Machine Gun Kellys Last Stand
Stanley Hamilton
June 2003
224 pages, 15 photographs, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1247-5, $29.95 (t)
Orchestrated
to the sounds of getaway cars and machine guns, the abduction of
Oklahoma City businessman Charles Urschel in 1933 was a highly publicized
crime in an era when gangsters were folk heroes and kidnapping had
become a scourge. The criminals interstate flight to a desolate
hideout in Texas called for federal action, instigating the most
intensive manhunt the country had yet seen. It also set in motion
a chain of events that would have lasting significance for crime-fighting
in America.
In an exciting account of that celebrated manhunt, Stanley Hamilton
rekindles the spirit of yesterdays newsreels to chronicle
the pursuit and capture of George Machine Gun Kelly
and his wife, Kathryn. Tapping a wealth of newspaper reports, court
transcripts, literary accounts, and recollections of participants,
he draws readers into the chase and its aftermath, unraveling what
was then considered the most compelling crime mystery of the day.
Hamilton sets the stage with an overview of the lawlessness of
that era and of Kellys formative years, getting under the
skin of a hard-boiled criminal to show us what made Kelly tick.
He assembles a cast of larger-than-life characters to weave this
tale of true crime, one of the largest of whom was the 38-year-old
director of the national police force, J. Edgar Hoover.
Hoover had revitalized an ineffective agency whose operatives were
still not authorized to carry firearms or make arrests, and when
the Urschel case broke, it was Hoover who stepped up to coordinate
the manhunt. Hamilton takes readers behind the scenes in Hoovers
operation to show how this case was responsible for popularizing
the G-man and institutionalizing the FBI, creating the agent-as-hero
image that replaced earlier characterizations of blundering foils
to glamorous gangsters.
This iconic kidnapping case, breathlessly followed by a fascinated
public, was so quickly and effectively concluded that it was largely
instrumental in bringing about the end of the Gangster Era in America.
Machine Gun Kellys Last Stand brings that era to life
again by providing a fresh look at one of Americas most notorious
criminals, vividly recreating the times in which he lived and sharing
the stories of the people whose lives he touched.
Hamiltons thorough research and electric narrative
style illuminate George Machine Gun Kellys sensational
criminal career and the untold tale of his subsequent incarceration.
In telling Kellys story, Hamilton also tells the story of
his victim, Charles Urschel, and adds an important chapter to
the history of kidnapping in the United States.--Claire
Potter, author of War on Crime: Bandits, G-Men, and the
Politics of Mass Culture
Hamiltons authoritative account of the Machine
Gun Kelly case offers a fascinating insight into the gangster
era of the early 30s and the operations of the FBI.
His research is impeccable and his book a terrific read.--Lee
Grieveson, coeditor of Mob Culture: Essays on the American
Gangster Film
STANLEY HAMILTON is a freelance writer and a former reporter
for the Kansas City Star.
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