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  1. The outlaw career of Dave Rudabaugh began in earnest in Arkansas in the early 1870s. He was part of a band of outlaws who robbed and participated in cattle rustling along with Milton Yarberry and Mysterious Dave Mather. [3] The three were suspected in the death of a rancher and fled the state.

  2. Nicknamed “Dirty Dave” because he rarely bathed and wore filthy clothes, he came to notoriety in the 1870s as the head of a gang of thieves and rustlers in Texas. But Rudabaugh didn’t limit his thieving to the Lone Star State.

  3. Feb 11, 2021 · And there’s no proof that he was killed in Mexico in February 1886 after terrorizing the village of Parral. And that photo of a severed head that is purported to be Rudabaugh? There’s no evidence that it’s really him.

  4. Dec 18, 2015 · The photo is believed to be the only image of Billy the Kid — whose given name was William Bonney — and Garrett together, making Abrams' $10 purchase possibly now worth millions of dollars.

    • Ryan Dailey
  5. May 18, 2023 · In October 1876, Dave Rudabaugh robbed a Santa Fe Railroad construction camp and fled south. Wyatt Earp was issued a temporary commission as deputy U.S. marshal and left Dodge City, following Rudabaugh over 400 miles towards Fort Griffin, Texas.

  6. Arkansas Dave Rudabaugh was known as an outlaw his entire life. as a child his father was killed during the american civil war, causing him and his mother to roam America his entire life.

  7. Jan 21, 2024 · The outlaw career of Dave Rudabaugh began in earnest in Arkansas in the early 1870s. He was part of a band of outlaws who robbed and participated in cattle rustling along with Milton Yarberry and Mysterious Dave Mather. The three were suspected in the death of a rancher and fled the state.

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