Read The Devil in the White City Online

Authors: Erik Larson

Tags: #2000, #Biography

The Devil in the White City (58 page)

BOOK: The Devil in the White City
12.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Schuyler, Montgomery.
American Architecture and Other Writings,
vol. 2. Belknap Press/Harvard University Press, 1961.

Shaw, Marian.
World’s Fair Notes: A Woman Journalist Views Chicago’s 1893 Columbian Exposition.
Pogo Press, 1992. Chicago Historical Society.

Silverman, Daniel. “Clinical and Electroencephalographic Studies on Criminal Psychopaths.”
Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry.
vol. 30, no. 1 (July 1943).

Sinclair, Upton.
The Jungle.
University of Illinois, 1988 (1906).

Sinkevitch, Alice, ed.
AIA Guide to Chicago.
Harvest/Harcourt Brace, 1993.

Smith, F. Hopkinson. “A White Umbrella at the Fair.”
Cosmopolitan,
vol. 16, no. 2 (December 1893).

Starrett, Paul.
Changing the Skyline.
Whittlesey House, 1938.

Steeples, Douglas, and David O. Whitten.
Democracy in Desperation: The Depression of 1893.
Greenwood Press, 1998.

Stevenson, Elizabeth.
Park Maker: A Life of Frederick Law Olmsted.
Macmillan, 1977.

Stewart, James. “The Bench: A Murderer’s Plea.”
New Yorker.
September 18, 2000.

Sullivan, Gerald E., ed.
The Story of Englewood, 1835–1923.
Englewood Business Men’s Association, 1924.

Sullivan, Louis H.
The Autobiography of an Idea.
Dover Publications, 1956 (1924).

A Synoptical History of the Chicago Fire Department.
Benevolent Association of the Paid Fire Department, Chicago, 1908. Chicago Historical Society.

Taylor, D. C.
Halcyon Days in the Dream City,
1894. Chicago Historical Society.

Tierney, Kevin.
Darrow: A Biography.
Thomas Y. Crowell, 1979.

Town of Lake Directory.
George Amberg and Co., 1886. Chicago Historical Society.

The Trial of Herman W. Mudgett, Alias, H. H. Holmes.
George T. Bisel, 1897.

Trude, Daniel P. Papers. Chicago Historical Society.

Ulrich, Rudolf.
Report of Superintendent. Landscape, Road and Miscellaneous Departments.
Burnham Archives, 1943.1, Box 58.

Updike, John. “Oz Is Us.”
New Yorker.
September 25, 2000.

Wade, Louise Carroll.
Chicago’s Pride: The Stockyards, Packingtown, and the Environs in the Nineteenth Century.
University of Illinois Press, 1987.

Weimann, Jeanne Madeline.
The Fair Women.
Academy Chicago, 1981.

Weinberg, Arthur, ed.
Attorney for the Damned.
Simon & Schuster, 1957.

Wheeler, Candace. “A Dream City.”
Harper’s,
vol. 86, no. 516 (May 1893).

The White Star Triple Screw Atlantic Liners, Olympic and Titanic.
Ocean Liners of the Past. Patrick Stephens, Cambridge, 1983.

Whyte, Frederic.
The Life of W. T. Stead,
vol. 2. Houghton Mifflin, 1925.

Wilson, Robert E.
“The Infanta at the Fair.”
Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society,
vol. 59, no. 3 (Autumn 1966).

Wish, Harvey. “The Pullman Strike: A Study in Industrial Warfare.”
Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society,
vol. 32, no. 3 (September 1939).

Wolman, Benjamin B., ed.
International Encyclopedia of Psychiatry, Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Neurology,
vol. 10. Aesculapius Publishers/Van Nostrand, 1977.

The World’s Fair, Being a Pictorial History of the Columbian Exposition.
Chicago Publication and Lithograph, 1893. Chicago Historical Society.

Wyckoff, Walter A.
The Workers: An Experiment in Reality.
Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1899.

A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS

T
HIS IS MY THIRD BOOK
with Crown Publishers and with my editor, Betty Prashker, who once again proved herself to be one of New York’s supreme editors—confident, obliquely forceful, always reassuring. Every writer needs support, and she gave it unstintingly. Every book also needs support, and once again Crown marshaled a team of committed men and women to help the book find its way to as many readers as possible. Thanks, here, to Steve Ross, publisher; Andrew Martin, Joan DeMayo, and Tina Constable, marketing wizards; and Penny Simon, the kind of veteran publicist most writers wish they had but seldom get.

