Rise of the Chicago Police Department

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1877 strikes
8-hour day
A01=Sam Mitrani
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Allan Pinkerton
anarchism
Anton Hesing
Author_Sam Mitrani
Battle of the Halsted Viaduct
Carter Harrison
Category=JKSW1
Category=NHTB
Chicago
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Cyrus McCormick
disorderly conduct
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
German immigrants
Haymarket
immigration
Irish immigrants
John Bonfield
John Wentworth
Joseph Medill
Levi Boone
Levi Leiter
Marshall Field
May Day
nativism
patrol wagon
patrolman
People's Party
People’s Party
Philip Armour
police
Police Alarm Telegraph System
prostitution
Pullman strike
state militias
station house
temperance
wage labor economy
working class

Product details

  • ISBN 9780252038068
  • Weight: 594g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Dec 2013
  • Publisher: University of Illinois Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Class turmoil, labor, and law and order in Chicago

In this book, Sam Mitrani cogently examines the making of the police department in Chicago, which by the late 1800s had grown into the most violent, turbulent city in America. Chicago was roiling with political and economic conflict, much of it rooted in class tensions, and the city's lawmakers and business elite fostered the growth of a professional municipal police force to protect capitalism, its assets, and their own positions in society. Together with city policymakers, the business elite united behind an ideology of order that would simultaneously justify the police force's existence and dictate its functions.

Tracing the Chicago police department's growth through events such as the 1855 Lager Beer riot, the Civil War, the May Day strikes, the 1877 railroad workers strike and riot, and the Haymarket violence in 1886, Mitrani demonstrates that this ideology of order both succeeded and failed in its aims. Recasting late nineteenth-century Chicago in terms of the struggle over order, this insightful history uncovers the modern police department's role in reconciling democracy with industrial capitalism.

Sam Mitrani is a professor of history at the College of DuPage.

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