FrFrancois
Vidocq
There has always been a colorful history in
regards to investigators. Private detectives
fighting crime and catching criminals using a
series of investigative techniques to catch the
criminals red handed. Most of these stories are
fictionalized accounts of real people who
conducted investigations, however, were not quite
as exciting as the stories told. By far I feel
that the father of private investigations was
Eugene Francois Vidocq. Vidocq was a criminal
turned investigator. Vidocq should be attributed
with the formalization of criminal investigations.
Why then do so few people know about Vidocq? Most
investigators today, recognize Allan Pinkerton as
the first private investigator. While Pinkerton
does deserve credit for his contributions to the
investigative and law enforcement field, I do not
consider him the originator.
Vidocq has an impressive list of credits, which
include:
-
First appointed
Surete of the French Police.
-
Introduced record
keeping which was a card index system,
criminalistics and the science of ballistics
into police work.
-
Was the first to
make plaster-of-paris casts of foot and shoe
impressions.
-
Founded the first
modern detective agency and credit bureau.
-
Held patents on
indelible ink and unalterable bond paper.
-
Was a master of
disguise and surveillance.
Vidocq was such a tremendous detective that he
caught the eye of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, which
based his Sherlock Holmes character off Vidocq.
Vidocq was unusual in the sense that he pursued
criminals to bring them to justice but yet spent
equal time freeing the innocent from prosecution.

Above: Eugene Francois
Vidocq, 1829
Due to his
swashbuckling life style, often involving criminal
activities, at least initially in his lifetime,
today’s private investigators and police
detectives do not give him due credit. He was
definitely not mainstream by any account. From
breaking out of jails, dueling to the death,
pursuing actresses and stalking the Paris nights
in a thousand disguises, Vidocq was not your
normal detective. It is this sordid past that
enabled Vidocq to become the most magnificent
detective of all time. “It was night; the rain
fell, lightning flashed, the thunder rolled; and a
relation, who was both midwife and fortune teller,
predicted that my career would be a stormy one.”
This was the beginning of Vidocq’s Memoirs, which
detailed his life story. Perhaps at the age of
fourteen was the beginning of the story though.
While learning the art of fencing, he accidentally
killed his fencing instructor and ran away and
eventually took to the army.

Above: Young Vidocq as
he makes his escape after killing his fencing
instructor.
Vidocq rose quickly through the ranks in the
military and was well liked and well respected.
Vidocq quickly gained enemies as well, on one
outing, in a small town, Vidocq came across three
women about to be beheaded at the chopping block.
He immediately came to their defense; by utilizing
his fencing skills he killed the dragoons while
the woman escaped. At Seventeen he found himself
in the town gallo for the first time, awaiting the
same fate as the woman he had saved. Vidocq was
able to convince some of his high-ranking friends
to vouch for him and he was eventually released.
Since that time, Vidocq had spent a lot of time in
various jails meeting the most hardened criminals
and learning about their criminal trades. Vidocq
was able to escape from most of the jails and
continued to meet criminals along his journeys by
staying within the criminal underworld of Paris.
By hanging out and talking with these criminals he
was laying down the groundwork for his future. He
was understanding them and gathering intelligence,
which he would later use to capture the very
thieves he was befriending. Vidocq had a unique
personality to say the least. He never saw himself
as a traitor to either side both law and criminal.
Vidocq could have been bitter and betrayed his own
sense of honor to turn away from a world that had
wronged him. But, instead, he decided to help that
world clean up its mess and be able to better
define the line between hardened criminals and
those who have simply made mistakes.
By Vidocq’s own admissions, he never captured or
turned in anyone whom he felt were driven to steal
out of hunger or necessity.
According to Vidocq, his principal functions were
“To prevent crimes, discover malefactors, and give
them up to justice,”
Vidocq
soon decided that he could not catch as many
criminals as himself as he was slowly becoming
feared. He then began using various disguises in
an effort to catch the criminals who might know of
him. Vidocq was flamboyant in his rouses, for one
day he would dawn the disguise of a German
swordsman wanted by the Berlin police for killing
two men in a duel, to a Sicilian gypsy who had
killed his wife in Castelvetrano. Vidocq had
clothing and dialects to accompany every character
he portrayed. Vidocq thought of himself as an
actor. He felt that to be a good detective one
must be an actor as well.