I have been blessed as well with one hell of an agent, David Black, a man whose instinct for narrative drive—and excellent wine—is unparalleled. He also happens to be an excellent human being.

On the homefront my family kept me sane. I could not have written this book without the help of my wife, Christine Gleason, a doctor by profession but also one of the best natural editors I’ve encountered. Her confidence was a beacon. My three daughters showed me what really matters. My dog showed me that nothing matters but dinner.

Two friends, both writers, generously agreed to read the entire manuscript and offered their wise critiques. Robin Marantz Henig sent me a dozen pages of pinpoint suggestions, most of which I adopted. Carrie Dolan, one of the best and funniest writers I know, offered her criticisms in a way that made them seem like compliments. Hers is a knack that few editors possess.

Thanks also to Dr. James Raney, Seattle psychiatrist and forensic consultant, who read the manuscript and offered his diagnosis of the psychic malaise that likely drove Holmes’s behavior. Gunny Harboe, the Chicago architect who led the restoration of two of Burnham & Root’s remaining buildings—the Reliance and the Rookery—gave me a tour of both and showed me Burnham’s library, restored to its original warmth.

Finally, a word about Chicago: I knew little about the city until I began work on this book. Place has always been important to me, and one thing today’s Chicago exudes, as it did in 1893, is a sense of place. I fell in love with the city, the people I encountered, and above all the lake and its moods, which shift so readily from season to season, day to day, even hour to hour.

I must confess a shameful secret: I love Chicago best in the cold.

I
NDEX

*The following items may be used as a guide to search for information in this eBook.

 

Ackelow, Herman

Adams, Mrs. C. A. (pseud.)

Adams, Henry

Adams Express Company

Addams, Jane

Adler, Dankmar

“After the Ball”

Agnew, Francis

Agnew & Co.

Aheze (Amazon)

alcoholism, cures for

Allerton, Samuel W.

alternating current

Altgeld, John P.

“America”

American Railway Union

Anthony, Susan B.

Archie (Algerian)

architecture:

acoustical design in

of bridges

Chicago School of

of cities

classical

competition within

of the fair,
see
World’s Columbian Exposition

form following function in

foundations in

grillage
in

imitation in

inventions in

landscape

load-bearing metal frame in

nature and purpose of

“Prairie” designs

public perception of

of skyscrapers

soil problem of

stone pyramids in

twentieth-century debates about

Armbrust, Mrs. J.

Armour, Philip

Armstrong, Maitland

Arnold, Charles Dudley

Arnold, C. W.

Around the World in Eighty Days

Astor, Mrs. William

Atwood, Charles B.

Aunt Jemima’s pancake mix

automobile, Burnham’s faith in

Avery Salt Mines

 

Bacon, Henry

bacteriology

Baker, Ray Stannard

Baker, William

Bank of England

Barber, O. Z.

Baring Brothers & Co.

Barlow, Thomas W.

Barnum, P. T.

Barrows, Rev. Dr. J. H.

Baum, L. Frank

Belknap, Jonathan

Belknap, Myrta Z.

Bellamy, Francis J.

Beman, Solon S.

Berkler, Joseph E.

Berry, John

Bertillon, Alphonse

Besant, Sir Walter

Biltmore mansion

Black, Rev. Dr. W. C.

Bloom, Sol

Bond, Alexander (pseud.)

Borden, Lizzie

Boston:

Burnham’s work in

Holmes arrested in

Bowman, George

Boyington, W. W.

Brady, Diamond Jim

Braille, invention of

Brooklyn Bridge

Brooks, Peter Chardon III

Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show

Burbank, Lucy

Burlington, Vermont, Holmes in

Burnham, Daniel (son)

Burnham, Daniel Hudson

aboard the
Olympic

advice given to

as architect

at architects’ dinner

biography of

birth and early years of

career of

as chief of construction

competition of

death of

degrees from Harvard and Yale to

denied admission to Harvard and Yale

as director of works

as environmentalist

and fair’s closing

foot problem of

health of

at inquest on fire

interest in the supernatural

and Midway ball

New York travel of

and Olmsted

on Opening Day

partnership of Root and,
see
Burnham & Root

physical appearance and personality of

and preliminary plans

and Root’s death

shanty of

and site selection

social pressures on

and time constraints

as urban planning consultant

Burnham, Frank P.

