Past Tense

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me anything
Jack Black in Vancouver, 1894
Jack Black came to Vancouver in 1894 after he and his Chinese cellmate busted out of a Revelstoke jail using a hacksaw. They hopped a boxcar to Vancouver, where Black rolled a drunk, smoked opium at Wing Sang, and got hog-tied in a botched robbery. He continued his perpetual crime spree throughout BC before getting pinched in Victoria, which earned him a two-year stretch at BC Penitentiary in New Westminster, where he was born. While there, the grandfather of another famous New West son, Raymond Burr, gave him the lash.
Jack Black (probably an alias) lived the life of any number of old west stock characters, including yegg, hobo, grifter, desperado, and hophead. More importantly, he eventually went straight and wrote his memoirs, You Can’t Win (1926), giving us a rare interior view of the world inhabited by the mostly anonymous underclass of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The book was a hit and made Black somewhat of a celebrity. He had his portrait (above right) taken by well-known photographer Edward Weston, and heavily influenced the likes of William S. Burroughs, who drew from You Can’t Win to write his classic beat novel, Junkie. MGM Studios recruited Black as a salaried Hollywood writer, presumably to give its crime flicks a touch of authenticity. 
For more on Jack Black’s time in BC, check out “A Wild West Wanderer’s Adventures in BC” by John Mackie.
Source: Left: Mugshot printed in the San Francisco Call, 5 January 1912; right: portrait by Edward Weston ca. 1930, via The Chiseler
Pop-upView Separately

Jack Black in Vancouver, 1894

Jack Black came to Vancouver in 1894 after he and his Chinese cellmate busted out of a Revelstoke jail using a hacksaw. They hopped a boxcar to Vancouver, where Black rolled a drunk, smoked opium at Wing Sang, and got hog-tied in a botched robbery. He continued his perpetual crime spree throughout BC before getting pinched in Victoria, which earned him a two-year stretch at BC Penitentiary in New Westminster, where he was born. While there, the grandfather of another famous New West son, Raymond Burr, gave him the lash.

Jack Black (probably an alias) lived the life of any number of old west stock characters, including yegg, hobo, grifter, desperado, and hophead. More importantly, he eventually went straight and wrote his memoirs, You Can’t Win (1926), giving us a rare interior view of the world inhabited by the mostly anonymous underclass of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The book was a hit and made Black somewhat of a celebrity. He had his portrait (above right) taken by well-known photographer Edward Weston, and heavily influenced the likes of William S. Burroughs, who drew from You Can’t Win to write his classic beat novel, Junkie. MGM Studios recruited Black as a salaried Hollywood writer, presumably to give its crime flicks a touch of authenticity. 

For more on Jack Black’s time in BC, check out “A Wild West Wanderer’s Adventures in BC” by John Mackie.

Source: Left: Mugshot printed in the San Francisco Call, 5 January 1912; right: portrait by Edward Weston ca. 1930, via The Chiseler

Source: chiseler.org

    • #Vancouver
    • #history
    • #Jack Black
  • 1 year ago
  • 82
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

82 Notes/ Hide

  1. tokrgallery reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  2. ghostbunker reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  3. vitaestbona likes this
  4. farah-patterson reblogged this from pasttensevancouver
  5. milknhoneydoe reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  6. johnxavier1975 likes this
  7. seiferre likes this
  8. bdazzle reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  9. darksstars likes this
  10. shout-with-the-devil likes this
  11. nite-shift reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  12. alexanderbruto reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  13. simon-p-petunia likes this
  14. mrsims reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  15. estrojennifer likes this
  16. snaketooth likes this
  17. infamuschet reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  18. unlocked-angel likes this
  19. d73-san likes this
  20. maelstromatic likes this
  21. sewnandsilentchange reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  22. nobodyspeaksenglish likes this
  23. frickenmike reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  24. pantelope reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  25. theyreadbooks likes this
  26. aureliusj likes this
  27. mccarronwalkaway likes this
  28. jadion likes this
  29. gentressmyrrhmurings likes this
  30. blood-period reblogged this from lonerwitch and added:
    Jack Black in Vancouver, 1894 Jack Black came to Vancouver in 1894 after he and his Chinese cellmate busted out of a...
  31. blood-period likes this
  32. lonerwitch reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  33. lonerwitch likes this
  34. metensomatosis likes this
  35. jacobenimble reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  36. jacobenimble likes this
  37. spilt-laughter likes this
  38. philosophermaggot likes this
  39. casualghosts reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  40. dibenedettogiuseppe likes this
  41. cool-whatever reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  42. burbanite likes this
  43. regardantlesetoiles reblogged this from criminalwisdom
  44. mercurialme likes this
  45. murmurandshout likes this
  46. ruem likes this
  47. the-whitetiger likes this
  48. justwhatiamx likes this
  49. rottenbones likes this
  50. criminalwisdom reblogged this from pasttensevancouver and added:
    Jack Black in Vancouver, 1894 (Source: pasttensevancouver)
  51. Show more notesLoading...
← Previous • Next →

About

images that may or may not be historical, related to vancouver, or my wordpress blog, past tense.

You can also follow me on twitter.

Most of these images were found online. If any belong to you, you can contact me at laniwurm [at] gmail [dot] com

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask me anything
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union