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Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the 1919 World Series

Page 52

by David Pietrusza

Williams, Peter (ed.) The Joe Williams Baseball Reader Chapel Hill (NC): Algonquin Books, 1989.

  Wolfe, Gerard R. New York: A Guide to the Metropolis New York: New York University Press, 1975.

  Woollcott, Alexander While Rome Burns New York: Viking Press, 1934.

  Newspapers

  Albany (NY) Times-Union

  Boston Herald

  Boston Post

  Chicago American

  Chicago Herald-Examiner

  Chicago Daily Journal

  Chicago Daily News

  Chicago Evening Post

  Chicago Tribune

  Dearborn Independent

  International Herald Tribune

  New Amsterdam News

  New York American

  New York Graphic

  New York Herald

  New York Herald-Tribune

  New York Journal

  New York Journal American

  New York Daily Mirror

  New York Evening Post

  New York Sun

  New York Morning Telegraph

  New York Telegram & Evening Mail

  New York Times

  New York Tribune

  New York World

  New York World (thrice-a-week edition)

  New York World-Telegram

  New York World-Telegram & Sun

  Saratogian (Saratoga Springs, NY)

  San Francisco Evening Bulletin

  San Francisco Morning Call

  Schenectady (NY) Union-Star

  Sporting News

  Variety

  Periodicals

  Attell, Abe, "The World Series Fix," Cavalier, October 1961, pp. 8-11, 13, 89, 96.

  Donovan, Dick and Hank Greenspun, "Nick the Greek-Fabulous King of Gamblers," Collier's, April 2, 1954, pp. 62-73; April 16, 1954, pp. 8487; April 30, 1954, pp. 64-71.

  Gandil, Arnold "Chick," "This Is My Story of the Black Sox Series," Sports Illustrated, September 17, 1956, pp. 62-68.

  Rosenthal, Harold, "The Scandalous Black Sox," Sport, October 1959, pp. 42-43, 98-102.

  Sutherland, Sidney, "The Mystery of Arnold Rothstein," Liberty, May 24, 1930, pp. 58-64.

  "Two Crimes of 1928: Reviewed by an Expert," The New Republic, January 30, 1929, pp. 293-295.

  Searching for the truth, or the approximation of the truth, about a master criminal who spent his life hiding that truth from police, prosecutors, rivals, the public-at-large-and his own wife-is, to say the least, difficult. Searching seven decades after his murder is harder still. Searching without assistance is foolhardy. Accomplishing it alone is impossible.

  Any number of institutions proved helpful in my journey to find the real Arnold Rothstein and the times in which he lived: The Albany (NY) Public Library; the Amsterdam (NY) Free Library; Beebe Library, Boston University; Chicago Public Library, the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin; the Hudson Valley Community College Library; the Library of Congress-Prints & Photographs Division, the Mount Holyoke College Library; the Municipal Archives of the City of New York; the National Baseball Library; the National Museum of Racing; the New York Public Library; the New York State Library; the City Clerk's Office, City of Saratoga Springs, New York; the San Francisco Public Library; the St. Louis Public Library; the Saratoga Springs (NY) Public Library; the Schenectady County (NY) Public Library; the Schenectady County (NY) Community College Library; the Schaffer Library, Union College (Schenectady, NY); the University of Florida at Tallahassee; Transcendental Graphics; the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library-Yale Collection of American Literature at Yale University.

