Some of the outlaws of the old days had a start in law enforcement. Seems a bit strange, doesn't it? Still, not many made a successful change from law enforcer to law breaker! Some ended up like the Dalton Gang!
Feb 6, 1891:
Dalton Gang commits its first train robbery
The members of the Dalton Gang stage an unsuccessful train robbery near Alila, California--an inauspicious beginning to their careers as serious criminals.
Bob, Emmett, and Grat Dalton were only three of Lewis and Adeleine Dalton's 10 sons. The brothers grew up on a succession of Oklahoma and Kansas homesteads during the post-Civil War period, when the region was awash in violence lingering from the war and notorious outlaw bands like the James-Younger Gang. Still, the majority of the Dalton boys became law-abiding citizens, and one of the older brothers, Frank, served as a deputy U.S. marshal.
Ironically, Frank's position in law enforcement brought his younger brothers into lives of crime. When Oklahoma whiskey runners murdered Frank in 1887, Grat took Frank's place as a deputy marshal and recruited Emmett and Bob as assistants. Disillusioned by the fate of their older law-abiding brother, the three Dalton boys showed little respect for the law and began rustling cattle and horses to supplement their income. The brothers soon began to use their official law enforcement powers for their own ends, and in 1888, they killed a man for pursuing Bob's girlfriend.
Such gross abuses of authority did not escape attention for long. By 1890, all three men were discredited as lawmen, though they managed to escape imprisonment. Taking up with some of the same hardcore criminals they had previously sworn to bring to justice, the Daltons decided to expand their criminal operations. Bob and Grat headed to California, leaving Emmett behind in Oklahoma because they felt he was still too young for a life of serious crime. In California, they planned to link up with their brother Bill and become bank and train robbers.
The Dalton Gang's first attempt at train robbery was a fiasco. On February 6, 1891, Bob, Grat, and Bill tried to rob a Southern Pacific train near Alila, California. While Bill kept any passengers from interfering by shooting over their heads, Bob and Grat forced the engineer to show them the location of the cash-carrying express car. When the engineer tried to slip away, one of the brothers shot him in the stomach. Finding the express car on their own, Bob and Grat demanded that the guard inside open the heavy door. The guard refused and began firing down on them from a small spy hole. Thwarted, the brothers finally gave up and rode away.
The Daltons would have done well to heed the ominous signs of that first failed robbery and seek safer pursuits. Instead, they returned to Oklahoma, reunited with young Emmett, and began robbing in earnest. A year later, the gang botched another robbery, boldly attempting to hit two Coffeyville, Kansas, banks at the same time. Townspeople caught them in the act and killed Bob, Grat, and two of their gang members. Emmett was seriously wounded and served 14 years in prison.
Of all the criminal Dalton brothers, only Emmett lived into old age. Freed from prison in 1907, he married and settled in Los Angeles, where he built a successful career in real estate and contracting.
I guess the lure of quick and easy riches was just as strong in the old days as it is now. Difference is, now days we don't call them "outlaws" but politicians! Sometimes the lines get a bit blurry, ya know?
Coffee out on the patio again! I'll make some cinnamon toast with homemade bread!
Bingo! Sounds like our current idiots in Washington have studied the Dalton gang well.
ReplyDeleteToday is the perfect day for homemade cinnamon toast - save the ends for me!
Isn't that the truth!!! Too bad we can't convict politicians for dereliction of duty. 4 degrees this morning and cinnamon toast on homemade bread sounds great to me.
ReplyDeleteGood post. I love the old west as you know.
ReplyDeleteThe weather here has been so beautiful. I really need to get out and do some walking around the desert before the snakes wake up.
But coffee and fresh made bread mmmmmmmm I'll sit with you. After all its still being outside.
Hey Phyllis...
ReplyDeleteDoes make you wonder who they took lessons from, doesn't it?
Thanks so much for coming over!
Hey Linda...
I'll bet you are ready for some Spring weather!
Wouldn't do any good to sue them...they don't have any money! They would have to repay us with our own!
Thanks for stopping by this morning!
Hey Jo...
Raining here again this morning, but at least it's warm!
Careful about waking up those snakes!
Thanks so much for coming over, sweetie!
Keep up the great work Jim! Always enjoy visiting!!
ReplyDeleteSteve
Common Cents
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