Murder Capital of the World: Difference between revisions

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* {{Leighton-1937}}
* {{Leighton-1937}}
* "[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884206,00.html Steel: Boom in Birmingham]" (November 25, 1940) ''TIME'' magazine
* "[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884206,00.html Steel: Boom in Birmingham]" (November 25, 1940) ''TIME'' magazine
* Beiman, Irving (1947) "Birmingham: Steel Giant with a Glass Jaw" in Robert S. Allen, ed. ''Our Fair City''. New York, New York: Vanguard Press, pp. 99-122
* {{Beiman-1947}}
* {{McWhorter-2001}}
* {{McWhorter-2001}}
* {{Bass-2001}}
* {{Bass-2001}}


[[Category:Birmingham nicknames|Murder Capital of the World]]
[[Category:Birmingham nicknames|Murder Capital of the World]]

Revision as of 23:14, 13 December 2010

Murder Capital of the World is an appellation which has been sometimes used to describe Birmingham.

The phrase is often used in conjunction with the nickname "Bad Birmingham", which prevailed in the late 1800s as the booming workshop city earned a reputation for lawlessness and violence. Historian S. Jonathan Bass dates the "murder capital" description to the press of that era.

The city's 148 homicides in 1931 were referenced in Irving Beiman's article "[[Birmingham: Steel Giant With a Glass Jaw".

Diane McWhorter cites an article in the December 20, 1934 edition of the Birmingham Post for the phrase.

George Leighton, in his 1937 article for Harpers Magazine places the time of that phrase as "not long ago".

Since 1995 an annual report entitled America's Safest and Most Dangerous Cities (first published by the Morgan Quitno Press of Lawrence, Kansas, but since acquired by CQ Press of Washington, D.C.) has ranked American cities based on crime rates, as reported to the Federal Bureau of Investigation by local police departments. Though the FBI cautions against using its uniform crime reports to rank or compare cities, the release of each year's report is avidly followed in the mass media. Birmingham has routinely appeared high up on the "Most Dangerous" list (6th in 2007, 7th in 2009, 10th in 2010).

See also

References