Crime, Women, and Allan Pinkerton

Penny Richards author photoRelevant History welcomes Penny Richards, published since 1983 with just over forty books to her credit. Mostly contemporary romance, her books have won several industry awards, including a Romantic Times Lifetime Achievement Award, Reader’s Choice award, and a RITA nomination. Several titles have made various bestseller lists. An Untimely Frost, first book of the Lilly Long mystery series for Kensington Publishing, debuted August 2016. Wolf Creek Wife, fifth title in the Wolf Creek series for Harlequin Love Inspired Historicals, is also an August 2016 release. The second Lilly Long mystery, Though This Be Madness, is scheduled for May 2017. To learn more about her and her books, visit her web site, and follow her on Facebook and Twitter.

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My new Lilly Long historical mystery series is about a headstrong, untraditional Shakespearean actress who becomes a Pinkerton operative. Since I’m an old(er) traditional, conventional woman, you can imagine my surprise when, during the course of my research, I found myself on a site about “women’s issues.” Until that moment, I hadn’t thought of Lilly’s driving ambition to help women who’d been victimized by unscrupulous men in those terms. To me, she was just a woman who’d been wronged by a slick, conniving man when her new husband stole her savings and left her high and dry, a woman who, at the age of eleven was hiding nearby when she heard her mother being killed by one of her many lovers.

After thinking on it a while, I realized that’s exactly what I was writing about, intentionally or not. I don’t consider myself a feminist, but I am all about balance and fairness, and anyone with at least a modicum of knowledge about the customs of the past knows that without the fearless females who led the way for a more open-minded treatment, we would not be where we are today.

Lilly is a woman who flaunts convention by seeking out a man’s job during a time when women were denied a voice in much of anything or “protected” by their husbands, (often chosen for them) who often considered them nothing more than second-class citizens or a means to get children.

Allan PinkertonAllan Pinkerton, the man who gives her a chance to make a difference, is the son of Isabella and William Pinkerton. Allan was born in a poor section of Glasgow, Scotland, called the Gorbels, an area known for its high crime and social injustices, so his decision to start his own detective agency makes a lot of sense.

Allan and his women
While researching the first book, I learned some interesting things about Allan’s attitude toward women, their capabilities, and his belief they possessed the intelligence and skill to be useful in his business, something he proved when he hired the first female detective, a young widow named Kate Warne. Kate pled her case by telling him she could “worm out” information in places his male detectives couldn’t. To Allan, whose motto was “the ends justify the means,” the idea was intriguing. He hired her the following day, and in the many years she worked for him, she never disappointed him.

There were others through the years that Allan used in exactly the way Kate had suggested, posing as wives to get close to another woman, infiltrating Baltimore society in hopes of gaining information, acting as spies during the war or just friends who aided and secured care for them.

Then, in late 1876, a somewhat funny debacle occurred within the agency. Allan’s son Robert, George Bangs, and Benjamin Franklin, once the police chief of Philadelphia, decided to band together and refuse to hire any more women, something Allan had ordered after Kate’s death. His reaction to their mutiny was to transfer Mrs. Angela Austin, a pretty actress who worked out of the Chicago office, to Philadelphia to prove that he was still in control and would be until his death. That ended that argument.

I’ve wondered if Allan’s willingness to work with women and to draw on the skills of various actresses was based, at least in part, because of his devotion to his hard-working mother, who, along with eight-year-old Allan, were the sole support of the family when his father died. Or perhaps it had something to do with how he met his entertainer wife, pretty Joan Carfrae, the soprano for the Unitarian Church choir whom he was immediately smitten with when he first saw her.

The Pinkerton code of ethics
Rates varied from $3.00 to $10.00 per day, and at the beginning of each assignment, the agent was given a small journal outlining the client’s problems and ideas about how to go about solving them. No client ever met the detective working his case, and undercover “stings” were often used, which is one of the times women operatives became invaluable. Allan’s feelings about women were further laid out in the agency rules he drafted, called General Principles. These unchanged, guiding principles are still the underpinnings of the agency today, though there have been some additions. Among the early regulations, which included things like not accepting rewards, gifts, investigating union meetings, or working for political parties was the promise to “…never investigate the morals of a woman unless in connection with another crime, nor…handle cases of divorce or of a scandalous nature.” These rules are still in place.

This standard, along with Pinkerton’s belief in a woman’s competence and usefulness, combined with Lilly’s personal experiences, are what motivated her and a other intrepid females to fight against the injustices, and limitations of the time and help them gain a more equitable position and louder voice in 1900’s society. It is this same sort of bold woman who is forging new paths for women today.

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An Untimely Frost book coverA big thanks to Penny Richards. She’ll give away a trade paperback copy of An Untimely Frost to someone who contributes a comment on my blog this week. I’ll choose the winner from among those who comment by Friday at 6 p.m. ET. Delivery is available in the U.S. only.

