The Vendetta: FBI Melvin Purvis' War Against Crime by Alton Purvis
Melvin Purvis Editor's Note: The
Columbia Star published this
book promotion November
11, 2005. The movie "Public
Enemies" about Melvin
Purvis search for John
Dillinger is currently playing.
The Vendetta is available
on Amazon.com.
In 1934, SC native Melvin Purvis was the most famous man in America, second only to FDR. Although only 31 years old, he had just completed a remarkable sweep of the great "Public Enemies" of the Depression: John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, Baby Face Nelson. America finally had a hero, and the face of the all- conquering champion of law enforcement was Melvin Purvis.
Yet, every new success and every new appearance of Purvis' face in the newspapers and magazines added to one man's bitter, implacable resentment. J. Edgar Hoover's jealousy was immense, and he determined that Purvis would be brought down.
Johnny Depp as John Dillinger A vendetta began that would not end—not even with Purvis' death. After Hoover removed him from his FBI assignment, Purvis returned to Florence, SC, to start a new life. However, he remained haunted by Hoover's betrayal and died of a self- inflicted gunshot wound in 1960.
But Hoover's jealousy lived on; it was only after he had smeared Purvis' reputation, called his courage and competence into question, and erased his name from all the records of the FBI's great triumphs did Hoover finally end the pursuit and persecution of Melvin Purvis.
Alston Purvis began to reinvestigate his father's story only after his own son was born. With the benefit of a unique family archive of documents and new testimony from Purvis' colleagues, friends, and witnesses to the events of the '30s, he has produced a grippingly authentic new telling
of the gangster era. The
Vendetta, brilliant in its portraits of good and bad guys alike, also eerily foreshadows Hoover's bitter paranoia throughout the 20th century that would come to overwhelm the bureau he had created.
Alston Purvis is the sole surviving son of Melvin Purvis. He is the head of Boston University's design department and has published many books on that subject. He lives with his wife and son in Boston.
Alston Purvis spoke and signed The Vendetta: FBI Hero Melvin Purvis' War Against Crime at the Columbia Museum of Art November 12, 2005, at 2 pm, Main and Hampton Streets.
Purvis married Marie Rosanne Wilcox Purvis. They had three children: Melvin H. Purvis III (1940- 1986), who ran against Strom Thurmond for a senate seat in 1984 and lost; and Christopher Peronneau Purvis (1950- 1984); and Alton Purvis.










