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| Jesse James |
At about 2 p.m. on February 13, 1866, ten or
twelve men dressed in tattered Union army apparel rode into Liberty, Missouri.
Three guarded the city’s outskirts, and the others went to the Clay County
Savings Association. Two men went inside while the others waited outside.
The men warmed their hands by the stove while
checking out the bank. They quickly decided there was nothing to worry about
here, just two employees, one of them an old man, and no guards or guns. One of
them asked the clerk, William Bird, to change a ten-dollar bill. As he did, the
man pointed a gun at Bird’s head. The other man jumped over the counter and
stuck his revolver in cashier Greenup Bird’s face.
After that, they forced William Bird to open
the vault and put all the valuables into a seed bag. When he finished, they
asked for the key to the vault. Then they slammed the vault door shut, locking
the clerk and cashier inside. “No doubt, [they] thought they had locked the
door,” The Daily Journal of Commerce reported. But something went wrong,
and it didn’t lock. The Birds pushed on the door, and to their surprise, it
opened.
Greenup Bird waited a moment, then raised the
window and shouted an alarm that the bank had been robbed.





