This week, the canon story we’re looking at is The Valley of Fear (Pt. 2, Chap. 5 - Epilogue) and the chosen topic is the Pinkerton Detective Agency.
A few facts:
🔎 Allan Pinkerton was born in Scotland in 1819 but emigrated to America in 1842.
🔎 Pinkerton first got interested in criminal detective work… when he came across a band of counterfeiters... After observing their movements for some time, he informed the local sheriff who arrested them. This later led to Pinkerton being appointed, in 1849, as the first police detective in Chicago… [Wikipedia]
🔎 In 1850, he partnered with Chicago attorney Edward Rucker in forming the North-Western Police Agency, which later became Pinkerton & Co, and finally Pinkerton National Detective Agency, still in existence today as Pinkerton Consulting and Investigations, a subsidiary of Securitas AB. [Wikipedia] And it has offices all over the world.
🔎 In 1856 Pinkerton hired a young widow, Kate Warne, who became the first female detective in the US. [pinkerton.com] Warne’s biggest case came in 1861, when she proved a key operative in Pinkerton’s successful thwarting of an assassination plot being hatched against then-president-elect Abraham Lincoln. [Gizmodo]
🔎 The Pinkertons spied for the Union Army during the American Civil War. [history.com]
🔎 In 1861, Pinkerton hired the first African-American Union Intelligence Agent, John Scobell. Scobell was a former slave. Pinkerton was a “staunch and vocal” supporter of the abolition of slavery and was known to frequently help fugitive slaves on the Underground Railway to Canada… [thrillingdetective.com]
🔎 Pinkerton and his agents become legendary during their relentless pursuit of Jesse James - the Younger Gang, the Dalton Brothers and Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch. [pinkerton.com]
🔎 The James brothers murdered a Pinkerton detective who’d been sent to investigate them. Pinkerton vowed vengeance on the outlaws but the following raid went very wrong. An incendiary device was thrown into their mother’s house wounding Zerelda [Samuel, the James brothers’ mother] and killing [their] eight-year-old half-brother Archie. [It's possible the device was thrown by one of the locals that made up the raiding group, rather than one of the detectives.] Public opinion turned against the agency, and Pinkerton gave up trying to bring Jesse and Frank James to justice.
🔎 The agency’s iconic logo—a large, unblinking eye accompanied by the slogan “We Never Sleep”—gave rise to the term “private eye” as a nickname for detectives. [history.com]
🔎 In contrast to the public police of the time, Pinkerton and his private operatives quickly gained a reputation for toughness, thoroughness and relentless professionalism. They compiled huge files on suspects, and were credited with creating the first rogue's gallery and being the first to use photographs to identify criminals. [thrillingdetective.com] The agency also used the practice of clipping and filing newspaper stories for reference in investigations. [pinkerton.com]
🔎 After [Pinkerton’s] death [in 1884], the agency continued to operate and soon became a major force against the labor movement developing in the US and Canada. This effort changed the image of the Pinkertons for years…[Wikipedia] Industrialists used them to spy on unions or act as guards and strikebreakers, and detectives clashed with workers on several occasions. [history.com] It was the bloodshed during the strike at Andrew Carnegie's Homestead Mill in 1892 that led to laws in 26 states that banned bringing in outside guards during labor disputes. [pbs.org]
🔎 Despite his agency's later reputation for anti-labor activities, Pinkerton himself was heavily involved in pro-labor politics as a young man. Though Pinkerton considered himself pro-labor, he opposed strikes and distrusted labor unions. [Wikipedia]
Some useful resources:
Pinkerton (detective agency) On Wikipedia.
Allan Pinkerton On Wikipedia.
Allan J. Pinkerton On The Thrilling Detective Web Site.
History of the Pinkerton Detective Agency On the Pinkerton website.
How America's First Female Detective Helped Foil An Assassination Plot An article about Kate Warne by Cheryl Eddy on Gizmodo.
Celebrating Women’s History: America’s First Female P.I. By Erin Allen on the Library of Congress website.
Black Dispatches Contains a biography of John Scobell. On Wikipedia.
Slaves, freedmen spied on South during Civil War On CBS News website. Mentions John Scobell amongst others.
10 Things You May Not Know About the Pinkertons On history.com
Allan Pinkerton's Detective Agency On PBS.org
Please feel free to discuss this topic in the comments.
Please also feel free to comment about the canon story itself or any related aspects outside this week’s theme. For example, any reactions, thoughts, theories, fic recs, favourite adaptations of the canon story… Or any other contribution you wish to make. And if you have any suggestions for fic prompts springing from this week's story, please feel free to share those in the comments as well.
A few facts:
🔎 Allan Pinkerton was born in Scotland in 1819 but emigrated to America in 1842.
🔎 Pinkerton first got interested in criminal detective work… when he came across a band of counterfeiters... After observing their movements for some time, he informed the local sheriff who arrested them. This later led to Pinkerton being appointed, in 1849, as the first police detective in Chicago… [Wikipedia]
🔎 In 1850, he partnered with Chicago attorney Edward Rucker in forming the North-Western Police Agency, which later became Pinkerton & Co, and finally Pinkerton National Detective Agency, still in existence today as Pinkerton Consulting and Investigations, a subsidiary of Securitas AB. [Wikipedia] And it has offices all over the world.
