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| Willie and Willis Newton |
If you ask the average guy on the street who
the James-Younger or Dalton Gang are, they will smile knowingly and nod their
heads. If you ask the same question about the Newton Boys, people will shake
their heads and cast a strange glance at you like you’re asking about some
long-forgotten boy band from the 60s.
The funny thing is that the four Newton
brothers—Willis, Willie, James, and Joseph — were probably the most successful
robbers in American history.
In the five years between 1919 and 1924, the
brothers robbed nearly ninety banks and six trains—taking in close to
$4,000,000. But,
unlike the James-Younger Gang or the Dalton Brothers, the Newtons kept a low
profile. They crept into banks after dark, blew the safe, and disappeared
before they had to deal with any bank employees or customers.
Robbing Texas banks proved a cakewalk. Willis
bribed an insurance official with the Texas Association of Bankers. In return,
he got a list of banks using older model safes he could blow open with a few
dabs of nitroglycerin.
Unfortunately, the gang’s information in the
Rondout robbery was too good. The train had nine mail cars and carried over
fifteen hundred mail pouches. Yet, the bandits knew precisely where to find the
sixty-three big-money bags of registered mail.






