On This Day in Weird, October 30...
Keep your heads down and your pets indoors for "Devil's
Night," described by Wikipedia as follows: "Devil's Night dates from
as early as the 1930s. Traditionally, city youths engaged in a night of
mischievous or petty criminal behavior, usually consisting of minor pranks or
acts of mild vandalism (such as egging, soaping or waxing windows and doors, leaving
rotten vegetables or flaming bags of Canine feces on front porch stoops, or
toilet papering trees and shrubs) which caused little or no property damage. However,
in the early 1970s, the vandalism escalated to more destructive acts such as
arson. This primarily took place in the inner city, but surrounding suburbs
were often affected as well. The crimes became more destructive in Detroit's
inner-city neighborhoods, and included hundreds of acts of arson and vandalism
every year. The destruction reached a peak in the mid- to late-1980s, with more
than 800 fires set in 1984, and 500 to 800 fires in the three days and nights
before Halloween in a typical year." Such crimes have now
"declined," they say—but will the tradition be revived after its
portrayal as a holiday for undead serial killers on American Horror Story:
Hotel?
No comments:
Post a Comment