"Rich Georgian Strangely Shot"

Eugene Grace, "Daisy of the Leopard Spots" and the Great Atlanta Shooting of 1912

Tom Hughes author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:McFarland & Co Inc

Published:5th Nov '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

"Rich Georgian Strangely Shot" cover

In March 1912, Gene Grace, a young Atlanta businessman, was found shot in the locked bedroom of his fashionable home "between the Peachtrees." Daisy Grace, his flashily dressed Yankee wife from Philadelphia, was soon arrested on a charge of assault with intent to murder. Gene Grace was left paralyzed but, more importantly, he was powerless legally. Under Georgia law, he could not testify against his wife. Prosecutors were forced to rely instead upon the circumstantial evidence of an alleged "diabolical plot." The Atlanta newspapers--led by the Georgian, under the very new control of Mr. Hearst, that giant of "yellow journalism"--covered the case relentlessly. Papers across the country followed the drama for months, which concluded with a five-day trial held in the searing heat of a Georgia summer. This is the never-before-told story of the tragic romance between "the Adonis of a country town" and the woman known to all as "Daisy of the Leopard Spots."

“In this study, Hughes, a member of the Georgia Radio Hall of Fame, examines the local and national newspapers’ sensationalistic coverage of the case and the trial, and explains the mystery of what actually happened between Eugene and Daisy”—Reference & Research Book News; “a century-old scandal about an Atlanta woman’s alleged shooting of her husband that became the dominant headline for weeks in al three Atlanta newspapers of the day”—AccessAtlanta.com.

ISBN: 9780786470785

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 10mm

Weight: 277g

204 pages