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Glasgow: The Real Mean City
Glasgow: The Real Mean City

Glasgow: The Real Mean City

True Crime and Punishment in the Second City of the Empire

TRUE CRIME

256 Pages, 5 x 8

Trade Paper, $12.95 (US $12.95) (CA $17.95)

Publication Date: June 2014

ISBN 9781845027377

Rights: US & CA

Black & White Publishing (Jun 2014)

Available from local and national retailers throughout the US.
 

Overview

There cannot be many cities where crime could mean anything from stealing a ship to singing a seditious song, but 19th-century Glasgow was a unique place with an amazing dynamism. Immigrants poured in from Ireland and the Highlands while the factories, shipyards, and mills buzzed with innovation. However, underneath the bustle was a different world as an incredibly diverse criminal class worked for their own profit with total disregard for the law. Robbers infested the highways and byways, a glut of garrotters gathered to jump on the unwary, drunken brawls disfigured the evening streets, prostitutes lured foolish men into dark corners, conmen connived clever schemes, and perfidious poisoners plotted. There were dark and dangerous places, such as the Tontine Close, and always the possibility of a major riot—with religion the excuse—as a volatile population became angry at unjust poverty and poor housing. It was perhaps not surprising that Glasgow formed Britain's first professional police force and men such as Superintendent James Smart fought to stem the crime that at times seemed to overwhelm the city. The forces of law had to be mobile, with the robbery of the Paisley Bank involving a coach chase as far as London, while the robbery of Walter Baird's shop in the Argyll Arcade took Acting Superintendent George McKay over the sea to Belfast. The police had an often thankless task, and The Real Mean City chronicles the century-long struggle of the forces of law and order to bring peace to a troubled city.

Author Biography

Malcolm Archibald has had a variety of occupations from postman to college lecturer. He is the author of Scottish Battles; Mother Law, which was a runner up at the inaugural Dundee Book Prize; Whales for the Wizard, which won the Dundee Book Prize; and The Darkest Walk, which was a winner in the People's Book Prize.