Gary Krist, photo by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders |
Gary Krist is the author of the new book Empire of Sin: A Story of Sex, Jazz, Murder, and the Battle for Modern New Orleans. His other books include City of Scoundrels and The White Cascade. He lives in Bethesda, Maryland.
Q:
Why did you decide to focus on the history of New Orleans from 1890-1920?
A:
I’ve made a specialty of the Progressive era in my recent work, and the social
issues of that time played out in New Orleans in particularly interesting ways,
most notably with the grand reformist experiment of the officially tolerated
red-light district known as Storyville.
But
the 30-year period from 1890-1920 encompasses a thorough and coherent campaign
by local reformers to clean up the city on many different fronts.
The
period began with the shocking assassination of police chief David Hennessy in
1890 – an event that galvanized the so-called "better half" to
finally take arms against the city’s various underworlds.
And
the period ended in 1920, with the ultimate triumph of reformers over vice lord
Tom Anderson, corrupt mayor Martin Behrman, and the political machine (known as
"the Ring") that had controlled the city for decades.
Q:
You write, “In nineteenth-century New Orleans, however, respectability was
arguably more difficult to achieve and maintain than in almost any other place
on the continent.” What were some of the main reasons why that was the case?
A:
New Orleans had a reputation as a den of iniquity long before the time I write
about. As a port city--full of transient males who spend months on end at
sea--it was naturally a prime marketplace for prostitution. Also, given the
city’s roots as a Franco-Latin city, it had a somewhat more tolerant attitude
toward sex and vice.
But
things had truly gotten out of hand by the late 1880s; gambling, bawdy
entertainment, and brothels had started to spread from traditional vice
districts into so-called reputable neighborhoods all over town, so local
reformers decided that something had to be done about it.
A
lot of people don’t realize that it was reformers, not venal machine
politicians, who created the Storyville district. Reformers hoped that the
district would lower the profile of vice in the city by concentrating and
isolating it in one out-of-the-way neighborhood.
Q:
Your book is filled with a variety of fascinating characters. How did you
decide which people would play especially large roles in your narrative?
A:
I look for the people who were at the center of the important issues of the day,
but I also need people who were well documented in the historical record.
Since
a lot of the characters I write about were criminals, I often had plenty of
court documents to give me the kind of information I need to write detail-rich
narrative history.
My
main character, for instance—Tom Anderson, the principal vice lord of the city
who was so dominant that he was called “the Mayor of Storyville”—went through
numerous court cases that generated hundreds of pages of testimony.
Q:
What surprised you most in the course of your research?
A:
Some of the beliefs held by the reformers surprised me. One of the leaders of
the anti-Storyville campaign, for instance, was a woman named Jean Gordon.
She
was firmly convinced that she was on the side of virtue, but as with many
self-styled moral champions, her idea of “virtue” was often distorted by class
and racial prejudice.
So
while she did fight for things like female suffrage and child labor regulation,
she also lent her support to the rise of Jim Crow discrimination and the
disenfranchisement of African Americans.
Even
worse, she held some astounding beliefs about eugenics, advocating for the
forced sterilization of children who showed signs of a future in crime,
prostitution, or alcoholism. “[I] took Lucille Decoux to the Women’s Dispensary
July 17 [for an appendectomy],” Jean once wrote in her diary. “This was an excellent opportunity to have
her sterilized…and thus end any feeble-minded progeny coming from Lucille.”
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I’m working on a book about Los Angeles in roughly this same time period. The
book will center on the Hollywood of the silent-film era and weave in a few
other elements. But the idea is still taking shape in my mind, so I’m not sure
yet how it will all come together.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
Well, Empire of Sin is a heavily populated, wide-ranging book, covering
everything from Storyville to the birth of jazz to the growth of the Mafia.
There’s even a serial ax-murderer in the mix, the so-called Axman of New
Orleans, who terrorized the city for about 18 months in 1918-19. I really
worked hard to make this as rich a chronicle of New Orleans as I could.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. For a previous interview with Gary Krist, please click here.
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