Comparing T. Eliot Ness's Life And Work

519 Words2 Pages

Eliot Ness was a dedicated man and an allegiant to his career. The man who helped bring Al Capone down is barely given his rightful amount of credit today, even though he spent his life chasing down the crime boss. He died fairly young, and yet the impact he made on the way we now look at criminals and law enforcement is significant. Born on April 19, 1903, Eliot Ness was the youngest of five children. Clara, Effie. Nina, and Charles were noticeably older than him; Charles, the fourth, was 10 years his senior. His parents, Peter Ness and Emma King Ness were Norwegian immigrants, coming from somewhere near Stavanger, Norway. It’s said that he had a poor childhood, losing both his parents at the age of fourteen.1 He grew up in the neighborhoods of Chicago, Illinois, and attended Christian Fenger High School. …show more content…

He briefly worked as an investigator at Retail Credit Company, but went back to the University of Chicago and earned a Master's degree in criminology.2 In 1938 he divorced from his first wife, Edna Staley, which took a toll on some of his work. However, he remarried to Evaline McAndrews, an illustrator, in 1939. Evaline had to travel for work to meet with publishers, and soon the distance between them became too much, as they divorced quietly in November of 1945. In January of 1946, Ness married again, to a friend of his former wife’s, an artist called Elisabeth Anderson Seaver.3 Although he couldn’t have children, he desperately wanted some, so he and his wife adopted Robert, a toddler from a local

More about Comparing T. Eliot Ness's Life And Work

Open Document