heart failure. At a young age, he studied at a local school and had a basic education, which he learned and known as a chair maker. By the time he was a teenager, he developed a reputation for street fighting. As many young people in the area, he became attached to a local volunteer fire company. Before marrying, he worked at a brush company. After that, he married with the owner’s daughter. That is the reason why he became a rising star in New York City politics of the 1850s and a key player in Tammany Hall. By the late of 1850s, he controlled the Tammany group with his associates. As the foreman of the Big Six, Tweed was elected the alderman of the Seventh Ward. Then Tweed ran for the Congress, won, and began his term in March, 1853. However, he didn’t like the life in Washington. That is why after his term, he came back to New York. In the inaugural parade for President James Buchanan in