1957, Chorus Girls Spend Night in Jail

Chorus Girls in Jail 1957

Chorus Girls in Jail 1957

Six chorus girls thank patrolman Harry Thompson for a night’s lodging. The girls, part of a show troupe taking part in the Williamson County Fair, arrived here to find they had no hotel reservations. The girls were allowed to sleep in the City Jail.

(L-R) Carole Brodine, Chicago; Carol Mattille, Des Moines; Pat Kirk, Chicago; Deanna Hagberg, Chicago; Harry Thompson; Deanna Newman, Chicago; and Carol Frey, Des Moines.

(UPI photo dated 08/08/1957)

August 1923 Lawlessness Appeals on the Square

With Prohibition and bootlegging in full swing, Williamson County was vulnerable to the influence of the Ku Klux Klan who promised to bring an end to rampant gambling, alcohol distribution and prostitution controlled by the Shelton and Birger outlaw gangs, not to mention corrupt officials.

A mass law and order meeting was held on the public square in Marion on August 20, 1923, with more than fifteen hundred voices “raised in protest against vice and corruption in Williamson County.” A rousing cheer went up from the crowd when one speaker, the Reverend P.R. Glotfelty, Methodist minister from Herrin, promised the county would be cleansed of iniquity, even if they had to do it themselves. Glotfelty, was likely a member of the Klan, as were quite a few ministers at this time period.

Glotfelty was adamantly opposed to two things—Catholicism and violation of Prohibition laws—and maintained that intentions of Herrin Catholics to build a new church were evil because most of the members of that parish were “Italian bootleggers”. He vowed publicly that the Catholic Church would never be built. The church was built anyway, of course, and was completed in 1926.

(Photos courtesy of the Williamson County Historical Society)