Eventually Vidocq organized a small, plain clothed
undercover unit to maintain surveillance over all
ex-convicts, Baron de Pasquier approved this idea
and this elite group of men became known as the
Brigade de Surete or Brigade of Security. This
team had free rain across the entire Cite de
Paris. It eventually grew to a large operation
gaining the same status as the Scotland Yard in
London. The Brigade of Security caught an enormous
amount of criminals in a difficult criminal period
of history. In 1832 Vidocq retired from the Surete
and at 58, he began the world’s first formal
private detective agency. Vidocq named this
investigation firm, “Le Bureau de Renseignements,”
or “Office of Intelligence.” Most of the cases he
accepted were detecting and apprehending con men
that were stealing from business owners. Vidocq
accepted a case in the late summer of 1842 from a
band of tradesmen who hired his services to track
down and arrest a con man by the name of Champaix,
who they claim borrowed money from them before
disappearing. They wanted to be re-paid by
Champaix and offered Vidocq 45 percent of the
payback if he could capture Champaix. Vidocq
eagerly accepted the case. Vidocq utilized his
sources of informants to eventually capture
Champaix. Once Vidocq had Champaix in custody he
enlisted a confession from the trembling Champaix
who turned over 2,200 francs to Vidocq. Vidocq,
feeling sorry for the gentleman, decided not to
prosecute and let him go, with a promise to repay
the remainder of monies owed. Vidocq even gave
Champaix some money to get something to eat, since
he had taken all of his money from him. Vidocq
immediately contacted his clients to advise them
of the progress in the case. Soon Vidocq found
himself under arrest on charges of false arrest,
unlawful detention of a prisoner and obtaining
money under false pretense. Vidocq was put into
the 14th Century castle prison. He was later found
not guilty of the lies set forth against him by
Champaix. On May 11, 1857 at the age 70 Vidocq was
stricken with paralysis and died in his home after
asking forgiveness for not attending Mass since he
was a boy. The priest assured him that God would
forgive him.
“I have the consolation of having remained an
honest man amid the darkness of perversion and the
atmosphere of crime. I have fought for the defense
of order, in the name of justice, as soldiers
fight for the defense of their country, beneath
the flag of their regiment. I had no epaulettes,
but I ran as many risks as they, and I exposed my
life everyday as they do.”
-Francois Vidocq
Alan Pinkerton

Above: Allan Pinkerton of the
Pinkerton National Detective Agency
Much like Vidocq Allan Pinkerton was a founder
within the field of private investigations,
however, Pinkerton’s become more known in the
field for his accomplishments than Vidocq. Not
many private investigators even know who Vidocq
is, but they all know Allan Pinkerton. Pinkerton
became a study to many in the growth of America.
Allan Pinkerton had the opportunity to cross paths
with some of the greatest American figures ever,
and has helped to change the course of history.
Time Life Books said that “So effective were the
agents of Pinkerton’s methods that when the
government formed the FBI in 1908, it used
Pinkerton’s Detective agency as a model. The
Pinkerton National Detective agency is still in
business today and has been a leader in the
private investigation industry for over 150 years.
Allan Pinkerton
was born to a policeman and his wife in 1819. His
father was eventually killed in a political riot,
leaving Pinkerton fatherless. He quit school and
began working at a young age to help support his
family. In 1842 Allan married Joan Carfrae. The
Pinkerton’s eventually came to the United States
and called Detroit Michigan there home, although
Allan dreamed of settling in Chicago. Eventually
they packed up their belongings and headed to
Chicago. Having no food or money and having to
live off the land created a difficult journey for
the Pinkerton’s. Eventually they reached Chicago.
Allan sold his only horse and wagon for lodging
near the lakefront. Pinkerton began working as a
barrel maker at a local brewery, which eventually
led Pinkerton to starting his own barrel making
business, which flourished. In 1846 Allan fathered
a son named William, two twins followed soon
Robert and Joan. Pinkerton actually stumbled
across detective work as he came across a campsite
for counterfeiters, he informed the local sheriff,
who in turn deputized Pinkerton and allowed him to
accompany them on the raid of the criminals.
Pinkerton’s bravery in the face of danger
impressed the town council and he was asked to
assist on several more criminal takedowns.
Pinkerton proved himself quickly as a policeman
and was soon hired by the sheriff to be a full
time officer. With the bustling growth of Chicago
and the up rise in crime with less than a dozen
policemen to protect the Chicago population of
30,000 Due to his lack of pay and his growing
family, Pinkerton decided that he would open a
private investigation firm. Pinkerton felt that
due to the lack of police officers to assist in
criminal investigations that there could be a
market for a private investigation firm. Although,
at the time there were no private investigation
firms in Chicago and very few in the country.
Prior to opening the agency Pinkerton approached
some associates of his at the Rock Island and
Illinois Central Railroad for whom Pinkerton had
previously investigated numerous cargo theft
cases. Pinkerton advised the President of the
company George McClellan and his Attorney Abraham
Lincoln of his idea of his investigation firm.
