Hell's Half Acre: The Life and Legend of a Red-light DistrictTexas Christian University Press, 1991 - 364 עמודים The red-light district of Fort Worth, Texas began its colorful history with the cattle drives of the 1870s and lingered on through World War I. The ``Acre,'' according to this entertaining account, supported a variety of vices, notably drinking, gambling, and prostitution. It also played host to the Wild Bunch, Sam Bass, and other colorful characters. This lively and readable work suffers from a repetitive text and some minor factual errors. For example, ``Squirrel-tooth Alice,'' a well-known bawd, acquired her moniker on account of her pet, not her appearance. Due to a paucity of local sources, the author relies on ``scholarly imagination'' and accounts of other tenderloins. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 90
עמוד 10
... street going uptown - Main Street , an eighty - foot - wide disaster most of the time . Dusty in the summer , it turned into a mud track when the fall and winter rains came . The slightest sprinkle was sufficient to produce an ...
... street going uptown - Main Street , an eighty - foot - wide disaster most of the time . Dusty in the summer , it turned into a mud track when the fall and winter rains came . The slightest sprinkle was sufficient to produce an ...
עמוד 47
... Street , while one block over on Rusk was where many of the low dives and bawdy houses were to be found . The better class of saloons kept to Main Street in the years to come , and half a century later old - timers still remembered the ...
... Street , while one block over on Rusk was where many of the low dives and bawdy houses were to be found . The better class of saloons kept to Main Street in the years to come , and half a century later old - timers still remembered the ...
עמוד 302
... Street was the only street where blacks predominated , and then only from Main Street eastward . Above Sixth Street there were practically no black residents on any street , although in some cases blacks in white residential areas are ...
... Street was the only street where blacks predominated , and then only from Main Street eastward . Above Sixth Street there were practically no black residents on any street , although in some cases blacks in white residential areas are ...
תוכן
Cowboy Capers or Dress and Delight Days I | 1 |
The Wages of Sin Are A Damned Sight Better | 33 |
Better Undressed Than Unarmed | 57 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
5 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
Hell's Half Acre: The Life and Legend of a Red-light District <span dir=ltr>Richard F. Selcer</span> תצוגה מקדימה מוגבלת - 1991 |
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Acre's April arrested Bass Bat Masterson Butch Cassidy cattle Chisholm Trail citizens city council city marshal city's cow towns cowboys Daggett dance halls district Dodge City drinking election end of town Etta Place famous Fannie Porter February Fort Worth Star-Telegram frontier gamblers gambling gang girls Gunfighters Harvey Logan Heck Thomas Hell's Half Acre historian History Hotel houses Ibid jail Jim Courtright Kansas later legend lived Luke Short madam Main Street never newspaper night Old Fort Worth ordinance outlaw Paddock Pinkerton police prostitutes railroad record reform reported reputation robberies Rusk Street saloon Sam Bass San Antonio September sporting story Sundance Tarrant County Tarrant County Criminal Texas Writers Theater Timothy Courtright took train uptown western White Elephant Wild Bunch William Worth City Directories Worth Daily Democrat Worth Daily Gazette Worth Democrat Worth Public Library Worth Star-Telegram Wyatt Earp