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In June 1870, the residents of the city of New Orleans were already
on edge when two African American women kidnapped seventeen-month
old Mollie Digby from in front of her New Orleans home. It was the
height of Radical Reconstruction. The old racial order had been
turned upside down and black men now voted, held office, sat on
juries, and served as policemen. Nervous white residents fearing
impeding chaos pointed to the Digby abduction as proof that no
white child was safe now that slavery had ended and the South had
been "Africanized." Newspapers opposed to Louisiana's biracial
Reconstruction government stoked those fears by reprinting rumors
that the stolen Digby baby had been sacrificed in a Voodoo ceremony
on the shore of Lake Pontchartrain. Louisiana's twenty-eight year
old Reconstruction Governor Henry Clay Warmoth, in turn, hoped to
use the kidnapping to prove that his newly integrated police force,
trained in the latest investigative techniques from Boston and New
York, could solve the crime. He offered a huge reward for the
return of Mollie Digby and the capture of her kidnappers, and his
police chief put his best Afro-Creole detective, the dashing Jean
Baptiste Jourdain, on the case. The Associated Press sent the story
out on the wire and newspaper readers around the country began to
follow the New Orleans mystery. Leads poured in from across the
Gulf Coast and from as far north as Ohio and New York, and Jourdain
became the first black detective in the United States to make
national news. Interest in the story only grew when police and
prosecutors put two strikingly beautiful Afro-Creole women on trial
for the crime and a tense courtroom drama unfolded against the
backdrop of a yellow fever epidemic and the momentous events of
Reconstruction in the South. A stunning work of historical
recreation, Michael Ross's The Great New Orleans Kidnapping Case is
the first full account ever written about an event that electrified
the South at one of the most critical moments in the history of
American race relations. Ross brings the era back to life, leading
readers into smoke filled concert saloons, Garden District drawing
rooms, sweltering courthouses, and squalid prisons, and he uses the
Digby kidnapping, investigation, and trial to offer important new
insights into the complexities and possibilities of the
Reconstruction era.
In June 1870, the residents of the city of New Orleans were already
on edge when two African American women kidnapped
seventeen-month-old Mollie Digby from in front of her New Orleans
home. It was the height of Radical Reconstruction, and the old
racial order had been turned upside down: black men now voted, held
office, sat on juries, and served as policemen. Nervous white
residents, certain that the end of slavery and resulting
"Africanization" of the city would bring chaos, pointed to the
Digby abduction as proof that no white child was safe. Louisiana's
twenty-eight-year old Reconstruction governor, Henry Clay Warmoth,
hoping to use the investigation of the kidnapping to validate his
newly integrated police force to the highly suspicious white
population of New Orleans, saw to it that the city's best
Afro-Creole detective, John Baptiste Jourdain, was put on the case,
and offered a huge reward for the return of Mollie Digby and the
capture of her kidnappers. When the Associated Press sent the story
out on the wire, newspaper readers around the country began to
follow the New Orleans mystery. Eventually, police and prosecutors
put two strikingly beautiful Afro-Creole women on trial for the
crime, and interest in the case exploded as a tense courtroom drama
unfolded. In The Great New Orleans Kidnapping Case, Michael Ross
offers the first full account of this event that electrified the
South at one of the most critical moments in the history of
American race relations. Tracing the crime from the moment it was
committed through the highly publicized investigation and
sensationalized trial that followed, all the while chronicling the
public outcry and escalating hysteria as news and rumors
surrounding the crime spread, Ross paints a vivid picture of the
Reconstruction-era South and the complexities and possibilities
that faced the newly integrated society. Leading readers into
smoke-filled concert saloons, Garden District drawing rooms,
sweltering courthouses, and squalid prisons, Ross brings this
fascinating era back to life. A stunning work of historical
recreation, The Great New Orleans Kidnapping Case is sure to
captivate anyone interested in true crime, the Civil War and its
aftermath, and the history of New Orleans and the American South.
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