I Am a Fugitive from a Georgia Chain Gang! is the amazing true story of one man's search for meaning, fall from grace, and eventual victory over injustice. In 1921, Robert E. Burns was a shell-shocked and penniless veteran who found himself at the mercy of Georgia's barbaric penal system when he fell in with a gang of petty thieves. Sentenced to six to ten years' hard labor for his part in a robbery that netted less than $6.00, Burns was shackled to a county chain gang. After four months of backbreaking work, he made a daring escape, dodging shotgun blasts, racing through swamps, and eluding bloodhounds on his way north. For seven years Burns lived as a free man. He married and became a prosperous Chicago businessman and publisher. When he fell in love with another woman, however, his jealous wife turned him in to the police, who arrested him as a fugitive from justice. Although he was promised lenient treatment and a quick pardon, he was back on a chain gang within a month. Undaunted, Burns did the impossible and escaped a second time, this time to New Jersey. He was still a hunted man living in hiding when this book was first published in 1932. The book and its movie version, nominated for a Best Picture Oscar in 1933, shocked the world by exposing Georgia's brutal treatment of prisoners. I Am a Fugitive from a Georgia Chain Gang! is a daring and heartbreaking book, an odyssey of misfortune, love, betrayal, adventure, and, above all, the unshakable courage and inner strength of the fugitive himself.
... Loretta Young (Ruth), Gordon Westcott (Roger), Robert Barrat (Max), Berton Churchill (M. Winston), Grant Mitchell (George Gibson), Charley Grapewin (Pa Dennis), Robert McWade (Dr. Briggs), G. Pat Collins (Leader of Agitators), ...
This book tells the harrowing, inspirational story of Robert E. Burns' imprisonment on a chain gang in the 1920s, his daring escape (twice, no less!), and the public furor that developed.
Georgia Scenes, Characters, Incidents, &c., in the First Half Century of the Republic
Staring unflinchingly into the abyss of slavery, this spellbinding novel transforms history into a story as powerful as Exodus and as intimate as a lullaby.
A thinly fictionalized condemnation of Georgia's penal system that unveiled the harsh working conditions and brutal treatment suffered by African Americans in the state's convict camps.
Few predicted its passing from the American penal landscape. Davis expertly argues how social movements transformed these social, political and cultural institutions, and made such practices untenable. In Are Prisons Obsolete?
just not cut out for the life you folks live,” Phillips wrote to his lawyer shortly before he escaped. “I tried it. It didn't work. Oh well.”64 He also said, reflecting on his reasons for fleeing, that, because he believed he was going ...
This book includes the complete screenplay.
When the Daughters of the American Revolution barred Anderson, because she was black, from singing in their auditorium, NAACP activists played a critical role in finding an alternative place and were particularly attuned to the ...
Collected over ten years, presents interviews with the last remaining World War I veterans, aged 101 to 113, to paint a picture of a time and a generation that, despite memorials and history lessons, is quickly fading away.