Thirty Years a Detective

Allan PINKERTON

Item#: 110029 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Thirty Years a Detective
Thirty Years a Detective

FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, OF PINKERTON’S THIRTY YEARS A DETECTIVE, INSCRIBED IN A SECRETARIAL HAND ON BEHALF ON THE AUTHOR

PINKERTON, Allan. Thirty Years a Detective: A Thorough and Comprehensive Expose of Criminal Practices of All Grades and Classes. New York: G.W. Carleton, 1884. Thick octavo, original gilt- and black-stamped pictorial russet cloth. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box.

First edition, with 24 full-page wood-engravings of crimes in progress, inscribed in a secretarial hand on Pinkerton's behalf (and dated in pencil by an unknown hand in the year of publication): “To Geo. D. Burgess Esq with Compliments of The Author."

"In 1850 Pinkerton was attached to Chicago's newly organized police force as its first and at that time only detective. The same year, in response to suggestions from several railroad presidents following a series of robberies, he established, in partnership with E.G. Rucker, a lawyer, a private detective agency, one of the first of its kind in the country… The solution of several sensational Adams Express robberies gave the agency a national reputation and brought it much Eastern business in the years before the Civil War" (DAB). The Pinkerton logo (the All-Seeing Eye) inspired the phrase "Private Eye." This work, based on Pinkerton's own experience, is intended to educate citizens on the modus operandi of common criminals, from pickpockets and shoplifters to forgers and blackmailers. Thirty Years a Detective appeared in 1884 from a number of presses in different cities (no priority established). The recipient, George D. Burgess, appears to have been a state Republican Party official from Ohio.

Only mild toning to interior, text block and inner hinges expertly reinforced, a bit of wear, soiling, and creasing to original cloth. A very good inscribed copy.

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