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Description
In 1947, James Hickman shot and killed the landlord he believed was responsible for a tragic fire that took the lives of four of his children on Chicago’s West Side. But a vibrant defense campaign, exposing the working poverty and racism that led to his crime, helped win Hickman’s freedom.

With a true-crime writer’s eye for suspense and a historian’s depth of knowledge, Joe Allen unearths the
compelling story of a campaign that stood up to Jim Crow well before the modern civil rights movement had even begun.

As deteriorating housing conditions and an accelerating foreclosure crisis combine to form a hauntingly similar set of circumstances to those that led to the Hickman case, Allen’s book restores to prominence a previously unknown story with profound relevance today.
Author Bios

Joe Allen is the author of The Package King: A Rank and File History of UPS.  He worked for nearly a decade at UPS between its Watertown, Massachusetts and Chicago, Illinois Jefferson Street hubs. Starting out as a part-time loader he worked his way through a series of part-time sorting and driving jobs until his final year at UPS where he was a package car driver.

Joe is a member of the Tempest collective and writes regularly for their website on the Teamsters and UPS. He has been writing a weekly update the UPS-Teamsters negotiations for Counterpunch

More Info

Publication date: December 8, 2020

Table of Contents
Introduction

1.)The Fire
2.)The Writer and the Sharecropper
3.)The Revolutionary
4.)“This can happen to you.”
5.)The Lawyer
6.)“God is my secret judge”
7.)“Free James Hickman”
8.)Holocaust on Ohio Street
9.)“This man has paid enough”
10.)“A chain of personal memories”

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