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Excerpt from Langdon W. Moore: His Own Story of His Eventful Life David Ash's home farm consisted of about three hundred acres, and cut one hundred tons of hay, wintered forty head of cattle and two hundred and fifty merino sheep. Here I learned never to say I can't until I had tried and failed. I also learned to eat what was set before me without finding fauAt the expiration of the year, when the butter and cheese were loaded on the wagon to start for Newburyport, I asked Mr. Ash to let me go with him to visit my parents; but with a little coaxing and a bright silver dollar, such as our fore fathers made, be persuaded me to stay at the farm another year. He andhis brother made the trip alon...
Contained in the item are "36 heliotype plates with photographs of mug shots of criminals (204), and two plates; one of Inspector Byrnes, and the second a tableau of a criminal being held for his picture."--Hanson Collection catalog, p. 85
Now a highly politicised medium, this book of prison literature collects a lively array of selections from the earliest recorded convict autobiographies, examining crimes, arrests and convictions, punishments inflicted, survival techniques and spiritual awakenings. Hard labour in coal mines, whippings, solitary confinement in bare unheated cells, water torture and iron maidens were just a few of the punishments meted out to these prisoners and vividly recounted in these selections.
This monograph by a professional thief—with the aid of Edwin H. Sutherland's expert comments and analyses—is a revealing sociological document that goes far to explain the genesis, development, and patterns of criminal behavior. "Chic Conwell," as the author was known in the underworld, gives a candid and forthright account of the highly organized society in which the professional thief lives. He tells how he learned to steal, survive, succeed, and ultimately to pay his debt to society and prepare himself for full and useful citizenship. The Professional Thief presents in amazing detail the hard, cold facts about the private lives and professional habits of pickpockets, shoplifters, and conmen, and brings into focus the essential psychological and sociological situations that beget and support professional crime.
Includes over two hundred plates illustrating the police at work and early police stations.