Read Sin in the Second City Online
Authors: Karen Abbott
Tags: #History - General History, #Everleigh; Minna, #History: American, #Chicago, #United States - 20th Century (1900-1945), #United States - State & Local - Midwest, #Brothels, #Prostitution, #Illinois, #History - U.S., #Human Sexuality, #Social History, #Biography & Autobiography, #General, #Illinois - Local History, #History
“terrible pair of sisters”: Harrison, 309.
“painted, peroxided, bedizened”: Ibid., 307.
“truly historic”: Ibid., 309.
“Close the Everleigh Club”: Wendt and Kogan, 297.
YOU GET EVERYTHING IN A LIFETIME
“How dear to my heart”: Edgar Lee Masters to Carter Harrison, April 14, 1939, Carter Harrison IV Papers, Newberry Library.
“On the square”: Wendt and Kogan, 297.
“rather sharp language”: Harrison, 310.
“The most persistent gossip”: Ibid., 311.
“infamy, the audacious advertising”: Asbury, 259.
“well known as Chicago itself”:
Chicago American,
October 25, 1911.
“cool and comical”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
151.
“You mustn’t believe”: Ibid., 195.
“Is the report”:
Chicago Tribune,
October 25, 1911.
Dearborn Street was alive:
Chicago American,
October 25, 1911.
“Gibraltar”: Bell Daniels, 85.
at the Hotel Vendome in Columbus: Bell to Mary, October 24, 1911, Ernest Bell Papers, box 2, folder 1909–1928 (correspondence with wife).
“speaking partner”:
Chicago Tribune,
October 25, 1911.
“I know the mayor’s order”: Ibid.
“I don’t worry”: Ibid.
“If they don’t want me”:
Chicago American,
October 25, 1911.
“Well, boys”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
202.
“It may be”: Ibid.
“It’s only 10”:
Chicago Tribune,
October 25, 1911.
“Sorry, girls”: Wendt and Kogan, 297.
“We’ve been expecting”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
203.
“Clear out”: Ibid.
“You’ll be going strong”: Ibid.
“Go away for a few”: Ibid., 204.
“What do you think”: Ibid.
“We’re going from bawd”: Hibbeler, 121.
“Let’s go to Europe”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
204.
“What about us”: Ibid.
“I’m afraid there never will”: Ibid., 204–205.
“And neither of you did”: Ibid.
“Poor kid”: Ibid., 206.
“We’re all nervous”: Ibid.
about $1 million: Ibid.
Chief McWeeny telephoned:
Chicago American,
October 25, 1911.
“Vice in Chicago”:
Chicago Record Herald,
October 25, 1911.
close “a score”:
Chicago American,
October 25, 1911.
“Two French blondes”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
207.
“Until I get”: Ibid.
Delft Candy Shop: Viskochil, 53. This book aided me in describing several Chicago street scenes.
“Don’t you recognize”: Harrison, 313–314.
visit from Taft:
Chicago Inter Ocean,
October 25, 1911.
“going strong”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
212.
“You ain’t got a thing”: Wendt and Kogan, 298.
“Do the best you can”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
212.
DANGEROUS ELEMENTS
“It is the code of honor”: Lindberg,
Quotable Chicago,
30.
“known to reside”: Langum, 50.
Congress…played stingy: Ibid., 52.
Bell in Europe: “Some Observations in Europe,” Ernest Bell Papers, box 4, folder 4-8.
“I note that special action”: Ibid., box 4, folder 4-8.
the Office of the Special Commissioner: Langum, 52.
“Mayor Harrison deserves”:
Chicago Tribune,
October 31, 1911.
“My dear Mr. Mayor”: Boynton to Harrison, March 1912, Ernest Bell Papers, box 4, folder 4-8.
“even Salt Lake City”: Boynton to Mann and Taft, March 23, 1912, ibid.
In March 1912, he ordered: Duis,
The Saloon,
269–270.
“I am instructed to advise you”: Starr Murphy to Roe, January 5, 1912, folder 42, box 7, series 3, Bureau of Social Hygiene Records, Rockefeller Archive Center.
a “pretended” disorderly house:
Chicago Tribune,
August 8, 1912.
DANGER!: Hepburn, 4–5.
Cincinnati Vigilance Society:
Vigilance,
May 1911.
“cordial congratulations”: Rockefeller to Roe, April 26, 1912, reel 3, series 3, Bureau of Social Hygiene Records, Rockefeller Archive Center.
“wealthiest men in this country”:
Chicago Tribune,
March 3, 1912.
“Until the public conscience”: Roe to Rockefeller, January 5, 1912, box 7, folder 42, series 3, Bureau of Social Hygiene Records, Rockefeller Archive Center.
“The Greeks construed Apollo’s loss”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
150.
5536 W. Washington Boulevard:
Chicago Tribune,
December 16, 1973.
“final stab”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
213.
Freiberg’s Dance Hall was bombed:
Chicago Tribune,
November 17, 1911.
“This home of vice”: Dillion and Lytle, 9.
“In the days”: Wendt and Kogan, 320–322.
“acting on orders”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
213.
“What’s up”: Ibid., 137–138.
“Take it or leave it”: Ibid., 138.
“all under the age of eighteen”: Annual Report of the Committee of Fifteen, 1912, page 2, Graham Taylor papers, Newberry Library.
“I beg to acknowledge the receipt”: Ibid.
Within the week, Dago Frank:
Chicago Tribune,
August 31, 1912.
“If there had been no Everleigh Club”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
213.
Two of them were rampaging: Ibid.
JUST HOW WICKED
“You can get much farther”: Lindberg,
Quotable Chicago,
115.
