Philadelphia’s top crime writer on True Crime Philadelphia:
“Bad things really do happen in Philadelphia and Kathryn Canavan has written about some of the baddest.”
— George Anastasia
Serial killer H.H. Holmes built his murder castle in Chicago, but he met the hangman in Philadelphia. Al Capone served his first prison sentence here. The real-life killers who inspired HBO’s Boardwalk Empire lived and died here.
America’s first bank robbery was pulled off here in 1798. The country’s first kidnapping for ransom came off without a hitch in 1874.
A South Philadelphia man hatched the largest mass murder plot in U.S. history in the 1930s. His partners in crime were unhappy housewives.
Catholics and Protestants aimed cannon at each other in city streets in 1844.
Civil rights hero Octavius V. Catto was gunned down on South Street in 1871.
Take a walk with us through city history. Would you pass Eastern State Penitentiary on April 3, 1945, just as famed bank robber Willie Sutton popped out of an escape tunnel in broad daylight? Or you might have been one of the invited guests at H.H. Holmes’ hanging at Moyamensing Prison on a gray morning in May 1896. Or, if you walked down Washington Lane on July 1, 1874, would you have been alert enough to stop the two men who lured little blond Charley Ross away with candy? If you were, you might have stopped America’s first kidnapping for ransom, the one that gave rise to the admonition, “Never take candy from a stranger.” The case inspired the Leopold and Loeb kidnapping.
Mix in murderous maids, bumbling burglars, and unflinching local heroes and you have True Crime Philadelphia.
From Rob Laymon’s review in Broad Street Review: “Canavan’s eye for detail is no less evident here than in her first book, Lincoln’s Final Hours, a close account of the assassination night. We get the shape of the nose of Charlie Ross’s kidnapper in 1874. We get the height of the fence wrapped around the Pine Street Mansion where Mary Hill was murdered in 1868. We get the number of minutes it took Anton Probst to hack up seven members of the Deering family in 1866, all of it buoyed by abundant footnotes…All of makes fascinating reading.”
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