Publisher's Synopsis
"Jim Murray's rise to great wealth began high in the Rocky Mountains in the small town of Pioneer, Montana. There he hit his first big strike, hired others to work his claims, and earned a reputation as someone who "couldn't be bluffed, wouldn't be cheated, and didn't scare at anything." He parlayed his mining wealth into banks, theatres, resorts, waterworks, and commercial properties from Seattle to San Diego. In western business circles, it was believed his ready cash was second only to W. A. Clark. Where Murray shared no peers, however, was in his decidedly radical politics. From the Irish Land League protests of the 1880s through the Easter Rising of 1916, he supported the violent overthrow of Britain's rule in his homeland. Hoping for the Crown's defeat in World War I, Murray's extremism reached its peak when future World War II General Omar Bradley was dispatched to Butte, Montana, to stop Murray's network of Sinn Féiners from imp