A Peculiar Tribe of People Murder and Madness in the Heart of Georgia

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A Peculiar Tribe of People Murder and Madness in the Heart of Georgia by Hutto, Richard Jay, 9781599219974
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  • ISBN: 9781599219974 | 1599219972
  • Cover: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 10/19/2010

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Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil for a new generation In early 1960, as John F. Kennedy campaigned for the presidency, as Elvis returned from his stint in the army, Chester Burge--slumlord, liquor runner, and the black sheep of the proud (and wealthy) Dunlap family of Macon, Georgia--lay in a hospital bed, recovering from surgery. He listened to the radio as the news reported that his wife had just been murdered. Chester was eventually charged, and when the trial finally began, the sweet Southern town of Macon witnessed a story of epic proportions; a tale of white-columned mansions, an insane asylum, real people as "Southern grotesque" as the characters of Flannery O'Connor, and a volatile mix of taboo interracial relationships and homosexuality. This was a story as fantastical as a Greek tragedy, complete with a stunning conclusion. It is told in riveting detail in Richard Jay Hutto'sA Peculiar Tribe of People. Chester Burge was a walking streak of deception and sex. After weaseling his way to be the caretaker of the last Dunlap sister, and forcing his way into her will, Burge and his wife inherited a fortune as well as one of the family mansions. Then came his numerous affairs with other men--including his chauffeur--and, either single-handedly or with help from a lover, the murder of his wife. The trial would spawn the first testimony in Georgia history of a black man disclosing that he had been a white man's sexual partner. Burge would be acquitted of murder, but convicted of sodomy. And this Southern grotesque tale doesn't end there. . . . Written in exacting detail with first-hand accounts,and populated by a cast of colorful characters, this masterfully rendered book takes us from the Civil War to the Civil Rights era. It is both a sweeping history of one genteel family and a powerful, redolent tale of the American South. FROM THE PROLOGUE On the morning of May 12, 1960, the Burge family maid discovered the body of Mary Burge, dead in her large, canopied bed, carpet fragments lodged under her fingernails from her desperate attempt to claw her way to escape from the murderer. The family physician, Dr. William R. Birdsong, was called immediately, followed soon thereafter by the Bibb County coroner. The medical examiner received a call just before the sheriff, who placed a call to the Burges' only child. Evidently no one thought to call the dead woman's husband. Chester Burge lay alone at the local hospital recovering from hernia surgery, without receiving any word from the authorities, and when the newly widowed patient heard on the radio the news of his wife's murder, he shouted from his bed. He did not arrive at the crime scene (his wife's bedroom) until early afternoon, when he exited a police car still clad in light green pajamas and maroon bathrobe. Chester was carried on a stretcher led by Detective Frank Lanneau through his darkened home, a police photographer close behind, his flash popping brightly. The
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