Description

Book Synopsis
In the nineteenth century Liverpool gained an unenviable reputation as the most crime-ridden place in the country. Dock theft, alcohol-related crime, prostitution, sectarian violence, a high level of female offending and armies of juvenile thieves made Liverpool a distinct criminal landscape, ‘the black spot on the Mersey’. Using contemporary newspapers and journals (both local and national), autobiographies and first-hand accounts gleaned from parliamentary and prison reports, Michael Macilwee explores the social background, conditions and events that helped create and sustain the variety and high level of criminality in Liverpool. The book provides accounts, statistics and analysis of criminal practices ranging from poaching to pocket-picking to prostitution. It also makes space for the voices of the long-forgotten Liverpool poor and members of the so-called ‘criminal classes’, exhuming fascinating first-person accounts of motives, fears and aspirations long buried in archives. Macilwee also considers the ways in which various institutions, including the police, courts, prisons, churches and philanthropic organizations, attempted to bring order to the streets and improve the behaviour of the Liverpool public. Finally, the book suggests that we are still struggling with the legacy of Victorian social problems and their possible solutions, particularly in relation to debates about alcohol, prostitution and the usefulness of prison as a punishment.

Trade Review
A rattling good read.
Clive Emsley, Open University


Table of Contents
  • List of Tables
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Acknowledgements
  • Preface
  • 'Ghastly Statistics': a Word of Warning
  • 1. The Black Spot on the Mersey
  • 2. Policing
  • 3. Prison and Punishment
  • 4. Children and Women in the Justice System 5 'The Scum ofIreland'
  • 6. Protest, Riot and Disorder 7 The Lowest Circle of Hell 8 The Demon Drink
  • 9. Violence
  • 10. Maritime Crime
  • 11. Street Robbery
  • 12. Burglary and Property Theft 13 Poaching Wars
  • 14. Scams
  • 15. Victorian Family Values
  • 16. 'The Devil's Children'
  • 17. Gangs and Anti-Social Behaviour
  • 18. Prostitution
  • 19. Sport and Gambling
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

The Liverpool Underworld: Crime in the City,

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    A Hardback by Michael Macilwee

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      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 04/11/2011
      ISBN13: 9781846316999, 978-1846316999
      ISBN10: 1846316995

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In the nineteenth century Liverpool gained an unenviable reputation as the most crime-ridden place in the country. Dock theft, alcohol-related crime, prostitution, sectarian violence, a high level of female offending and armies of juvenile thieves made Liverpool a distinct criminal landscape, ‘the black spot on the Mersey’. Using contemporary newspapers and journals (both local and national), autobiographies and first-hand accounts gleaned from parliamentary and prison reports, Michael Macilwee explores the social background, conditions and events that helped create and sustain the variety and high level of criminality in Liverpool. The book provides accounts, statistics and analysis of criminal practices ranging from poaching to pocket-picking to prostitution. It also makes space for the voices of the long-forgotten Liverpool poor and members of the so-called ‘criminal classes’, exhuming fascinating first-person accounts of motives, fears and aspirations long buried in archives. Macilwee also considers the ways in which various institutions, including the police, courts, prisons, churches and philanthropic organizations, attempted to bring order to the streets and improve the behaviour of the Liverpool public. Finally, the book suggests that we are still struggling with the legacy of Victorian social problems and their possible solutions, particularly in relation to debates about alcohol, prostitution and the usefulness of prison as a punishment.

      Trade Review
      A rattling good read.
      Clive Emsley, Open University


      Table of Contents
      • List of Tables
      • List of Abbreviations
      • Acknowledgements
      • Preface
      • 'Ghastly Statistics': a Word of Warning
      • 1. The Black Spot on the Mersey
      • 2. Policing
      • 3. Prison and Punishment
      • 4. Children and Women in the Justice System 5 'The Scum ofIreland'
      • 6. Protest, Riot and Disorder 7 The Lowest Circle of Hell 8 The Demon Drink
      • 9. Violence
      • 10. Maritime Crime
      • 11. Street Robbery
      • 12. Burglary and Property Theft 13 Poaching Wars
      • 14. Scams
      • 15. Victorian Family Values
      • 16. 'The Devil's Children'
      • 17. Gangs and Anti-Social Behaviour
      • 18. Prostitution
      • 19. Sport and Gambling
      • Conclusion
      • Notes
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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