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Book Cover
E-book
Author Adler, Jeffrey S.

Title First in violence, deepest in dirt : homicide in Chicago, 1875-1920 / Jeffrey S. Adler
Published Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2006

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Description 1 online resource (367 pages) : illustrations
Contents "So you refuse to drink with me, do you?" -- "I loved my wife so I killed her" -- "He got what he deserved" -- "If ever that black dog crosses the threshold of my house, I will kill him" -- "The dead man's hand" -- "A good place to drown babies" -- "A butcher at the stockyard killing sheep."
Summary Between 1875 and 1920, Chicago's homicide rate more than quadrupled, making it the most violent major urban center in the United States--or, in the words of Lincoln Steffens, "first in violence, deepest in dirt." In many ways, however, Chicago became more orderly as it grew. Hundreds of thousands of newcomers poured into the city, yet levels of disorder fell and rates of drunkenness, brawling, and accidental death dropped. But if Chicagoans became less volatile and less impulsive, they also became more homicidal. Based on an analysis of nearly six thousand homicide cases, First in Violence, Deepest in Dirt examines the ways in which industrialization, immigration, poverty, ethnic and racial conflict, and powerful cultural forces reshaped city life and generated soaring levels of lethal violence. Drawing on suicide notes, deathbed declarations, courtroom testimony, and commutation petitions, Jeffrey Adler reveals the pressures fueling murders in turn-of-the-century Chicago. During this era Chicagoans confronted social and cultural pressures powerful enough to trigger surging levels of spouse killing and fatal robberies. Homicide shifted from the swaggering rituals of plebeian masculinity into family life and then into street life. From rage killers to the "Baby Bandit Quartet," Adler offers a dramatic portrait of Chicago during a period in which the characteristic elements of modern homicide in America emerged
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 285-357) and index
Notes In English
Print version record
Subject Homicide -- Illinois -- Chicago -- Case studies
Murder -- Illinois -- Chicago -- Case studies
TRUE CRIME -- General.
HISTORY -- United States -- General.
Homicide
Murder
Social conditions
Kriminalität
Mord
SUBJECT Chicago (Ill.) -- Social conditions
Subject Illinois -- Chicago
Chicago, Ill.
Genre/Form Case studies
Case studies.
Études de cas.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780674020085
0674020081