“We’re getting nowhere”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
214.
blackened both her eyes: Ibid., 213.
shutting down the madam’s brothel:
Chicago Record Herald,
September 5, 1912.
“Pikers”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
214.
“The Levee has it”: Ibid.
“going to rip off”:
Chicago Tribune,
September 27, 1912.
“The man who takes”:
Chicago Tribune,
October 31, 1908.
“handsomest man in Chicago”: Lindberg,
Chicago by Gaslight,
141.
“This grand jury”:
Chicago Tribune,
September 27, 1912.
“most pretentious street parade”:
Chicago Record Herald,
September 27, 1912.
stated purpose:
Chicago American,
September 27, 1912.
“the aim of the crusaders”: Quoted in Asbury, 298.
“subject of ridicule”:
Chicago Daily Socialist,
September 28, 1912.
float signs and banners:
Chicago Record Herald,
September 27, 1912.
Chief Justice Harry Olson: Wendt and Kogan, 320.
she and that sister of hers: Ibid.
“they aren’t worth the paper”:
Chicago Record Herald,
September 29, 1912.
“half-naked sirens”: Duis,
The Saloon,
270.
“One might expect”:
Chicago American,
September 28, 1912.
“The South Side Levee is rejoicing”:
Chicago Daily News,
September 30, 1912.
“it was not generally known”:
Chicago Tribune,
October 1, 1912.
“Minnie and Ada Everleigh were called”:
Chicago American,
October 1, 1912.
The order left prominent Atlanta madam:
Chicago Evening World,
October 1, 1912.
“Gentlemen, I am through”:
Chicago American,
October 1, 1912.
“furious passion”: Asbury, 299.
“There is an apparent effort”: Wendt and Kogan, 300.
“Wayman’s out to pinch”:
Chicago American,
October 5, 1912.
“Looks like we saved”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
216.
FALLEN IS BABYLON
“Have patience, my friend”: Ibid., 213.
“Another Johnstown flood”:
Chicago American,
October 5, 1912;
Chicago Record Herald,
October 6, 1912.
valerianate of ammonia, etc.: Bell to Carter Harrison, November 29, 1912, Ernest Bell Papers, box 4, folder 4-8.
“Brother Bell, your prayers”: Bell Daniels, 84.
Officers found twenty harlots:
Chicago Tribune,
October 5, 1912.
“It is rather extraordinary”: Longstreet, 471–472.
the men issued the following: Asbury, 301.
The invasion of the harlots: Ibid.
“I’ll take care of any of them”:
Chicago Daily News,
October 7, 1912.
But not one harlot applied:
Chicago Evening Post,
October 8, 1912.
waving handkerchiefs:
Chicago Record Herald,
October 7, 1912.
“Fallen is Babylon!”: Bell to Midnight Mission board, October 8, 1912, Ernest Bell Papers, box 4, folder 4-8.
LITTLE LOST SISTER
“I suppose we all”: Wallace, 55.
“fight to the death”: Asbury, 302.
“We’ll make everything clean”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
225.
“scattering of evil”:
Chicago Record Herald,
October 28, 1912.
“Who is that guy”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
225.
“It can’t be done”: Ibid., 226.
“Five minutes of real”:
Chicago Record Herald,
November 21, 1912.
“former queen of Chicago’s underworld”: Quoted in Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
244.
Freiberg’s Dance Hall celebrated: Asbury, 275.
“It surely wasn’t a disappointed”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
142.
“death bed confession”:
Chicago Record Herald,
October 6, 1912.
“I am sorry”:
Chicago Tribune,
April 18, 1913.
“He was an outcast”: Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
239.
letter from Chauncey to Bell, January 8, 1916, Ernest Bell Papers, box 2, folder 2-7.
“Our Father Who Art in Heaven”: November 16, 1919, Ernest Bell Papers, box 2, folder 2-2.
“The song you sung at me”: Taylor to Bell, February 27, 1927, Ernest Bell Papers, box 1, folder 11.
genre of films: Lagler, 135.
Little Lost Sister:
Washburn,
Come into My Parlor,
242.
“A wave of sex hysteria”:
Current Opinion,
August 1913.
In the spring of 1913: Lagler, 231–240.
boxer Jack Johnson: Ward, 314–315.
arrested in the fall of 1912: Langum, 181.
“We now went”: Ibid., 95.
J. Edgar Hoover: Ibid., 190–194.
“It owed its passage”:
New York Times,
June 25, 1916.
“there never was a joke”: Langum, 35.
“a sort of pornography”: Ibid., 34.
Sociologist Walter Reckless: Reckless,
Vice in Chicago,
43–46.
another young Chicago girl:
Chicago Tribune,
December 25, 1913.
“There has been too much hysteria”:
Intermountain Herald-Republican,
January 30,1914.
Roe died of heart disease:
New York Times,
June 29, 1934.
Only one major newspaper: Langum, 248.
“street of the stately few”: Madsen, 223.
“bad heart”:
Chicago Tribune,
December 2, 1943.
“I can’t stand to see”:
Chicago Tribune,
March 14, 1949.
“My God! A man!”: Ibid.
When Vic Shaw died:
Chicago Tribune,
November 13, 1951.
20 W. 71st Street: Wallace, 48.
“former plantation home in the South”:
Chicago Tribune,
November 1, 1953.
“If you’re all decked out”: Ibid.
“How come your poetry”: Ibid.
in 1933, the Everleigh Club:
Chicago Tribune,
July 25, 1933. The Hilliard Homes, a public housing project, now stands on the former site of the Everleigh Club.
In the early 1940s, Theodore Dreiser: E-mail from Hilary Masters, son of Edgar Lee Masters, December 2005.