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Telluride, Colorado
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06/24/1889
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The San Miguel Valley Bank Robbery in Telluride,
Colorado is often used to mark the beginning of the
outlaw era, but of course that is an over simplification. This was not
Robert LeRoy Parker's first theft, however, it was his
first bank robbery and began his career under the alias
of Butch Cassidy. It sealed his commitment to the
outlaw way of life and put him on the outlaw trail.
He had committed a gun-point
robbery and did it in a town where he was well known. The loot has been reported as high
as $10,500.
Being new to this new vocation, Cassidy was not the
in charge. It was more of an equal partnership
between Cassidy, Matt Warner and Tom McCarty. Cassidy
was well known in Telluride and did not attract attention
by hanging out in locations where he could observe the
bank and become familiar with their routines.
Tom McCarty had a ranch near Cortez, Colorado and
Matt owned one about 35 miles from Telluride in
the Mancos Mountains. They were making a good
living from those ranches although some of it involved
rustling, but they were discouraged with how long it
was taking. They wanted some quick cash.
The robbery took place about noon, give or take a
couple hours, on June 24th. The newspaper
account reported they took the money and left the bank
casually while the teller lay on the floor shivering
in fear. Other stories report they left in a hurry
when someone in the street began shouting the bank was
being robbed.
In any case, they had quite a ride. The first
stop was at Warner's Ranch, then on to Moab with the
posse hot on their trail and lead flying when the distance
was not too great. They rode toward Thompson Springs,
then across the Indian country to Browns Hole. They
were chased out of that country and went to Robbers
Roost but got bored hanging out there. After that,
they rode back to Browns Hole, then split up. Cassidy
may have went to Lander, Wyoming and the other two went
to Star Valley in Idaho. For a really good account
of that action, check you local library for a book called,
Last of the Bandit Riders, with stories told by Matt
Warner.
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Delta,
Colorado
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09/06/1893
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Farmers and Merchants Bank Robbery in Delta, Colorado, September
6, 1893 was attempted by Tom McCarty (see Telluride)
and two of his relatives. Cassidy was not involved.
As for the robbery, it started out badly for the
bank teller and ended badly for the outlaws. The
bank teller was killed in the bank and the shot that
killed him brought the town out into the street. As
the McCartys tried to run, a local man killed two of
them. Tom was the only one to escape and all he
had to show for losing his brother and his brother's
son, was $100.
This was the last known robbery for Tom McCarty.
He and his family had done a lot of damage across
the West, but losing his compadres seemed to shatter
his nerves. He often threatened to kill the man
who had shot the other two robbers out of the saddle,
but never made good on that threat. After writing
to his family in a biography format, he simply vanished
with out a trace.
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Montpelier,
Idaho
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08/13/1896
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Butch Cassidy pulled off the Montpelier, Idaho robbery to hire a lawyer
to defend his friend, Matt Warner, on a murder charge.
Or at least, that is the most popular story.
The robbery occurred on August 13, 1896 at closing
time for the bank. The robbery netted more
than $7,000. Apparently that was not quite enough
to buy Matt's freedom, however, the sentence of five years
was reduced
to three for good behavior. Matt then
became a lawman and stayed away from the outlaw trail.
The book titled Last of the Bandit Riders is based
on stories told by Matt Warner to Murray E King (a writer)
and revisited by his daughter, Joyce.
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Castlegate,
Utah
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04/21/1897
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If there was anyone who did not know who Butch Cassidy
was, he introduced himself
in 1897 with the robbery at Castlegate, Utah. This
was declared the most daring and well planned holdup
ever committed by any outlaw. It is credited
as being the heist that earned Cassidy his leadership
position. On Wednesday,
April 21, 1897 at just past noon, more than $8,000
of payroll money was taken by the Wild Bunch. He
and his pals split up and took the outlaw trail in opposite
directions.
As we tell this story, be aware that many opposing
views exist about who was involved and exactly what
happened after the robbery. If you have read the
book "Last of the Bandit Riders", you will
find a version that does not include Cassidy at all.
