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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.”






