Southwest Train Robberies

Regular price €22.99
A01=Doug Hocking
Agua Zarca
Apache
Arizona
Arizona Rangers
Author_Doug Hocking
Beardless Boy Bandits
Benson
Billy Breakenridge
Billy Stiles
Black Jack Ketchum
Burt Alvord
Category=DNXC
Category=NHK
Clayton
Cochise
Cochise County
Cow Boy Gang
Curly Bill Brocius
Doc Holliday
El Paso and Southwestern Railroad
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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Fairbank
Grant Wheeler
Guthrie
heists
High Five Gang
Ike Clanton
J.J. "Jack" Taylor
Jean Tullier
John Slaughter
Johnny Ringo
Kit Carson Joy
Maricopa
massacre
Matt Dillon
New Mexico

Product details

  • ISBN 9781493071104
  • Weight: 349g
  • Dimensions: 153 x 223mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2023
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In 1854, the United States acquired the roughly 30,000-square-mile region of present-day southern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico from Mexico as part of the Gadsden Purchase. This new Southern Corridor was ideal for train routes from Texas to California, and soon tracks were laid for the Southern Pacific and Santa Fe rail lines. Shipping goods by train was more efficient, and for desperate outlaws and opportunistic lawmen, robbing trains was high-risk, high-reward.

The Southern Corridor was the location of sixteen train robberies between 1883 and 1922. It was also the homebase of cowboy-turned-outlaw Black Jack Ketchum’s High Five Gang. Most of these desperadoes rode the rails to Arizona’s Cochise County on the US-Mexico border where locals and lawmen alike hid them from discovery. Both Wyatt Earp and Texas John Slaughter tried to clean them out, but it took the Arizona Rangers to finish the job. It was a time and place where posses were as likely to get arrested as the bandits. Some of the Rangers and some of Slaughter’s deputies were train robbers. When rewards were offered there were often so many claimants that only the lawyers came out ahead.

Southwest Train Robberies chronicles the train heists throughout the region at the turn of the twentieth century, and the robbers who pulled off these train jobs with daring, deceit, and plain dumb luck! Many of these blundering outlaws escaped capture by baffling law enforcement. One outlaw crew had their own caboose, Number 44, and the railroad shipped them back and forth between Tucson and El Paso while they scouted locations. Legend says one gang disappeared into Colossal Cave to split the loot leaving the posse out front while they divided the cash and escaped out another entrance. The antics of these outlaws inspired Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid to blow up an express car and to run out guns blazing into the fire of a company of soldiers.

Doug Hocking lives in southeast Arizona, where he has frequently visited the site of Forts Buchanan and Breckenridge, Cochise’s Stronghold, Johnny Ward’s Ranch, and Apache Pass seeing them through the eyes of historian, ethnographer and archaeologist.