During the 1800s trains carried the nation's wealth throughout the east, but no one thought to rob a speeding train until 1866. In 1870 the first western train was robbed in Nevada and within hours a second train was robbed. Railroads made every alteration to their cars and changed every procedure they could imagine to thwart the robbers, but to no avail. Robbing trains became epidemic over the next five decades, even when the legislatures made train robbery a capital crime. A few of the hundreds of train robberies stand out as thrilling and dangerous affairs, and the greatest of these (15-20) are included in this book.
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In 1855, master criminal Edward Pierce plans and carries out, with three accomplices, the impossible robbery of the monthly London-to-Paris train carrying gold bullion for the British army in the Crimea.
As soon as all three men were free they rendezvoused and prepared to rob stagecoaches. There seemed to be no reason to delay so within three months they set their trap along the Forest Hill to Auburn stagecoach route in Placer County.
The Old West's Infamous Train Robbers and Their Historic Heists profiles sixteen noted train robbers (or train robbing gangs) along with the details of each their forty-seven hold-ups.
2. John Wesley Powell, Canyons of the Colorado (Meadville, PA: Flood & Vincent, 1895), p. 123. Darrah, “Three Letters by Andrew Hall,” p. 506. 4. John Cooley, ed., Exploring the Colorado River: Firsthand Accounts by Powell and His Crew ...
Rube Burrow, Desperado is the factual story of a prolific train robber in the 1880s and 1890s who briefly captured national attention through his daring deeds.
With compelling details that chronicle the two-week chase that followed—the near misses, the fateful mistakes, and the bloody final shootout on the Watonwan River, Shot All to Hell is a galloping true tale of frontier justice from the ...
time in Sullivan's back before the wounded man fled from the room while crying out for help. Sullivan reached the rear door, but he was already so weak from the loss of blood that he could barely turn the handle.
This the true story of Willis Newton and his outlaw gang who robbed trains and over seventy banks-more than Jessie James, the Daltons, and all of the rest of the Old West outlaws-combined.
This story of his life reads like the dime-novel fiction of an earlier day, but every incident of his daring and gripping exploits is a matter of record throughout Wyoming and all Western states.