Sex, Liquor, and Lawlessness in Early Roanoke - Paperback
by Phillip Andrew Gibbs (Author)
Discover the rambunctious early history of Roanoke, a Wild West town in Virginia's Blue Ridge.
During the 1880s, the new city of Roanoke attracted a large and diverse workforce and a multitude of merchants and investors. But like the Western cow towns and mining camps of the same period, the city also attracted sex workers, professional gamblers, charlatans, and common thieves. By the early 1900s, Roanoke had become well known for its brothels, saloons, gambling halls, and rampant lawlessness.
Despite a campaign to clean up the city, Roanoke was unable to shake its unsavory image. This was particularly true after Virginia went dry in 1916. With easy access to the moonshine whiskey that had long been produced in the surrounding mountains, bootleg kingpins boldly transported illegal liquor into the city and used violence to protect their operations.
Author Phillip Andrew Gibbs explores Roanoke's early criminal underworld and how civic leaders and law enforcement struggled to free the city from its wild, wicked, and unrepentant reputation.
Author Biography
Phillip Andrew Gibbs is Professor Emeritus of History at Middle Georgia State University. Although a native of Franklin County, Virginia, he has lived and taught in Georgia since 1987. An avid tennis player, cyclist, and traveler, he is also a professional musician, performing throughout the southeastern United States with the Georgia Chryslers, a rock, pop, and R&B band. He makes his home in the small town of Perry, Georgia.