Escaped Felon Caught Here

May 14, 1947
Los Angeles

Last Sunday, William Harold Evans was one of three San Quentin prisoners who walked away from a Modoc County road crew. FBI agents found him just two hours after his arrival in Los Angeles, at the home of Miss Alexie Goldworthy, 185 W. 39th Street. The convict, a self-styled osteopath serving time for forgery, had been corresponding with the lady from his prison cell.

Published by

Kim Cooper

Kim Cooper is the creator of 1947project, the crime-a-day time travel blog that spawned Esotouric’s popular crime bus tours, including The Real Black Dahlia. She is the author of The Kept Girl, the acclaimed historical mystery starring the young Raymond Chandler and the real-life Philip Marlowe, and of The Raymond Chandler Map of Los Angeles. With husband Richard Schave, Kim curates the Salons and forensic science seminars of LAVA- The Los Angeles Visionaries Association. When the third generation Angeleno isn’t combing old newspapers for forgotten scandals, she is a passionate advocate for historic preservation of signage, vernacular architecture and writer’s homes. Kim was for many years the editrix of Scram, a journal of unpopular culture. Her books include Fall in Love For Life, Bubblegum Music is the Naked Truth, Lost in the Grooves and an oral history of Neutral Milk Hotel.

4 thoughts on “Escaped Felon Caught Here”

  1. Sorry, but I was slightly off in my crime statistics:

    Ethnic breakdown of 119 homicides in the city of L.A. in 1947
    whites = 53 (44.5%)
    blacks = 52 (43.6%)
    Latinos = 13(10.9%)
    Asians = 1 (0.8%)

    If anyone is interested I have posted my elaborate crime stats on my website:

    https://www.lmharnisch.com

  2. I appreciate the enormity of your project and frankly, even though I was aware of the numbers I was stunned. The fact that less than 8% of the population suffered nearly half the murders (53 out of 119) is all the more appalling because the local papers ignored it. One reason I posed the question now is that you have more than six months to go. 🙂

    For those interested, the Los Angeles Sentinel is available on microfilm at the downtown branch of the Los Angeles Public Library.

    In the meantime, you might consider the May 27, 1947, Board of Education election, especially the candidacy of Dr. H. Claude Hudson (a dentist with offices at 4266 S. Central and a home at 224 E. Jefferson). The son of slaves, Hudson was arrested in 1925 for wading into the ocean in an attempt to desegregate Manhattan Beach, graduated from Howard University and was the first black to receive a law degree from Loyola.

    He was, of course, roundly attacked in the daily press for his subversive leanings (including many stories by “The Watchman” in The Times) and was defeated in the 1947 election. He died in 1989 at the age of 102.

    Keep up the good work (and it is work, I know).

    https://www.lmharnisch.com

  3. You’re not wrong, Larry, but you could just as well ask where the black people are today. Are their experiences being reported in any meaningful way by the daily (or weekly) citywide papers?

    With this project, we’re attempting to replicate (in microcosm) the experience of daily newspaper readers in 1947. We choose a story each day that, ideally:

    1) evokes the time, and is of the time
    2) puts a pin into the lost “memory map” of a neighborhood, again marking the spot where something happened that had people talking

    We would love someday to delve into the archives of smaller community papers and find stories from under-reported neighborhoods and demographics, but we don’t have the resources right now.

    Thanks for those interesting statistics. It was a dangerous city for black people. Still is.

  4. Where are the black people?

    I realize your project is devoted to savoring the “found objects” of history, so I went down to the city archives at Piper Tech and pulled the LAPD annual report for 1947.

    Here’s a few numbers:

    Whites killed in the city of Los Angeles in 1947–50
    Blacks killed in the city of Los Angeles in 1947–53
    (Bonus factoid, out of a city population of 1.9 million, blacks constituted 150,000, up from 67,000 in 1940).

    I don’t think their absence in your project is intentional but the result of your source material, the daily newspapers, specifically the Los Angeles Times (disclosure: I work there) which virtually ignored the black community. On the rare occasions when the papers actually wrote about blacks, they were always referred to as “John Jones, Negro.”

    As I’m sure you know, Los Angeles was a segregated city at the time, with restrictive deed covenants and a segregated Police Department.

    I applaud your enthusiasm–this has probably turned out to be far more work than you ever imagined. But while L.A. was segregated at the time, its history shouldn’t be.

    https://www.lmharnisch.com

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