Chapter One
The Black City
How easy it was to disappear:
A thousand trains a day entered or left Chicago. Many of these trains
brought single young women who had never even seen a city but now hoped
to make one of the biggest and toughest their home. Jane Addams, the
urban reformer who founded Chicago's Hull House, wrote, "Never
before in civilization have such numbers of young girls been suddenly
released from the protection of the home and permitted to walk
unattended upon the city streets and to work under alien roofs."
The women sought work as typewriters, stenographers, seamstresses, and
weavers. The men who hired them were for the most part moral citizens
intent on efficiency and profit. But not always. On March 30, 1890, an
officer of the First National Bank placed a warning in the help-wanted
section of the Chicago Tribune, to inform female stenographers of
"our growing conviction that no thoroughly honorable business-man
who is this side of dotage ever advertises for a lady stenographer who
is a blonde, is good-looking, is quite alone in the city, or will
transmit her photograph. All such advertisements upon their face bear
the marks of vulgarity, nor do we regard it safe for any lady to answer
such unseemly utterances."
The women walked to work on streets that angled past bars, gambling
houses, and bordellos. Vice thrived, with official indulgence. "The
parlors and bedrooms in which honest folk lived were (as now) rather
dull places," wrote Ben Hecht, late in his life, trying to explain
this persistent trait of old Chicago. "It was pleasant, in a way,
to know that outside their windows, the devil was still capering in a
flare of brimstone." In an analogy that would prove all too apt,
Max Weber likened the city to "a human being with his skin
removed."
Anonymous death came early and often. Each of the thousand trains that
entered and left the city did so at grade level. You could step from a
curb and be killed by the Chicago Limited. Every day on average two
people were destroyed at the city's rail crossings. Their injuries were
grotesque. Pedestrians retrieved severed heads. There were other
hazards. Streetcars fell from drawbridges. Horses bolted and dragged
carriages into crowds. Fires took a dozen lives a day. In describing the
fire dead, the term the newspapers most liked to use was
"roasted." There was diphtheria, typhus, cholera, influenza.
And there was murder. In the time of the fair the rate at which men and
women killed each other rose sharply throughout the nation but
especially in Chicago, where police found themselves without the
manpower or expertise to manage the volume. In the first six months of
1892 the city experienced nearly eight hundred homicides. Four a day.
Most were prosaic, arising from robbery, argument, or sexual jealousy.
Men shot women, women shot men, and children shot each other by
accident. But all this could be understood. Nothing like the Whitechapel
killings had occurred. Jack the Ripper's five-murder spree in 1888 had
defied explanation and captivated readers throughout America, who
believed such a thing could not happen in their own hometowns.
But things were changing. Everywhere one looked the boundary between the
moral and the wicked seemed to be degrading. Elizabeth Cady Stanton
argued in favor of divorce. Clarence Darrow advocated free love. A young
woman named Borden killed her parents.
And in Chicago a young handsome doctor stepped from a train, his
surgical valise in hand. He entered a world of clamor, smoke, and steam,
refulgent with the scents of murdered cattle and pigs. He found it to
his liking.
The letters came later, from the Cigrands, Williamses, Smythes, and
untold others, addressed to that strange gloomy castle at Sixty-third
and Wallace, pleading for the whereabouts of daughters and daughters'
children.
It was so easy to disappear, so easy to deny knowledge, so very easy in
the smoke and din to mask that something dark had taken root.
This was Chicago, on the eve of the greatest fair in history.
From the Hardcover edition.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "The Devil in the White City"
by Erik Larson.
Copyright (C) 2004 by Erik Larson.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
About the Book
Two men embodied an element of the great dynamic that characterized America's rush toward the 20th century. The architect was Daniel Hudson Burnham the brilliant director of works for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair and the builder of many of the country's most important structures, including the Flatiron Building in New York and Union Station in Washington, D.C. The murderer was Henry H. Holmes, a young doctor who, in a malign parody of the White City, built his "World's Fair Hotel" just west of the fairgrounds - a torture palace complete with dissection table, gas chamber, and 3,000-degree crematorium. Burnham overcame tremendous obstacles and tragedies as he organized the talents of Frederick Law Olmsted, Charles McKim, Louis Sullivan, and others to transform swampy Jackson Park into the White City, while Holmes used the attraction of the great fair and his own satanic charms to lure scores of young women to their deaths. What makes the story all the more chilling is that Holmes really lived, walking the grounds of that dream city by the lake.
The Devil in the White City draws listeners into a time of magic and majesty, made all the more appealing by a supporting cast of real-life characters, including Buffalo Bill, Theodore Dreiser, Susan B. Anthony, Thomas Edison, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, and others.
Erik Larson's gifts as a storyteller are magnificently displayed in this rich narrative of the master builder, the killer, and the great fair that obsessed them both.