Offering Fine Print Reproductions of Authentic Maps and Prints

Map of Chicago's Gangland by Frederic M Thrasher, 1927 - Fine Print Reproduction

1927 Chicago's Gangland

The Vintage Map Shop, Inc.

Regular price $50.00

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By: Frederic M. Thrasher

Date of Original: 1927 (published) Chicago

Original Size: 27 x 18.5 inches (68.5 x 45.75 cm)

This is a fine print reproduction of an iconic thematic map of Chicago, of which its subject matter, gang activity, is synonymous with its century-old reputation as a city of organized crime. Thrasher's original map was published within his book The Gang: A Study of 1,313 Gangs in Chicago in which Thrasher takes a deep dive into not only the prolific mobs of Al "Scarface" Capone, George "Bugs" Moran, and Dean O'Banion, but the younger, second-generation immigrant gangs that were coming into their own in the age of prohibition and bootlegging.

The base layer of the map is similar to many other maps of Chicago with regards to the area shown and the depiction of streets and boulevards. It spans from 95th street to Bryn Mawr Avenue and the lakefront to Austin Avenue. A legend distinguishes between railroad property, industrial property, parks, boulevards, and cemeteries in different shades / patterns of grey. Gangs with clubrooms vs. gangs without clubrooms are identified by red circles or triangles, an important distinction during the Era of Prohibition.

Nicknames of various neighborhoods and points of the city that are both widely recognized as well as made up by Thrasher are given in red. Such areas include the Gold Coast, Hotel Coast, Back-of-the-Yards, China Town (old and new), Goose Island, and the Polish-Jewish Frontier to name a few. High concentrations of Chicago's wide array of ethnic groups are also noted in grey with the approximate boundaries of their territories encircled. Some of these ethnic groups include Jewish, Black, Italian, Dutch, Polish, German, Hungarian, and Ukrainian.

In this map, Thrasher presents the theory that gangs develop and thrive in the “interstices” between ethnic, racial, and religious communities and industrial and residential zones. His layers of data between gang locations and their activity over the map of Chicago gives geographic credence to his theory.

Inventory #12620

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