Clara at the Door with a Revolver

The Scandalous Black Suspect, the Exemplary White Son, and the Murder That Shocked Toronto

By Carolyn Whitzman
Categories: Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies, History, Canadian History, Regional & Cultural Studies, Black Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Paperback : 9780774890618, 336 pages, February 2023
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774890625, 336 pages, February 2023
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774890632, 336 pages, February 2023

Table of contents

Cast of Characters

Overture: Cakewalk

Act 1: The Parkdale Mystery

1 The Murderee

2 There’s a Girl in It

3 Amateur Detectives

4 The Bad Hat

Act 2: Clara’s Turn

5 From Whence She Came

6 Go West, Young Man

7 Bad Fences

8 Eight Hours

9 Monster

Act 3: A Great Trial – and Its Aftermath

10 The Forces of the Law

11 Witness for the Prosecution

12 The Performance of Her Life

13 Twelve Hungry Men

14 What Clara Did Next

Finale: Clara, Armed

Notes and Further Reading; Index

Description

On the night of October 6, 1894, Frank Westwood was shot to death by an unknown assailant as he stood in the doorway of his home. Six weeks later, Clara Ford – a Black tailor and single mother known for wearing men’s attire – was arrested and confessed to the murder. But as the details of her arrest and her history with Westwood emerged, Clara recanted, testifying that she was coerced by police into a false confession. Carolyn Whitzman tells the story of a courageous Black woman in nineteenth-century Toronto and paints a portrait of a city and a society that have not changed enough in 125 years.

Reviews

Whitzman’s book...brings to light a unique case in the annals of Canadian criminal history involving one Clara Ford.

- Emily Donaldson

A fascinating exploration of a part of Toronto’s history that deserves a new telling.

- Deborah Dundas

The city’s seven newspapers in the 1890s were in competition for readership and often exaggerated or even fabricated facts to sell papers – but Whitzman tells the story in shades of grey.

- Cassandra Drudi

Whitzman does a deep dive to put this three-act tragedy in historical context…the story has been told many times, but not in quite the same way.

- Pat St. Germain

Whitzman … brings to life a spectacular 1894 Toronto true crime case.

- Nathalie Atkinson