2012
DOI: 10.1017/s1537781412000011
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Boodle over the Border: Embezzlement and the Crisis of International Mobility, 1880–1890

Abstract: Roughly 2,000 American fugitives fled to Canada in the 1880s-mostly clerks, cashiers, and bank tellers charged with embezzlement. This article argues that these "boodlers," as they were popularly called, were symptomatic of a late-nineteenth-century crisis of mobility. Embezzlement was a function of new kinds of mobility: migration to cities, the rise of an upwardly mobile middle class, the fungibility of greenbacks, and the growth of international transportation networks. The boodlers were some of the earlies… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…68 The stock market beckoned investors to entrust their money to strangers, while coal-fired rail and steam-powered ships made it easier for those strangers to abscond when investments did not pan out. 69 But Lala's projection of wealth involved refashioning stereotypes of the tropical. In this respect, Lala's performance resembled that of another deracinated shape shifter, William Henry Ellis.…”
Section: Lala's Expert Performance In the United Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…68 The stock market beckoned investors to entrust their money to strangers, while coal-fired rail and steam-powered ships made it easier for those strangers to abscond when investments did not pan out. 69 But Lala's projection of wealth involved refashioning stereotypes of the tropical. In this respect, Lala's performance resembled that of another deracinated shape shifter, William Henry Ellis.…”
Section: Lala's Expert Performance In the United Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%