Historic Photos of Chicago Crime , livre ebook

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Perhaps no city has a more fabled past than Chicago, home of legendary Al Capone. But that fabled past is often portrayed separate from the surrounding web of social realities, without which no event, no period in time can be understood.

Historic Photos of Chicago Crime: The Capone Era addresses this problem by opening with a compelling look at Chicago's cityscape to include a broad range of cultural phenomena—from suffrage to jazz—essential to the contextualization of crime in the 1920s and 1930s. The history then proceeds as its title suggests—to a riveting overview of crime in Chicago, chock-full of images documenting notorious gangsters and gruesome gangland wars. Al Capone, John Torrio, Earl "Hymie" Weiss, George "Bugs" Moran, and a host of others are all here. Replete with insightful captions and penetrating chapter introductions by historian John Russick, these photos offer a unique view into Chicago and its nefarious past.


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Date de parution

01 novembre 2007

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9781618586117

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

4 Mo

Turner Publishing Company 200 4th Avenue North • Suite 950 Nashville, Tennessee 37219 (615) 255-2665
 
www.turnerpublishing.com
 
Historic Photos of Chicago Crime: The Capone Era
 
Copyright © 2007 Turner Publishing Company
 
All rights reserved. This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
 
Library of Congress Control Number: 2007933765
9781618586117
 
Printed in China
 
09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16—0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
Table of Contents
Title Page Copyright Page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION - CHICAGO IN THE CAPONE ERA CHICAGO IN THE ROARING TWENTIES BIRTH OF THE CHICAGO GANGSTER GANGLAND CHICAGO THE END OF THE CAPONE ERA NOTES ON THE PHOTOGRAPHS
Captain Joseph Goldberg examines contraband beer and booze found in a raid. Prohibition and the subsequent illegal trade in alcohol was a catalyst for the gang wars during Capone’s time.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book would not be possible without the assistance of two talented researchers, Cortney K. Tunis and Isabella J. Horning. They worked under extremely tight deadlines to review original source materials and investigate image dates, places, and names.
 
 
I want to thank the Chicago History Museum staff members who helped reproduce all the images for this volume, specifically Debbie Vaughan, Director of Research and Access and Chief Librarian; Rob Medina, Rights and Reproductions Coordinator; Bryan McDaniel and Erin Tikovitsch, Rights and Reproductions Assistants; John Alderson, Senior Photographer; and Jay Crawford, Photographer.
 
Last, I want to thank Gary T. Johnson, President, and Russell Lewis, Executive Vice President and Chief Historian, of the Chicago History Museum for giving me the opportunity to write the text for this book.


For Susan, Leo, and Sofia
INTRODUCTION
CHICAGO IN THE CAPONE ERA
It is quite a challenge to caption photographs about the Chicago underworld in the 1920s, a place inhabited by characters who wished to remain anonymous, who concealed their true identities and masqueraded as simple businessmen or even defenders of the poor, and who conducted their illicit trade behind closed doors to protect both themselves and their customers.
Pictures of cloaked figures in trench coats and fedoras, and policemen raiding speakeasies, breaking up beer barrels, and smashing stills, tend only to reflect how the gangs behaved when they were out of the shadows, and how the policemen looked when they were aware of the presence of cameras. A collection of these images alone might fail to reveal anything but the theater the public was meant to see.
Chicago in the Roaring Twenties was more than just a violent playground for the gangs. The U.S. census in 1920 revealed that for the first time in American history more people lived in the nation’s cities than in rural areas. Cities like Chicago experienced a tremendous influx of people from across America searching for a better life. Laborers, musicians, social activists—and gangsters—all came. They brought with them energy, ambition, and determination to “make it” in Chicago.
Perhaps no other decade in American history conjures more romantic notions than the 1920s. Too often the realities of the corruption, greed, gang violence, racial prejudice, and gender inequality that shaped the decade are lost in the seductive image of the flapper, the allure of speakeasies and forbidden nightclubs, or the brilliance of an original Louis Armstrong solo. It must be remembered that the flamboyant and independent flapper emerges after more than a half-century-long struggle for equality by American women. Speakeasies were run by ruthless gangsters and hoodlums who dared defy the Volstead Act and defended their turf in violent gun battles. And Louis Armstrong is a symbol of the great flood of African Americans who left the South in search of a better life and freedom of expression in the nation’s northern cities.
This book tries to paint a rich portrait of Chicago when gangsters, such as George “Bugs” Moran, John Torrio, Dean O’Banion, Earl “Hymie” Weiss, and “Scarface” Al Capone, operated multi-million-dollar illegal operations, used intimidation, extortion, and bribery to get their way, and regularly killed one another to satisfy their greed or their egos. It is hoped that this collection of photographs will provide some clarity and insight into Chicago’s complex relationship with the gangs of the Capone era.
 
