Homicide in Chicago 1870-1930
 
1870s 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s  

Links to Related Sites


historical archives
Illinois State Archives
Illinois Historic Preservation Agency
Illinois Women, Alliance Library System
National Archive of Criminal Justice Data
Chicago Bibliography, Chicago Public Library
The Avalon Project: Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy, Yale University
Illinois State Archives
Forgotten Chicago
Our main goal is to discover and document little known elements of Chicago's infrastructure, architecture, neighborhoods and general cityscape, whether existing or historical

women/social movements

Women and Social Movements in the United States 1600-2000
An Inventory of the Florence Kelley Collection, University of Illinois, Chicago
The Lucy Parsons Project 


haymarket/anarchy
Chicago Anarchists on Trial, Evidence from the Haymarket Affair 1886-1887, Library of Congress
Anarchy and Anarchist by Michael J Schaack
The Haymarket Massacre Archive, Anarchy Archives
The Labadie Collection, University of Michigan


john peter altgeld
Jeffrey Chown's Altgeld web site, Northern Illinois University
Michael Magidson's Altgeld web site, Vassar


crime, police, criminals & vice

Chicago HSI

Chicago HSI is an application to research spatial relationships between homicide events in Chicago. This tool is comprised of multiple federal, state, and regional data resources organized into an intuitive visual display

Crime and Society: A Comparative Criminology Tour of the World
Chicago in 1900 - A Millienium Bibiliography: Crime-Police, Criminals & Vice, Chicago Pub;ic Library
Alchemy of Bones: Chicago's Leutgert Murder Case of 1897, Robert Loerzel
Famous Online Cases, Clerk of the Circuit Court, Cook County
Mad in Pursuit of Family History: Moses "Muhoney" Rafael Flanagan, Family Outlaw, Susan B. Price


leopold & loeb
Leopold & Loeb, Marianne Rackliffe
People V. Nathan F. Leopold, Jr., and Richard Loeb, Clerk of the circuit County, Cook County
Famous American Trials
TruTV Crime Library
Leopold and Loeb: On-line research sources, University of Chicago
The Leopold and Loeb Case of 1924, Jazz Age Chicago

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