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Dying for a drink : how a prohibition preacher got away with murder

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  • Author: Brode, Patrick
    Edition: First edition
    Date:
    Created
    2020
    Summary:

    Known to history as "The Fighting Parson," Reverend J.O.L. Spracklin broke into a notorious Windsor roadhouse one chilly November night in 1920 and shot and killed barkeep Beverly "Babe" Trumble. He never served a day of time, easily being acquitted in his trial for self-defense. A provincial liquor license inspector already known for his brash tactics, Spracklin's unabashed carnage solidified across North America the Detroit-Windsor borderlands' reputation as the new Wild West--where whisky flowed freely, warrants were forged on the spot, and ministers toted guns to keep the peace. To the rest of Ontario, a dry province, Spracklin had been the saviour they had been waiting for, the answer to the lawlessness of the Border Cities--that is, until he shot a man at point blank range. In this exploration of the period, decorated Ontario historian Patrick Brode unpacks this infamous piece of Prohibition lore and asks: Why did Babe Trumble die? What led to a hotheaded reverend taking the law into his own hands, killing a man, and getting away with it? Full of fire-and-brimstone preachers, crooked politicians, wily rum runners, grandstanding lawyers, and innocents caught in the cross-fire, Why Babe Trumble Died is a fascinating read that will engross anyone curious about deeper stories behind this fabled time.

    Contents:
    • Intro; Title Page; Copyright; Intro; 1 A Temperate Province; 2 An Intemperate City; 3 Fighters; 4 Enforcing Temperance; 5 A Leader Found; 6 Inspector Spracklin; 7 "This Man Spracklin Is A Fool"; 8 Bloody Madness; 9 Trial-Matters of a Limited Compass; 10 Learning to Live with Booze; 11 The Parting Glass; Bibliography; Author
    Original Publisher: Windsor, Ontario : Biblioasis, 2018, Toronto, CNIB
    Language(s): English
    ISBN: 9780221040603, 0221040609