A Dirty Year

A Dirty Year
A Dirty Year

A Dirty Year

Sex, Suffrage, and Scandal in Gilded Age New York
By Bill Greer

HISTORY

240 Pages, 6 x 9

Formats: Cloth, Mobipocket, PDF, EPUB

Cloth, $28.99 (CA $38.99) (US $28.99)

ISBN 9781641602518

Rights: WOR

Chicago Review Press (Apr 2020)

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Overview

New York, 1872, was a city convulsing with social upheaval and sexual revolution seven years after the Civil War
New York, 1872, was a city convulsing with social upheaval and sexual revolution seven years after the Civil War. As the year began, the New York Times headlined four stories that symptomized the decay in public morals the editors so frequently decried: financier Jim Fisk was gunned down in a love triangle; suffragist and free love advocate Victoria Woodhull was running for president; vice hunter Anthony Comstock battled smut dealers poisoning children's minds; and abortionists were thriving—and killing. Through the year these stories intertwined in ways unimaginable, pulling in others famous and infamous—suffragists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Brooklyn's beloved preacher Henry Ward Beecher, the nation's richest tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt, and William Howe, preeminent counsel to the criminal element. Through the lives of these larger-than-life characters, the issues of the day played out—rigged elections, everyday shootings, attacks on the press, sexual impropriety, reproductive rights, the chasm between rich and poor—issues that resonate today. Political parties split over a bitterly contested election, suffragist battled suffragist over bettering women's place in society, and pious saints fought soulless sinners, until at year-end this jumble of conflicts exploded in the greatest sensation of the nineteenth century.

Author Biography

 
Bill Greer has spent his adult life exploring New York and with the world. As a travel writer, he founded the early Internet’s leading community for outdoor adventure and promoted adventure travel through television, radio and public events. Turning to New York history, he chaired the New Netherland Institute’s program to establish the New Netherland Research Center in Albany.