Ninety years ago, on Aug. 23, 1927, two Italian immigrants were executed.
The deaths of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in the
Charlestown Prison in Massachusetts marked the end of a raucous
seven-year legal and political battle that captivated people across the
United States and the world.
According to many who lived through it, no other event since
the outbreak of the Civil War had so starkly divided American opinion.
Writer Edmund Wilson believed
that it “revealed the whole anatomy of American life, with all its
classes, professions, and points of view, and raised every fundamental
question of our political and social system.” And arguably, no other
event until the Vietnam War evoked as much anti-American sentiment on
the global stage.
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