Celebrating America's 250th Anniversary with five days of banners depicting our country's birth and heritage.
Celebrating America's 250th Anniversary with five days of banners depicting our country's birth and heritage.
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| Lizzie Borden |
Lizzie Borden is the stuff from which legends
are made. Schoolchildren recite poetry about her while adults revel in the gory
details of her crimes.
Unfortunately, little is known about Lizzie’s
inner life.
She was thirty-two at the time her parents were
killed. Her sister, Emma was forty-one. The girls lived at home, unattached,
with their father and stepmother.
Lizzie’s father, Andrew J. Borden, was most
often described as peculiar. A Puritan type, more interested in acquiring money
than living life. He got his start as a furniture dealer, partnering with
William L. Almy. When Almy retired, they dissolved the business, and Borden
began investing in real estate. Over time, he made some shrewd moves and wound
up owning many of the city’s choicest properties.
When he died, Borden’s real estate holdings
totaled over $170,000. In addition, he held stock in the cotton mill, bank, and
other business concerns valued at several hundred thousand dollars more. John
T. Burrell, the cashier of the Union Bank, valued Borden’s estate at $200,000
to $300,000 (just under $10 million today).
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| Alfred Packer aprroaching fort |
Alfred Griner Packer, sometimes called Alferd
Packer, was born in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, on July 21, 1842. His
family moved to Indiana in the early 1850s. Packer enlisted in the Union army
in Minnesota in April 1862, listing his occupation as a shoemaker. He received
an honorable discharge at Fort Ontario, New York, Eight months later.
Packer enlisted in the Union army again at
Ottumwa, Iowa, in June 1863. He was mustered out less than a year later. The
discharge papers said Packer had epilepsy in both instances—constantly going in
and out of seizures—which kept him from performing his duties.
The nine years after Packer left the service are
a blur.
Some historians say he traveled up and down the
Rocky Mountains, prospecting and working odd jobs. Others implicate him in
several murders and robberies throughout Colorado, California, and Utah.
However, no documentation shows that Packer was wanted for committing any
crimes. So, we can assume the accusations were more wishful thinking, trying to
make Alfred Packer appear worse than he was.
In November 1873, Packer played a bluff,
pretending to be an experienced guide familiar with mountain travel. Bob McGrue
hired him to guide nineteen prospectors to the newly discovered gold and silver
mines in the San Juan Mountains.
Things went wrong almost from the start. Heavy
snow and freezing temperatures battered the area, making travel nearly
impossible. Finally, after three months, the men stumbled into Chief Ouray’s
camp near present-day Montrose, Colorado.
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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.
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| Kansas City Fair robbery |
One account of the County Agricultural
Fair robbery at the Kansas City Exposition on September 26, 1872, has it
playing out like a B-Western. Three men wearing wide-brimmed slouch hats rode
up to the ticket office. One rider dismounted and walked up to the cashier.
“What if I was to say I was Jesse James
and told you to hand out that tin box of money? What would you say?
“I’d say I’d see you in hell first.”
“Well, that’s just who I am—Jesse James,
and you’d better hand it out pretty damned quick, or....”
The man punctuated his request by shoving
a Navy revolver in ticket-taker Ben Wallace’s face. And then, there was
some careless shooting where a young girl took a bullet before the robbers rode
away.
That may have been the way it happened,
but most papers provided a tamer view.
The robbery happened at sundown, just as
the exposition grounds were closing. Three men wearing checkered cloth “drawn
over their foreheads and below their eyes” rode up to the ticket seller’s
office. One jumped off his horse and grabbed the cash box while the other two
held the crowd at bay, pointing their guns at anyone who moved, “threatening
instant death to the first man who moved a muscle.”
Five men rode into Columbia, Kentucky, shortly
after 2 p.m. on April 29, 1872. Three hitched their horses in an alley near
Major Winfrey’s residence and walked into the Deposit Bank. The other two
positioned themselves at opposite ends of the courthouse on the public square,
where they had a view of the entire city.
Inside the bank, R. A. C. Martin worked at the
cashier’s desk. Four men sat around a large wooden table near the front door.
They included Judge James Garnett, president of the bank, Major T. C. Winfrey,
James T. Page, and William H. Hudson.
The bandits didn’t waste any time. One said,
“Good evening, gentlemen,” then pulled a pistol out of his saddle-riders,
pointed it at cashier R. A. C. Martin’s head, and fired. Martin fell forward
onto the floor. The robber then pointed his pistol at James Garnett’s head.
Garnett pushed the weapon aside, receiving a powder burn on his hand when it
went off. Another shot was fired at William Hudson, grazing his wrist. Garnett,
Hudson, and James Page ran out the door in the ensuing confusion, leaving cashier
R. A. C. Martin alone with the robbers.
The Old West wasn’t won. At least not in Dee Brown’s version.
Every treaty came with an expiration date. Every promise had an escape clause. Every time a tribe packed up and moved, somebody in Washington wanted the next piece of land.
So they moved again.
Brown takes you from the Sand Creek Massacre to the Little Bighorn, from the Long Walk of the Navajo to Wounded Knee. Along the way you meet Red Cloud, Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, Chief Joseph, and dozens of others. They negotiate, surrender, and keep their word.
The government usually doesn’t.
There’s no melodrama here. Brown simply keeps piling the evidence on the table. Army reports. Newspaper accounts. Letters. Eyewitnesses. By the halfway point, you stop wondering who’s telling the truth.
You start wondering how this ever became the version of history most of us grew up with.
Forget the Hollywood West. Forget the noble cavalry charging over the hill. This is a story about people watching their world disappear one broken promise at a time.
It’s not an easy read. It’s not supposed to be.
More than fifty years after it first appeared, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee still has the power to change the way you look at the American frontier. And once it does, there’s really no going back.
I first read the book when it came out in 1972. I was in his school then, but it turned the table on the way I looked at history. Maybe it’ll do the same for you.