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Comments

Crime, Women, and Allan Pinkerton — 29 Comments

  1. Fascinating. In my research into the lives of women of the nineteenth-century American West I often read about Pinkerton women, but I never knew of Pinkerton’s rules and regulations nor his staunch backing of women.

    • Hi Judy, I’m sorry not to have responded before now, but as so often happens, “life” changed my plans.

      I was surprised to learn of his attitude toward women, but as I researched I quickly learned that he was opinionated and very stubborn, so it wasn’t a surprise that he stood by them the way he did once he made the decision to use them in the agency.

      Thanks so much for stopping by and commenting.

  2. Amazing research, Penny! I’ve always had an interest in all things Pinkerton. This post about Allan Pinkerton, why he hired intelligent women and his code of ethics reinforces why I am attracted to the subject. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us!

    • They’ve always fascinated me as well, Alice. I was really surprised by his code of ethics. I’d like to have met him, though he sounds a bit intimidating!

    • Wow, Linda! I never thought about women Pinkertons in that time frame, though it makes sense. I have an idea for a WWII book, and dozens of research books. All I need is the time to write it.

      Happy writing!

  3. How wonderful to see the great Kate Warne mentioned, if only in the shadow of Pinkerton. She was invaluable to him, and with him her entire life. Those who would like to read more about her can see an entry on the Library of Congress website.
    http://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2015/03/celebrating-womens-history-americas-first-female-p-I/

    I do think Pinkerton should be celebrated as something of a feminist, though. To me, that designation has always been more about what you do than the labels you attach to yourself.

    Intrepid women worked in various fields of law enforcement long before most people recognize. Thanks for the post.

      • Yes, Judy, I agree. While many of the women who followed their men into an untamed world went because they more or less had to, I do believe that some went out of a feeling of adventure and the hope for something better. Unfortunately, not all the stories had happy endings.

    • You know, Ruth, I hadn’t thought of feminism in that way, but I agree. Allan certainly helped their quest to become more than society would like them to be. I was really appalled by the fact that some men thought they didn’t have the capabilities to do a man’s job, like Robert and Ben Franklin. The truth apparently was that Franklin’s wife was jealous. Interesting, right?

    • Ruth, as usual, this tech challenged person somehow got the reply to your post in the wrong spot. It’s below. So sorry. I’m really not very good with all the new-fangled promotional things, but I’m learning.

  4. What an interesting guest blogger – and an interesting subject! I can’t wait to read more. I’m a new fan of the Lilly Long mysteries!

    • Thanks, Tanya, the more I delve into the way women were perceived and treated, the more I realize what an important role those who came before played in where we are today. P.S. I’m not a feminist in any way, but I’m not stupid, either!

    • I’m so glad I piques your interest, Christina! I had a great time with Lilly, and started and worked on it during an 8 year long break from writing. I’d been writing contemporary romance, so to get the hang of two new genres was quite a learning curve. I still fight to keep out the “romancey” tone. And yes, it was a diverse time. America was growing and changing in so many ways. Thanks for stopping by.

  5. I really want to thank everyone for stopping by, and leaving a comment about Lilly and the Pinkertons. If you choose to give the book a try, I hope Lilly and I don’t disappoint! The second book, THOUGH THIS BE MADNESS takes place in New Orleans and has a pub date of May 2017. I’m waiting for approval of book three, which is set in Ft. Worth’s Hell’s Half Acre. Happy reading and writing, y’all.

  6. Very interesting post! I really enjoy reading and learning about late 19th century culture and ideas. I watch a TV series called Murdoch Mysteries and I love it because it is set in late 19th and early 20th century Toronto, Canada. The female actors on the show are very progressive; one being a mortician and considered a doctor. I think there is an episode where the Pinkerton Agency is highlighted, but I can’t remember if it involved any female undercovers. It is a cute show and an entertaining way to learn about history.
    Thanks for this interesting post, Penny!

    • Eve, there’s a show called THE PINKERTONS, too, but there were things that didn’t ring true to what I’d read about the way they did business. There’s also a great show set in Australia (I think) MISS FISCHER’S MYSTERIES (or something like that) set in 1928 or so that I really enjoy. Phryne Fischer is certainly a woman out of step of her time.

  7. Very interesting post. I think I read where since the Pinkerton Agency was so effective, the start of the Secret Service for the President adopted some of their policies.
    Your book solunds really good.

  8. You do find more intrepid women in the frontier part of our history. I suspect it was as much about need as it was about a lack of socially-enforced restrictions. Sounds like a fun read.

  9. Always fascinating reading about women in the past and their sometimes unique way of doing jobs that men could not. Very intersting.

    • I hope everyone likes Lilly. I tried really hard to make her more than just another “spunky” heroine by giving her some real-life issues to deal with. I’ll be sure to look up the book you mentioned. Thanks.