According to Matt Warner's daughter, her father
did not believe Cassidy was even there. On the
other hand, Warner was locked away in prison at the
time.
The most popular view is that Cassidy, Elsa Lay,
and Joe Walker pulled it off. Walker's only part in
it was to cut the telegraph wires. Cassidy and
Lay had everything planned out. They would commit
the robbery and getaway on two very fast race quality
horses. Althought they were fast, the horses could
not get very far before tiring. Somewhere
near Cleveland, they had two long distance horses stashed.
Although these were not the fastest at short distance,
they could run for hours. The third stash of fresh
horses was at Mexican Bend on the San Rafael River.
Once again, these were long distance horses that
would take them to Robbers Roost. The Posse would
be using the same horses from start to finish and did
not have a chance of keeping up.
There was one thing they did not plan on and that
was for the train engineer to bypass the cut telegraph
wires by running the locomotive down the tracks to Price.
In doing so, he was able to send messages and
get a posse started in Huntington and Castledale.
From Castlegate, the outlaws made really good time
to Price even though they were racing against a locomotive.
By the time they got to Cleveland, the telegraph
was buzzing but no one there bothered to look for them.
They headed south past Cedar Mountain.
In the meantime, the Castledale Posse and the Huntington
Posse were racing to cut them off. The posses
knew they had to reach Buckhorn Wash before the outlaws
in order to catch them. The Castledale Posse was
the first to reach Buckhorn Wash. They set up
a roadblock and then saw riders coming their way. Thinking
it was the outlaws, they opened fire. Lead was
flying in both directions before someone in the Castledale
Posse realized they were shooting at the Huntington
Posse. The outlaws had beat them to Buckhorn Wash
and were already half way to Mexican Mountain.
Another relay of horses was picked up at Mexican
Mounain and the outlaws split up. Walker headed
north for Browns Hole covering his trail and carrying
most of the money. Cassidy and Lay left an easy
trail to follow all the way to Robbers Roost. When
the Posse reached the Roost, they dared not enter and
simply went back home.
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Belle
Fourche, South Dakota
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06/28/1897
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During 1897, Kid Curry and Sundance Kid
were running together and stirring up trouble everywhere
they went. When they heard about Cassidy's success
in Castlegate, they decided to show what they could
do by hitting the Butte County Bank in Belle Fourche,
South Dakota. This was familiar territory for
Sundance Kid. As a younger man, before he was
Sundance Kid, he worked on the VVV ranch as a ranch
hand. As Harry Longabaugh, he was convicted
of stealing a horse from his boss and locked away in
the Sundance, Wyoming county jail. Harry Longabaugh
went in and Sundance Kid came out. From that experience,
he was forever dedicated to the outlaw trail.
The lands once claimed by the VVV Ranch are currently
owned by numerous ranchers, however, the location of
the former VVV Ranch headquarters falls into one. The
VVV Ranch shows up on DeLorme's TopoUSA mapping software,
however, there is nothing there today.
Kid Curry, Sundance Kid and their pals did not have
Cassidy's talent in planning a robbery. They gave
it a good try but no cigar. First of all, they
sent Tom O'Day in the night before the robbery to check
things out. Tom ended up in the saloon and never
made it back to the rest of the gang.
When the outlaws rode into town the next day, they
entered the bank only to find out the safe was on a
timer and could not be opened for another half hour.
They would have waited except someone outside
noticed unusual activity in the bank and started yelling
something about bank robbers which got the attention
of the rest of the town. The outlaws had no choice
but to make a run for it.
All that noise woke Tom up from where ever he was
sleeping it off but he was still a little too drunk
to get on his horse. The horse made a break for
it but Tom was not on board. He hid in the outhouse
behind the saloon. Someone saw him go in and he
was arrested.
The next few weeks was not good for Kid Curry and
Sundance. They were chased all the way to Hole
in the Wall in Wyoming. On the way out of that
hideout, they decided to rob a bank in Red Lodge, Montana,
but that one didn't go any better. They were recognized
and had another posse on their tails. This posse
was a little better at their job and caught the gang.