—John Russick

Facing south toward north Michigan Avenue. The scene is dominated by the Palmolive building, an art deco masterpiece designed by Holabird and Root and completed in 1929. At the top of the building stood the Lindbergh beacon, named for Charles Lindbergh, the American aviator who flew solo across the Atlantic Ocean in 1927 and became an international celebrity.
CHICAGO IN THE ROARING TWENTIES
(1900–1920S)
 
 
The 1920s was a time of great change and experimentation in America. In the first decades of the twentieth century the country was transformed from a nation of small towns and farms, to one in which the majority of its citizens lived in cities like Chicago.
From a distance, Chicago offered freedom, equality, and opportunity. Young people, women, immigrants, and African Americans saw the promise of a better life there. They soon discovered that racism, ethnic isolation, labor unrest, corruption, and greed thrived there too. This mixture of people, ambition, opportunity, and conflict fueled Chicago in the jazz age and gave rise to a new American icon, the gangster.
Chicago had gangs and vice well before the 1920s. In fact, Chicago’s Levee, or red-light district, an area just a few blocks south of downtown, was run by pimps and madams and celebrated for its brothels. Chief among them was the Everleigh Club at 2131 S. Dearborn Street. It was run by, and named for, the Everleigh sisters, Ada and Minna. In 1911, reformers forced Mayor Carter Harrison to close down the Levee. Prostitution, however, proved more resilient. Driven by the ambition of James “Big Jim” Colosimo, his wife, Victoria Moresco, and “Big Jim’s” protégé, John Torrio, a new way of organizing vice emerged—more dispersed, more discrete—and its success attracted the attention of vice lords as far away as Brooklyn, New York.
In 1919, the United States Congress adopted the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. It became law the following year. The Volstead Act, as it was called, prohibited “the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors” in the United States. Prohibition took what had been a widely used substance, alcohol, and turned it into contraband. It made every American who took a drink a criminal and put every saloonkeeper out of business. Chicago’s gangs, already fiercely competing for the market in prostitution and gambling, suddenly had a new, more acceptable product to provide. They built alliances, networks, and carved up the city into territories they could control and defend, and they supplied alcohol to anyone with money to pay for it.
For many Chicagoans, the gangsters were seen as a necessary evil. The public came to rely on the gangs to get what the government denied them. It was an uneasy relationship, but it lasted for more than a decade, and it helped define Chicago in the Roaring Twenties.

America was changing dramatically in the first decades of the twentieth century and so was Chicago. Conservative voices were concerned that the rapid movement of people from rural America into the nation’s cities would undermine traditional American values. Progressives, as if to fulfill this prophecy, found the mood in American cities ripe for advancing new ideas, such as the right to vote for women and protections for the poor and new immigrants.

The outbreak of World War I inspired romantic notions of adventure in many young Americans. Taken in 1917, this photograph depicts men arriving for officers’ training at Fort Sheridan, just north of Chicago. During the First World War, Illinois provided more than 300,000 recruits for the military. Many young men came home from the war less optimistic, disillusioned by the carnage they had witnessed.

In this 1917 photograph, Boy Scouts in U.S. Army uniforms sell Liberty Bonds, which supplemented taxation to pay for the war. Bonds could be bought for $50, $100, $500, and $1,000 at 3.5 percent interest and had 15-year to 30-year maturation periods. It was considered one’s patriotic duty to buy bonds.

On Armistice Day large crowds marched down Michigan Avenue in celebration of peace. Here, crowds gather in front of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Workers engaged in the transport of commodities, better known as Teamsters, began to organize labor unions in 1900. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) sided with striking workers at Montgomery Ward Co. in 1905. In the battles with replacement workers that ensued, 105 people were killed.

This photograph, taken in December 1915, depicts garment workers clashing with police. Garment manufacturing was one of Chicago’s largest industries until the 1930s and was heavily involved in labor politics. Strikes in 1909 and 1910 led to the foundation of men’s Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA) and expansion of International Ladies Garment Worker Union (ILGWU). In 1919, the ILGWU claimed a membership of 6,000, or two-thirds of the women’s clothing work force.

A pro-suffrage gathering in downtown Chicago at the corner of Van Buren Street and Michigan Avenue, June 16, 1916. The women’s suffrage movement lasted from roughly the 1860s to 1920. Many progressive women involved in the movement for suffrage also championed the abolition of alcohol.

Suffragist Mabel Vernon speaks to a crowd in Chicago, June 16, 1916. The Illinois legislature

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