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Wicked Philadelphia: The Storey Cotton Con--Philadelphia’s Ponzi Scheme

Join Philadelphia Author, Historian, and Lecturer Thomas H. Keels as he takes us back in time to the early 1900s and the Storey Cotton Company. In 1900, five con artists created the Storey Cotton Company, a phony commodities trading firm that bilked Americans out of millions of dollars before its inglorious collapse in 1905.  

Refreshments provided.

 

About the Author

Tom Keels is the author or co-author of seven published books on Philadelphia history: Wicked Philadelphia: Sin in the City of Brotherly Love; Forgotten Philadelphia: Lost Architecture of the Quaker City; Philadelphia Graveyards and Cemeteries; Philadelphia’s Rittenhouse Square; Chestnut Hill, and Philadelphia's Golden Age of Retail  (with Lawrence M. Arrigale). 

Tom's latest book, Sesqui!  Greed, Graft, and The Forgotten World's Fair of 1926, has just been published by Temple University Press.   Sesqui! is the story of the Sesqui-Centennial International Exposition of 1926, Philadelphia's second world's fair, which was as big a failure as the 1876 Centennial was a success.  Why?  The city's rampant culture of political corruption and "pay-to-play," which turned the fair into a gigantic boondoggle.

Tom is a lecturer, writer, and commentator specializing in Philadelphia history and architecture.  He has spoken to many of Philadelphia's leading cultural and historical organizations, including the American Institute of Architects (Philadelphia chapter), American Revolution Roundtable, Chestnut Hill Historical Society, Cosmopolitan Club, Curtis Institute of Music, Franklin Inn Club, Free Library of Philadelphia, Harvard Club of Philadelphia, Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, Springfield Township Historical Society, and Union League of Philadelphia.

Tom has appeared in numerous documentaries, including "Franklin's Spark" on Philadelphia: The Great Experiment; "Philly Firsts" on WLVT (PBS39); and "Buried Stones, Buried Dreams," a feature on Mount Moriah Cemetery for the Precious Places Project.  He has appeared on two episodes of Mysteries at the Museum on the Travel Channel, discussing the real-life origins of the 1958 sci-fi classic, The Blob, and how a Philadelphia merchant-turned-counterfeiter nearly bankrupted the Confederacy during the Civil War. Other media appearances include Radio Times on WHYY-FM, 
Creatively Speaking on WRTI-FM, PA Books on the Pennsylvania Cable Network, Action News on WPVI-TV, and Good Day Philadelphia on FOX-TV.

For many years, Tom was a Contributing Writer for the Rittenhouse Sq. Revue,  writing monthly articles on Philadelphia landmarks and lore.  His articles have also appeared in the Chestnut Hill Local, Main Line Times, Springfield Sun, Philadelphia Style Magazine, Germantown Crier, and the Journal of the Historical Society of Montgomery County.  

A confirmed taphophile, Tom has been a tour guide at Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia's premier Victorian necropolis, for over two decades.  He has conducted classes on Philadelphia cemetery history for the Bucks County Community College Historic Preservation Program, Cheltenham Township Adult School, and Mount Airy Learning Tree.

Date:
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Time:
6:30pm - 7:30pm
Campus:
Warminster
Categories:
  Adults     Book Discussion