Sundance and Kid Curry were arrested and sent back to
Belle Fourche, however, the jail in Belle Fourche had
been burned down by a prisoner who was trying to keep
warm so the two were taken to Deadwood, South Dakota.
They broke out of jail a short time later. As
far as we know, that was the last time Sundance was
locked up. Kid Curry was not so hard to catch.
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Wilcox,
Wyoming
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06/2/1899
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Cassidy had moved onto the WS Ranch in New Mexico.
The owner of the ranch had been losing cattle
to rustlers so fast he was going out of business. Butch
and his pals put a stop to that very quickly. None
of the rustlers were arrested. They just sort
of disappeared. Cassidy liked the layout and so
far lawmen had not found him at that ranch. Unfortunately,
the rest of the gang wanted more action. Now,
keep in mind, this is only one version of what happened.
Cassidy put together a plan for robbing the train
at Wilcox, Wyoming. He decided not to take part
personally because of his promise that got him pardoned
from the Laramie jail years earlier. His gang stopped the train
near Wilcox at just past
2am in the morning on June 2, 1899. They blew
the baggage car apart just like in the movie, Butch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Although historians
seem to agree that Cassidy planned
it, many believe the robbery was actually pulled off by Kid Curry,
Flat Nose George Curry, and Cassidy's best friend,
Elsa Lay. Kid Curry claimed that Sundance
was involved which fits in with the fact that Sundance
and Kid Curry had ridden together for years. Kid
Curry also claims that Elsa Lay was not there because
he had gotten bored with life on the WS ranch and left
Cassidy to ride with the Ketchum gang. That makes
sense too considering the trouble he got into at Folsom.
The robbery at Wilcox was a tremendous success.
Everything went like clockwork and the loot taken ammounted
to about $30,000.
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Folsom,
New Mexico
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07/11/1899
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Elsa Lay got connected with the Ketchum gang looking
for more action. Cassidy did not like the Ketchums and
they were not welcome at the WS Ranch. Whatever
the reason, Lay made the mistake that ended his outlaw
career when he left Cassidy to join the Ketchums in
robbing the train in Folsom, New Mexico. First
of all, the safe on the train was empty things got worse
after that. After the robbery, the gang split
up. Sam Ketchum and Lay went to a nearby hideout.
Some reports claim Kid Curry was in on the robbery.
Kid Curry claims he met Ketchum and Lay at the
hideout after the robbery and was there when the posse
arrived. Sam Ketchum was shot once, Lay was shot
twice, and a lawman was killed. No one was arrested
that night and Curry got away taking Lay with him. Ketchum
was captured but soon died of his wounds. Lay
recovered from his wounds but was captured at
another location and sent to prison. Curry escaped.
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Tipton,
Wyoming
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08/29/1900
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The Tipton, Wyoming train robbery occurred at just past 8pm on August
29, 1900. This was almost a rerun of the Wilcox
robbery. Although there is evidence that Cassidy
and Sundance were involved, most historians believe
they were already in Nevada planning the Winnemucca
holdup. Kid Curry also claimed that the two were
in Nevada. That debate will never be settled.
Kid Curry was at Tipton and was probably the one
who blew the safe with a little too much dynamite. Ben
Kilpatrick and Bill Carver were also likely involved
since they ended up in Forth Worth with Kid Curry to
pose for the famous Wild Bunch photo with Cassidy. The
movie Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid got
two facts correct. First of all, Woodcock
was the same guy guarding the safe in the baggage
car at Wilcox and at Tipton just like in
the movie. Secondly, the baggage car was destroyed.
The contents of that safe were debated. The
reports are as little as $50 and as much as $55,000.
The reasoning behind the theory that Cassidy and
Sundance were not involved is the 21 day period between
the Tipton robbery and the Winnemucca robbery. A
horseback ride from Tipton to Winnemucca is possible
as proved many times before, however it would be very tiring.
The counter-theory is that nothing was taken during
the Tipton robbery and Cassidy was determined to get
a stake for his trip to South America. That argument
seems a little shakey to me.
