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.1, 13, 9, 12.62.Jack Kelly, Mad Dog ( New York: Atheneum, 1992), pp.147, 242.63.James Carlos Blake, Handsome Harry ( New York: William Morrow, 2004).Also see Stephen King’s poignant short story, “The Death of Jack Hamilton,” The New Yorker, September 24, 2001, p.76.Kurt Vonnegut invoked Dillinger on the very first page of his novel Jailbird ( New York: Dial Press, 1979): “Crown Point is notorious for a jailbreak there by the bank robber John Dillinger, during the depths of the Great Depression.Dillinger was the Robin Hood of my early youth.He is buried near my parents—and near my sister Alice, who admired him even more than I did—in Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis.Dillinger was summarily executed by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.He was shot down in a public place, although he was not trying to escape or resist arrest.So there is nothing recent in my lack of respect for the F.B.I.”64.There are several biographies of Hoover; see Richard Gid Powers, Secrecy and Power, The Life of J.Edgar Hoover ( New York: Free Press, 1986); Kenneth Ackerman, Young J.Edgar: Hoover, the Red Scare, and the Assault on Civil Liberties ( New York: Da Capo Press, 2007); Curt Gentry, J Edgar Hoover, the Man and the Secrets ( New York: Norton, 2001).Kelly, Mad Dog, p.267.The powerful image of the outlaw on the open road, of course, is why Dillinger was so often compared to Jesse James.But see T.J.Stiles’s excellent biography, Jesse James: Last Rebel of the Civil War (New York: Vintage, 2003), for a much different take on the Missouri bandit.65.John Patterson, “On Film: The Bust Boom,” The Guardian, September 26, 2008, online edition.This page intentionally left blankIndexAbraham, F.Murray, 174Bluffton, Ohio (1933), 31–32Adams, Nick, 249n29Indianapolis, Indiana (1933), 32, 35, 52,Allen County Jail (Lima, Ohio), 36, 41–42,211n14213n38Greencastle, Indiana (1933), 43–44,American Legion, 43, 45, 211–12n21192– 93American road trip cultural theme, 61,Racine, Wisconsin (1933), 49 –50,106, 170215–16n57American Surety Company, 35East Chicago, Indiana (1934), 56 –58, 64,anticrime legislation, 120 –22, 233–34n568 – 69Audette, Blackie, 174Sioux Falls, South Dakota (1934),Aunt, Josephine, 12685– 86, 225n4autopsy (of Dillinger), 148, 153–54,Mason City, Iowa (1934), 86 – 87158 –59, 173, 246n1.See also body Fostoria, Ohio (1934), 123, 131, 192,234n11, 237n29Bailey, Harvey, 25South Bend, Indiana (1934), 137–38,Baker, Lewis, 71, 79214n45ballads, 175–76banks.See economybank robberiesBarce, J.Edward, 78 –79Indiana bank robberies, 1920s andBarker, Doc, 1211930s, 33Barker, “Ma,” 25, 194motivations for, 129Barker Family, 25, 121robberies spuriously attributed toBarrow, Buck, 26Dillinger, 44, 131Barrow, Clyde, 26, 28, 186.See alsorobbery insurance fraud rumors, 45Bonnie and ClydeSee also crimesbaseball, 10 –11, 16 –18, 36, 136, 238n41bank robberies (by Dillinger)Baum, Carter, 110 –11, 134, 157Dillinger robberies (summer of 1933),Beatty, Warren, 18628 –29Belton, John, 62Daleville, Indiana (1933), 29 –30, 31, 38Bentz, Eddie, 25Montpelier, Indiana (1933), 31, 35Berg, Harry, 137, 138, 239n46256 | IndexBeveridge, Albert J., 150Catfish, Ollie and Maggie, 112Beverly, William, 196Caylor, Tanya Isch, 252–53n52Billy the Kid, 117, 175Cejnar, John, 97, 102, 148, 207n24,Biograph Theater
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