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City Of Scoundrels: The 12 Days Of Disaster That Gave Birth To Modern Chicago (2012)

by Gary Krist(Favorite Author)
3.48 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
0307454290 (ISBN13: 9780307454294)
languge
English
publisher
Crown
review 1: The setting is Chicago. There is political infighting, graft, riots, strikes, murders, and disasters. The Mayor has a grand plan to beautify the city and make it one of the greatest cities in the country. Guess what? It is 1919, and the political party in charge is the Republican. In this nonfiction work, we can see that history does repeat itself. Names may change and the political parties in charge may change but human conditions remain the same. I enjoyed this book because I learned a great deal about Chicago history. The author included accounts about actual people, as well as historical events, thus making history come alive.
review 2: If you want evidence that things haven’t changed all that much in the great state of Illinois, read City of Sco
... moreundrels by Gary Krist. It’s a work of nonfiction covering July 21 to August 1, 1919 in Chicago.A lot happened during those 12 days, more than I ever learned in school. The book opens with a prologue covering the crash of a blimp named the Wingfoot Express. The airship flew over the city several times on July 21. It took flight for the last time at 4:50 pm with five passengers. As it crossed State Street and the city’s central district, it caught fire; baseball fans at Comiskey Park south of downtown watched the flames erupt. As the passengers plummeted from the burning airship, it crashed into the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank.The author spends a lot of time covering Chicago’s mayor, the colorful William Hale Thompson. The last Republican mayor of Chicago, he was known as Big Bill and is considered one of the most unethical mayors of all time. His relationship with Governor Frank Lowden was contentious and seems to have contributed to some of the city’s biggest problems during the summer of 1919. Still, Krist credits Thompson’s corrupt and wasteful administration with helping turn 21st-century Chicago into “perhaps the most architecturally distinguished and physically impressive city in the Americas.”The problems that summer included racial unrest and bombings, race riots, a transit strike, and the frightening disappearance of a six-year-old girl. Krist’s quotations from newspapers of the day make it clear that claims that the press used to be unbiased are wishful thinking.One thing that I did not expect to find in City of Scoundrels was multiple references to Galesburg’s own Carl Sandburg. Hired by Chicago Daily News editor Henry Justin Smith to be a labor reporter, he comes across as one of the good guys, fighting for the underdog and spotlighting the rights of the black soldiers recently returned from fighting for the U.S. in the Great War. Krist quotes from Sandburg’s poem “Hoodlums,” written in Chicago on July 29, 1919, and calls it “a powerful indictment of the senseless anger he was seeing all around him.”City of Scoundrels is meticulously footnoted, but don’t let that put you off. It’s a fascinating look at Chicago – and the United States – of 100 years ago. less
Reviews (see all)
PatrickStar
Interesting read and well composed. I always enjoy a good historical read about the city I love!
Yule
A fascinating look at a tumultuous week in Chicago's history. This town is pretty crazy.
georgetch
Especially liked the personal touches. Real people caught in real situations.
Yaz
Learned quite a bit of history about my hometown - city of scoundrels indeed!
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