Lincoln and McClellan approved of his endeavors
and agreed to use his services. Pinkerton soon
opened an office at 151 Fifth Avenue, which was
the center of Chicago’s market district. The
Pinkerton National Detective Agency was now open
for business. He advertised his services in
newspapers across the country. The agency boasted
results and hard-core ethics. Pinkerton
immediately became a one-man marketing sensation.
His business quickly flourished and he felt the
need to design a log, which became familiar to
millions of Americans, even today. An eyeball
which boasts ‘We Never Sleep.” A tradition and
legend was formed
While Pinkerton’s business
continued to grow, he prided himself on hand
picking each investigator and subjected them to
strict ethical and business codes. His first two
agents’ were George H. Bangs and Francis Warner.
Both were detectives with outstanding reputations
and big city savvy.
Pinkerton would later use his
relationship with Abraham Lincoln to provided
protective services to the President of the United
States. Pinkerton had gathered information
regarding an assassination attempt on the soon to
be President Lincoln. This would eventually become
known as the “Baltimore Plot.” Pinkerton
immediately used his influential contacts to meet
with the now President Elect Abraham Lincoln.
“They want to stop you from taking office, sir.”
Said Pinkerton as he explained the assassination
attempt to his friend Lincoln. Lincoln knew to
that the threat if it was coming from his old
friend Pinkerton that it was to be trusted.
Pinkerton devised a plan that would allow Lincoln
to keep his appointments for the most part while
avoiding the assassination attempt. Pinkerton
assembled a team of investigators to accompany
Lincoln and ensure his safety. Over the coming
weeks under the safety of the Pinkerton National
Detective Agency Lincoln was sworn in as President
of the United States. Lincoln would later call on
Pinkerton for many assignments, to include
military intelligence during the Civil War.
Pinkerton would infiltrate enemy camps and gather
intelligence. It was during the Civil War that
Pinkerton brought on a new recruit to the
Pinkerton National Detective Agency. Although the
child was only sixteen years of age, Pinkerton
found that he had a willingness and eagerness to
learn and possessed an intelligence to understand
the complexity of the business. This new recruit
was his son William Pinkerton
After the Civil War
ended, Pinkerton returned to Chicago with his son
William and another new recruit his second son
Robert. William preferred to be where the action
was chasing down the bad guys and Robert preferred
to handle the administrative aspects of the
company. Allan Pinkerton was proud of his sons and
the interest they took in the agency. Pinkerton
was responsible for creating history within the
field of investigations and police work. Allan
Pinkerton was detailed in his work and established
what is known as the “rogues’ gallery.” This was
the detailed description of known criminals,
including physical characteristics, background
information, companions, and hideouts. Mr.
Pinkerton never closed a case in the “rogues’
gallery” until the individual was officially
declared dead. This was the beginning of today’s
police mug books. A few of the famous individuals
listed in Mr. Pinkerton’s gallery were:
Maximilian Shinburn;
1839-1919 He was know as the “King of Bank
Burglars.”
Sophie Lyons;
1850-1924 Occupation: criminal tendencies since
early childhood. Criminal occupations:
pickpocket, shoplifter, blackmailer, and stall for
bank sneaks.
Charles Bullard;
Accomplished burglar and pianist. Distinguished
features: speaks fluent French.
Allan Pinkerton was
also responsible for developing the term “private
eye”. Although Pinkerton was the most famous of
private police agencies, he was not alone. David
J. Cook a former major general of the Colorado
Militia began the Rocky Mountain Detective
Association. Mr. Cook had agents in all the major
cities in the United States. Cook’s army of
private detectives primarily focused on the
pursuit and apprehension of the many bank and
cattle robbers and even sought after the notorious
murderers of the times.
Through the years,
Allan Pinkerton was often credited with having a
third sense, an innate ability to identify
criminals long before police detectives could even
come up with a name. Pinkerton laughed at this
notion that he had any mystic powers, but
explained that his supernatural powers were merely
experience.
In 1884 Allan
Pinkerton slipped on the wet streets of Chicago
and bit his tongue as his chin hit the sidewalk.
He soon died of this injury, leaving the bite
untreated, which turned gangrenous. He was put to
rest in the famous Chicago Graceland Cemetery
where he rests today near his wife and the remains
of other pioneers who made Illinois the great city
it is today.
Since the
Swashbuckling days of Francois Vidocq and the Wild
West days of Allan Pinkerton, there have been many
notable private detectives. However, none of whom
helped shaped the face of investigations, as we
know it today.
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