According to Kid Curry, the outlaws involved went
south to Powder Springs in Browns Hole. Some time
later, they met one of Cassidy's brothers who told them
Cassidy went to Fort Worth.
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Winnemucca,
Nevada
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09/19/1900
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Winnemucca is a long way off the outlaw trail. It
is also a long way off from Cassidy's usual stomping
grounds. Regardless, the First National Bank was the target. Cassidy was
concerned that the outlaw profession was in serious
trouble due to the rapid communications lawmen enjoyed.
They had telegraph lines, trains that crossed the country
in days, and those pesky Pinkertons with a personal
vindeta against him. Cassidy wanted
to go to South America and needed money. He
and Sundance got $32,640 from Winnemucca.
They cut cross country to Robbers Roost, then connected
to the outlaw trail and went south. They eventually
ended up in Fort Worth, Texas. It seems they spent
a lot of their money celebrating. One evening,
after celebrating too much, Cassidy,
Sundance, Kid Curry, Bill Carver, and Ben Kilpatrick
posed for the famous photo of the the Wild Bunch. They
mailed a copy to the Winnemucca Bank with a thank you
note for the contribution. That action provided
the law with their first photo of the men they were
chasing. From that moment on, they could run, but they
could not hide.
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Exeter Creek,
Montana
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07/3/1901
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Exeter Creek was the last holdup committed by
the Wild Bunch in the United States before Cassidy
moved to South America. Of course there are those
who claim to have proof that Cassidy was already in
South America. Others are certain that Cassidy
not only was involved, but set the entire thing up.
That theory is that Cassidy and Sundance spent too much
of the Winnemucca loot partying in Fort Worth and needed
one more heist to finance the trip to South America.
The Exeter Creek train holdup near Wagner, Montana
occurred July 3, 1901 at 2
pm. The loot has been reported
as high as $65,000. Kid Curry was the one
who blew the safe. He even gave a gun to someone
on the train as a sovenier. As for the rest of
the story, we like to tell it like this:
On July 3,
1901, the Great Northern Express from St. Paul pulled into Malta, Montana. One of its passengers sat quietly in the back
with his hat pulled over his eyes. He
could not take a chance that someone would recognize him. His face had been appearing on wanted posters
since he made the mistake of having a photo taken in Ft. Worth, Texas a few
months earlier.
As the train
prepared to leave, another passenger with his hat pulled low stepped
aboard. He also was concerned about
being recognized since he was in that same photo. The first passenger, Butch Cassidy, looked up
and acknowledged his partner, Sundance Kid, with a nod.
In the
meantime, Kid Curry, boarded the train from the water tower above and hid
behind the engineer in the tinder. When
the train began to move, he stepped forward with his gun pulled and instructed
the engineer to keep the train moving until he was ordered to stop. That order came about half way between Malta
and Wagner at the bridge over Exeter Creek.
While Butch
and Sundance kept the passengers covered, two other members of the Wild Bunch
came out of the brush with getaway horses.
Kid Curry used dynamite to open the safe. Within a few minutes, the Wild Bunch
collected $60,000 and rode off in a cloud of dust. They were headed for the Missouri Breaks on
the Missouri River where Kid Curry had a hideout cabin in Hideaway Coulee. They
stayed there a few weeks before going back to Forth
Worth.
The location of this robbery is the starting point
for our trips in 2005 along the outlaw trail - border
to border.
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Parachute, Colorado
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07/07/1903
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Kid Curry was not successful
in much of anything without Cassidy's help. The
Parachute robbery was no exception. In fact, it
ended his career as the cold blooded killer of the Wild
Bunch. He and his two pals were chased by the
law into the mountains where Kid Curry was killed in
a gun fight. Of course there are those who say
the man killed was not him but the family in Colorado
at Sand Creek never heard from him again. That
is the same family that passed the Kid Curry story down
to Bruce Lamb who wrote the book about his family and
their involvement with Kid Curry..
Kid Curry's demise pretty much ended the outlaw era.
The outlaw trail no longer served a purpose and
the hideouts became law abiding ranches.
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