Suggested reading from Chicago Review Press
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California's Border War on Dust Bowl Refugees
By Bill Lascher
HISTORY
304 Pages, 6 x 9
Formats: Cloth, PDF, EPUB
Cloth, $27.99 (CA $37.99) (US $27.99)
ISBN 9781641606042
Rights: WOR
Chicago Review Press (Aug 2022)
eBook Editions Available
Will it work on my eReader?Overview
In February 1936, Los Angeles police officers drove hundreds of miles to California’s state borders with one mission: turn back anyone deemed too poor to enter.
Myths of the Golden State’s abundance enticed thousands of Americans uprooted by the Depression, but those who created those myths saw only invading criminal “hordes” that they believed just one man could stop: James “Two-Gun” Davis, Los Angeles's authoritarian police chief.
The Golden Fortress tells the story of Davis’s audacious deployment of hand-picked armed police slamming California’s door on America’s Dust Bowl refugees and Depression-displaced migrants. It depicts the sometimes deadly consequences of law enforcement politicized and weaponized against the poor, even in remote places like Modoc County, where a sheriff’s opposition to the blockade inflamed an already smoldering feud between an itinerant newsman and a publisher obsessed with her California heritage.
Davis, blessed by his city’s ruling business class and fueled by his own wild claims of communist conspiracies undermining America, deployed his “Foreign Legion” to California’s state lines, threatening democracy even as the nation's cities and rural communities juggled the burdens of economic recovery, migrant aid, and public safety.
The Golden Fortress underscores the decades-long fight over who can access the American Dream.
Reviews
“A lively narrative that touches on issues that are relevant to today’s politics: the militarization of borders, freedom of movement, and the politics of fear. A great read.” —Kathryn S. Olmsted, author of Right Out of California: The 1930s and the Big Business Roots of Modern ConservatismAuthor Biography
Bill Lascher is the author of Eve of a Hundred Midnights, a 2017 Oregon Book Awards finalist. Lascher wrote the American History Tellers podcast’s Great Depression series. His journalism appears in outlets like Atlas Obscura, Fortune, the Guardian, the Portland Monthly, and Boom: A Journal of California. He previously edited the Ventura County Reporter and was a staff writer at the Pacific Coast Business Times. A graduate of the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies, Lascher has a history degree from Oberlin and a master’s degree in specialized journalism from the University of Southern California Annenberg School of Journalism and Communication.