
25th Street Confidential
25th Street Confidential traces Ogden’s transformation from quiet hamlet to chaotic transcontinental railroad junction as waves of non-Mormon fortune seekers swelled the city’s population. The street’s outsized role in Ogden annals illuminates larger themes in Utah and U.S. history. Most significantly, 25th Street was a crucible of Mormon-Gentile conflict, especially after the non-Mormon Liberal Party deprived its rival, the People’s Party, of long-standing control of Ogden’s municipal government in 1889. In the early twentieth-century the street was targeted in state wide Progressive Era reform efforts, and during Prohibition it would come to epitomize the futility of liquor abatement programmes.
This first full-length treatment of Ogden’s rowdiest road spotlights larger-than-life figures whose careers were entwined with the street: Mayor Harman Ward Peery, who unabashedly filled the city treasury with fees and fines from vicious establishments; Belle London, the most successful madam in Utah history; and Rosetta Ducinnie Davie, the heiress to London’s legacy who became a celebrity on the street, in the courts, and in the press. Material from previously unexploited archives and more than one hundred historic photos enrich this narrative of a turbulent but unforgettable street.
- Undertittel
- Drama, Decadence, and Dissipation Along Ogden’s Rowdiest Road
- Forfatter
- Val Holley
- ISBN
- 9781607812692
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Vekt
- 519 gram
- Utgivelsesdato
- 15.10.2013
- Antall sider
- 240