Burnham, Margaret Sherman

children of

courtship and marriage of

husband’s letters to

later years of

Burnham & Root

competition of

as lead fair designers

problems of

skyscrapers built by

spirit in

Stone Gate by

Burnham Park

 

cadavers, for medical schools

Campbell, Hiram S. (pseud.)

Campbell-Yates Manufacturing Company

Capen, John L.

Capp, William

Capp & Canty

Carse, Mrs. T. B.

Carter H. Harrison Associations

Cassatt, Alexander

Catherwood, Mary Hartwell

Central Park, New York

Century Club, Chicago

Chalmers, William J.

Chamberlin, George B.

Chappell, Charles

Chemical National Bank, Chicago

Chicago,

accidental deaths in

architects in

Auditorium in

bank failures in

bicycle craze in

brothels in

citywide plans for

civic pride of

“cliff-dwellers” in

competition for fair in

disappearances in

filth in

fires in

gas lamps in

Grannis Block in

growth of

gumbo of

Hull House in

as industrial center

Kinsley’s Restaurant in

labor movement in

“the Loop” in

Miracle Mile of

Montauk Block in

opportunity in

politics in

population of

real estate in

Rookery in

skyscrapers in

soil problems of

stockyards in

suburbs of

trains in

unemployment in

vice and violence in

as “Windy City”

World’s Fair in,
see
World’s Columbian Exposition

young women moving to

Chicago & Alton Railroad

Chicago Club

Chicago House Wrecking Company

Chicago Limited

Chicago River

Chicago School of architecture

Chicago Tribune,
31, 59–60, 153, 310, 336

Cigrand, Dr. and Mrs. B. J.

Cigrand, Emeline

Cigrand, Peter

Cincinnati, search for children in

City Beautiful movement

Cleckley, Hervey

Clemmons, Katherine

Cleveland, Grover

Cleveland, Ohio, city plans for

Cobb (architect)

Codman, Henry Sargent “Harry,”

Cody, Louisa

Cody, William “Buffalo Bill,”

Cody, Wyoming, founding of

Columbia Cook Book, The
(Hollingsworth)

“Columbian March”

Columbus, Christopher

Columbus Day

Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur

Congress, U.S.:

and fair’s finances

and site selection

and Sunday closings

Conner, Gertrude

Conner, Julia

Conner, Ned (Icilius)

Conner, Pearl

Cook, Alex E. (pseud.)

Cooling, W. F.

Corbett, James J.

Cotton, Sallie

Coughlin, Bathhouse John

Cowie, F. G.

Cracker Jack

Cregier, DeWitt C.

Crowe, Mr. and Mrs. John

Cuddy, Alf

Cumberland Gap

 

Dana, Charles Anderson

Darrow, Clarence

Davis, C. E.

Davis, George R.

Davis, John

Davis, Richard Harding

Dean, Teresa

Debs, Eugene

Decker, L. E.

Denslow, William Wallace

Depew, Chauncey M.

Detroit, Holmes in

Devil

Dewey, Melvil

De Young, Mike

Disney, Elias

Disney, Roy

Disney, Walt

Doyle family

Dredge, James

Dreiser, Theodore

Du Maurier, George

 

Eads, James B.

Eddy, Charles J.

Edison, Thomas A.

Eiffel, Alexandre Gustave

Eiffel Tower

electric chair, first

electricity, alternating current

elevator, invention of

Eliot, Charles

Elliott, Capt. Horace

Ellsworth, James

Empire State Building, New York

Englewood, Illinois:

annexation to Chicago

growth of

Holmes’s arrival in

Erickson (druggist)

Erie Railroad

BOOK: The Devil in the White City
12.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Wrecked by Walker, Shiloh
Through the Storm by Maureen Lee
Heroic Measures by Ciment, Jill
Don't Die Dragonfly by Linda Joy Singleton
Pit Pony by Joyce Barkhouse
Feet of Clay by Terry Pratchett
Tin Hats and Gas Masks by Joan Moules
Summon Dorn (Archangels Creed) by Azure Boone, Kenra Daniels