🔎 In 1856 Pinkerton hired a young widow, Kate Warne, who became the first female detective in the US. [pinkerton.com] Warne’s biggest case came in 1861, when she proved a key operative in Pinkerton’s successful thwarting of an assassination plot being hatched against then-president-elect Abraham Lincoln. [Gizmodo]
🔎 The Pinkertons spied for the Union Army during the American Civil War. [history.com]
🔎 In 1861, Pinkerton hired the first African-American Union Intelligence Agent, John Scobell. Scobell was a former slave. Pinkerton was a “staunch and vocal” supporter of the abolition of slavery and was known to frequently help fugitive slaves on the Underground Railway to Canada… [thrillingdetective.com]
🔎 Pinkerton and his agents become legendary during their relentless pursuit of Jesse James - the Younger Gang, the Dalton Brothers and Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch. [pinkerton.com]
🔎 The James brothers murdered a Pinkerton detective who’d been sent to investigate them. Pinkerton vowed vengeance on the outlaws but the following raid went very wrong. An incendiary device was thrown into their mother’s house wounding Zerelda [Samuel, the James brothers’ mother] and killing [their] eight-year-old half-brother Archie. [It's possible the device was thrown by one of the locals that made up the raiding group, rather than one of the detectives.] Public opinion turned against the agency, and Pinkerton gave up trying to bring Jesse and Frank James to justice.
🔎 The agency’s iconic logo—a large, unblinking eye accompanied by the slogan “We Never Sleep”—gave rise to the term “private eye” as a nickname for detectives. [history.com]
🔎 In contrast to the public police of the time, Pinkerton and his private operatives quickly gained a reputation for toughness, thoroughness and relentless professionalism. They compiled huge files on suspects, and were credited with creating the first rogue's gallery and being the first to use photographs to identify criminals. [thrillingdetective.com] The agency also used the practice of clipping and filing newspaper stories for reference in investigations. [pinkerton.com]
🔎 After [Pinkerton’s] death [in 1884], the agency continued to operate and soon became a major force against the labor movement developing in the US and Canada. This effort changed the image of the Pinkertons for years…[Wikipedia] Industrialists used them to spy on unions or act as guards and strikebreakers, and detectives clashed with workers on several occasions. [history.com] It was the bloodshed during the strike at Andrew Carnegie's Homestead Mill in 1892 that led to laws in 26 states that banned bringing in outside guards during labor disputes. [pbs.org]
🔎 Despite his agency's later reputation for anti-labor activities, Pinkerton himself was heavily involved in pro-labor politics as a young man. Though Pinkerton considered himself pro-labor, he opposed strikes and distrusted labor unions. [Wikipedia]
Some useful resources:
Pinkerton (detective agency) On Wikipedia.
Allan Pinkerton On Wikipedia.
Allan J. Pinkerton On The Thrilling Detective Web Site.
History of the Pinkerton Detective Agency On the Pinkerton website.
How America's First Female Detective Helped Foil An Assassination Plot An article about Kate Warne by Cheryl Eddy on Gizmodo.
Celebrating Women’s History: America’s First Female P.I. By Erin Allen on the Library of Congress website.
Black Dispatches Contains a biography of John Scobell. On Wikipedia.
Slaves, freedmen spied on South during Civil War On CBS News website. Mentions John Scobell amongst others.
10 Things You May Not Know About the Pinkertons On history.com
Allan Pinkerton's Detective Agency On PBS.org
Please feel free to discuss this topic in the comments.
Please also feel free to comment about the canon story itself or any related aspects outside this week’s theme. For example, any reactions, thoughts, theories, fic recs, favourite adaptations of the canon story… Or any other contribution you wish to make. And if you have any suggestions for fic prompts springing from this week's story, please feel free to share those in the comments as well.
no subject
Date: 2016-07-03 05:47 pm (UTC)The Mollie Maguires and the Detectives, Allan Pinkerton
Date: 2016-07-03 07:14 pm (UTC)So, I read some of Pinkerton's Mollie Maguires account (it's 420 pages long!), and I can totally see why ppl say it was Doyle's main source for the VALL backstory. There were times that I lost track of which book I was reading, some of the phraseologies or emphasized points are so similar.
Random observations:
...continued in another comment, because LJ length limit.
Re: The Mollie Maguires and the Detectives, Allan Pinkerton
Date: 2016-07-03 07:21 pm (UTC)So! That's the 100% scientific capsule summary of Pinkerton's not!novel about James McParland and the Mollie Maguires!
no subject
Date: 2016-07-03 10:35 pm (UTC)Re: The Mollie Maguires and the Detectives, Allan Pinkerton
Date: 2016-07-03 10:42 pm (UTC)Thank you so much for reading the book so we didn't have to ^_^ And crikey - thank you so much for the thorough summary. That must have taken you a while ^^"
It really is fascinating stuff comparing Pinkerton's version with ACD's wholly fictionalised version.
Re: The Mollie Maguires and the Detectives, Allan Pinkerton
Date: 2016-07-03 10:59 pm (UTC)One has to wonder if Watson was fictionalizing Holmes' cases as much as Doyle fictionalized this one. If so, no wonder Holmes was always bellyaching about it. :-D