The devil in the white city is based about the Chicago’s 1893 World’s Fair also known as The Worlds Columbian Exposition. In the book, the author Erik Larson talks about both Daniel Burnham and the infamous killer H.H Holmes. Daniel Burnham is the architect who would build the designs of the World’s Fair in 1893. H.H Holmes is the serial killer who would use the fair as his way to find his victims and kill them in a three story building that he had built with an elevator known as the house of horrors.
The main purpose of the author is to explain and to talk about both Burnham and Holmes. Erik Larson also gives us more information about both characters. Also Larson gives us great details about each the characters. His purpose to me also is
…show more content…
Daniel Burnham had a great career. During trying to build the world’s fair, he went through tough times to try to make it happen. With all the things going on at Chicago during that era, especially the death of his partner John Root, who was also helping him construct the World’s Fair in Chicago. Also with the deaths of the construction workers who worked the World’s Fair, and the financial problems that were going on. Also with the great invention that he gave Chicago one of the best things we could ever have in our city, which would be the Ferris wheel.
The Ferris wheel was a great invention that helped out the city and also Daniel Burnham. With the money that the city was spending on the fair, the city was in debt and Burnham figured out a way that could make the city more money and pay off its debt, and would also make Daniel Burnham profit at the end. The Ferris wheel would also increase a great amount of attendance and would also out due the Eiffel Tower in Paris that was built for their World’s
…show more content…
For the first time ever people would finally see the beauty of electricity, different types of things from all over the world. The worlds fair was home to many new things that were finally introduced for the first time like the squashed penny, Wrigley’s juicy fruit gum, Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer, Aunt Jemima pancake mix, Cracker Jack, dishwashers, and models of the new modern family suburban houses. (City of Big Shoulders: A History of