  I'd also like to thank the following individuals for their selfless assistance: Irene Bayly; Reen Bodo; David R. Craig, Perry Desmond; Rob Edelman; Jim W. Faulkinbury, CGRS; James Gallagher; William Gienapp; Chuck Jacobi; Cathy Karp, to whom this book is dedicated and who has patiently listened to every story I've told about Arnold Rothstein and about scores of people, places, and events even remotely related to A. R.; John Kenrick, of "The MusicalslOl.com Archive;" Audrey Kupferberg; Bruce Markusen; Frank D. Mayer, Jr. of Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw; Herb M. Moss; Peter J. McManus, greatnephew of George McManus; Jim Overmyer; Paul H. Replogle; Dr. Eugene Schoenfeld; Stuart Shea; Carlton Stowers; Steven Syzdek; David W. Smith of Project Retrosheet; Steve L. Steinberg; Dr. Martha Stonequist, City Historian/Archivist, Saratoga Springs, New York; Eric Thomsen, great-nephew of Abe Attell; John Thorn; Lieutenant Bernie Whelan of the New York City Police Department; and Joe Wolfe.

  A special note of appreciation goes to Ralph J. Christian of Des Moines, Iowa, who has performed yeoman research regarding the Midwestern gamblers involved in fixing the 1919 World Series.

  And, of course, particular thanks to my wife Patty, who has probably been wondering why this project has taken so long (so have I, come to think of it); my agent Robert Wilson of Wilson Media, who guided this project to publication; and to Carroll & Graf's Philip Turner, Keith Wallman, Claiborne Hancock, and Simon M. Sullivan who helped turn my words into the book before you.

  DAVID PIETRUSZA

  May 2003

  DAVID PIETRUSZA, former president of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) and Editor-in-Chief of Total Sports, is the author of judge and jury: The Life and Times of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, winner of the 1998 CASEY Award. At one time a member of the Amsterdam (N.Y.) City Council, Pietrusza serves as Public Information Officer for the New York State Governor's Office of Regulatory Reform. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees in history from the State University of New York at Albany. An expert on the 1920's, Pietrusza has served on the Board of Directors of the Calvin Coolidge Memorial Foundation.

  He is also the author of Lights On!: The Wild Century-Long Saga of Night Baseball (a finalist for the 1997 CASEY Award); Minor Miracles: The Legend and Lure of Minor League Baseball; Major Leagues; and Baseball's Canadian-American League. In 2001 he co-authored Teddy Ballgame: My Life in Pictures with Ted Williams (first published as Ted Williams: My Life in Pictures). He has co-edited more than a dozen other sports books. He has appeared on Good Morning America, ESPN, and National Public Radio and written for numerous publications including USA Today Baseball Weekly and Baseball America.

  Pietrusza's experience in both sports history and in general history/public affairs (his juvenile titles include The Roaring 20s, John F. Kennedy, The End of the Cold War, The Chinese Cultural Revolution, The Battle of Waterloo, and The Invasion of Normandy) has made him unusually qualified to research the life and death of Arnold Rothstein.

  Pietrusza lives with his wife in upstate New York.

  For more on David Pietrusza, visit www.davidpietrusza.com

  Table of Contents

  The Players in Our Drama-

  I • "I've Been Shot" •

  • "Nobody Loves Me" •

  • "Everyone Gambled" •

  • "Why Not Get Married?" •

  • "I've Got Plans" •

  • "He'll Crucify the Big Feller" •

  • "Let's Go Looking for Some Action" •

  "Take Any Price" •

  • "Chicken Feed" •

  I0 • "I Never Take My Troubles to the Cops" •

  • "AM WIRING YOU TWENTY GRAND" •

  I2 • "I Wasn't In On It" •

  • "The Chic Thing to Have Good Whiskey" •

  • "The Man to See Was Arnold Rothstein" •

  • "I Can't Trust a Drunk" •

  CHAPTER 16 • "I Don't Bet On ... Boxing" • 232

  • "I'm Not a Gambler" •

  • "I Will Be Alone" •

  • "Will I Pull Through?" •

  CHAPTER 20 • Cover-up: "A Decenter, Kinder Man

  • "Tell Me Who is Using My Money for Dope" •

  • Aftermath: "A Wonderful Box" •

  • Case Closed: "I Did It, You Know"'

  • Epilogue •

  Notes •

  Bibliography •

  Ackno
wledgments •

  Index •

 

 

 


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