Edward Sullivan’s, Rattling the Cup on Chicago Crime originally published in 1929, will be the first source analyzed and evaluated. Through Sullivan's aggression as a reporter in Chicago’s Herald Examiner, the extensive research and notes further solidify the credibility in this book and the many others Sullivan has published over the topics of organized crime, prohibition, and Chicago crime. Quinsidentaly, Sullivan's location and date of where and when the book was publicized plays a crucial role in the validity of this source. The first-hand experience and personal encounters with the topics described allow for a much more accurate account of Chicago's organized crime as compared to a historian in a different setting. Although this insight is strong in the source, …show more content…
This source is valuable as it list the events of organized crime and what happened, but why these events happened and the aspirations of the events.This is valuable for it does not simply list the events of organized crime and what happened, but why it happened and the aspirations of the