Wyoming Territorial Prison – Part 3
The most infamous prisoner at the Wyoming Territorial Prison was Robert LeRoy Parker, also known as Butch Cassidy.
*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!
Maximilian and Annie Parker, Robert’s parents. Robert was the eldest of 13 children.
Parker Ranch near Circleville, Utah.
By the age of 13, Robert clashed with the law. He stole a pair of trousers, and left an IOU. The store owner called the authorities who issued Robert a warning.
Cassidy hit a patch of bad luck when he bought a stolen horse for five dollars from a rustler name Billy Nutcher in Fremont County, Wyoming. Authorities caught Cassidy with the stolen horse and arrested him. His trial was held in Lander, Wyoming, where he was convicted for grand larceny and sent to the Wyoming State Penitentiary in Laramie City. Sentenced to two years of hard labor, Cassidy was incarcerated at the Wyoming Prison at Laramie on July 15, 1894.
This would be the only prison to ever hold Butch Cassidy.
George ‘Butch’ Cassidy’s (Robert LeRoy Parker) actual mug shot:
There is no record of who shared Cassidy’s cell. There were convicts incarcerated at the same time as Butch who probably knew him from his rustling days. Cassidy took every opportunity to network with these outlaws and other men while he was imprisoned, ensuring the success of his future gang, the Wild Bunch.
A lot of people wanted to be part of Butch’s gang. He was successful and seen as a celebrity among outlaws. Butch chose his gang carefully. He knew most outlaws were neither trustworthy nor reliable. He didn’t look for the hard drinkers, braggarts, bullies, and the hot-tempered. He chose with purpose…wranglers, gunslingers, sharpshooters, teamsters, safecrackers, scouts, powder men, railroaders…he chose skills. The locals, who were unhappy with the big cattlemen, railroaders, bankers and miners, all of whom took advantage of the common people, hid Butch when he was on the run. They also supplied him with fresh horses and food.
The big banks, the railroad, and the Stock Growers Associations all played a role in shrinking the West and its way of life. There was no room for open range cowboys, like Butch Cassidy, who made a living traversing the grasses and foothills of the Wild West, or for the homesteader with his fences. The outlaw, Cassidy, and his Wild Bunch targeted the powerful – the railroad, the Wyoming Stock Growers Association, and their strongest allies, the banks and the mining companies.
Upon his release he would establish the most successful band of bank and train robbers this country has ever seen. Butch and his gang, the Wild Bunch, would steal over $233,905.00 from trains, banks, and mining payrolls all over the West in five years. Cassidy, the Sundance Kid (Harry Alonso Longabaugh), Kid Curry and other Wild Bunch gang members were some of the most wanted men in four states with Pinkerton detectives, posses and bounty hunters dogging their steps. Butch and the Wild Bunch would become the country’s last horseman outlaws.
*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!
Harry Alonso Longabaugh (Sundance Kid):
Pictured below is an actual safe dynamited by Cassidy and the Wild Bunch. It is difficult to get a good photo without reflections, so you just might want to go and see it for yourself. In fact, the prison has quite a large display with lots of information about this gang…too much for me to share here!
The popular Bowler hat:
*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!
In 1901 the gang dissolved. On February 20, 1901, Butch, the Sundance Kid and Etta (also known as Ethel) Place set sail for South America from New York aboard the British steamer Herminius.
Cassidy may have died in a gun-fight with local law enforcement authorities in San Vicente, Bolivia, in 1908, or he may have returned to the United States under another identity. There is lots of conjecture, but his fate remains a mystery.
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wow – just loved reading thru this posting Laura. What a time in our history. Which reminds me I just finished the book The Lies They Told by Ellen Marie Wiseman I think it is one you might like – historical novel about “the shocking reality behind one of the darkest episodes of recent American history” Eugenics. I’d be happy to send it off to you 🙂
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I believe that forced sterilization was implemented by the Danes on the Greenlanders at one point in time as well. Will we ever learn to treat one another with respect? I had never heard of that book, Sharon. If you do send it, I will read it, but I warn you, my reading pile is tall. Ha, ha!
I am glad that you enjoyed the post! It is a lot of reading so I don’t expect too many people to take the time. 🙂
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Some of my favorite outlaws/stories. Who knew being good looking made a difference in the bandit business! 😉 “All the bandits are good looking men.” which “made it difficult to catch them for they could live in any city without attracting undue attention.” Wonderful article, Laura. The blasted out safe is quite the show & tell piece!
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The museum has photos of blasted out train cars, too, Laura. Very impressive!
I guess it isn’t a new thing to look at a face and ‘judge a book by its cover’. Sometimes we aren’t very good judges. Ha, ha! I just finished reading a book with stories about the bad girls (outlaws) of the era…some of them running with the Wild Bunch. I enjoyed the stories and was a bit shocked at the viciousness of some of them. And, of course, some were made more outlandish by the press at the time. 🙂
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Some reason could add to our thread. Perfect, I only get to the post office once a month, so a stack of books ahead works fine, just add it to your pile and if your like me – please pass it on 🥰
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Thank you, Sharon! I love to pass books on! 🙂
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