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  1. Outlaws of Texas

    Outlaws of Texas

    1950 · Western · 56m

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  1. Aug 10, 2017 · Some, however, were a little more complicated. Here are eight of the most notorious Texas outlaws. 8. Jim Miller 1866-1909. Jim Miller. Perhaps the most baffling Texas outlaw was James Brown ...

    • James “Jim” Miller. Few Texas outlaws can claim the kind of respectable pedigree that helped make this Jekyll-and-Hyde figure such an effective killer. A regular churchgoer who never smoked or drank, Miller served as marshal of Pecos and a Texas Ranger.
    • Sam Bass. Sam Bass cemented his place in Wild West legend with a single train robbery. In September 1877, Bass and his gang forcibly boarded a train at Big Spring Station in Nebraska, where they discovered nearly $60,000 in freshly minted $20 gold pieces en route from the U.S. Mint at San Francisco to a bank on the East Coast.
    • Doc Holliday. Even before he became known as one of the fastest hands with a six-shooter in the West, Doc Holliday had many talents. He was a dentist who set up a practice in Dallas after doctors recommended the warm Texas weather might help his tuberculosis symptoms.
    • Billy the Kid. William H. Bonney, Jr. is connected to Texas primarily through legend. Born in New York, he moved west with his family to Kansas as a boy, and the family eventually landed in New Mexico.
  2. Jan 6, 2016 · Not known as the most successful, famous or vicious outlaw, Mannen earns his spot due to his role in cultivating the outlaw culture in Central Texas. A godfather of sorts, Clement was the friend, brother, father, cousin or father-in-law to some of Texas’s most infamous outlaws including Jim Miller, Emmanuel Clement Jr., and John Wesley Hardin.

    • The Newton Boys
      The Newton Boys
    • Bonnie Parker (1910-1934) and Clyde Barrow (1909-1934)
      Bonnie Parker (1910-1934) and Clyde Barrow (1909-1934)
    • Sam Bass (1851-1878)
      Sam Bass (1851-1878)
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  4. May 9, 2021 · Now with a taste for loot, Willis joined a gang in Oklahoma, scoring about $10,000 from one bank. By about 1920, Willis and these outlaws had stolen nearly $400,000 worth of bonds and cash. Returning to Texas, Willis formed his own gang in 1921 by recruiting his brothers Jess and Doc to his outlaw lifestyle.

    • William Axford
    • John Wesley Hardin. Born on May 26, 1853, in Bonham, Texas, Hardin killed his first victim at the age of 15. He fell into a life of gambling and killing by 1869 when he was 16.
    • Sam Bass. Born in Mitchell, Indiana, on July 21, 1851, Bass made his way to Denton, Texas, by the age of 19. Bass tried his hand in horse racing before robbing trains and stagecoaches all around the United States.
    • The Fort Worth Five. Harry Alonzo Longabaugh (the Sundance Kid), left, William Carver (News Carver), Benjamin Kilpatrick (the Tall Texan), Harvey Logan (Kid Curry) and Robert Leroy Parker (Butch Cassidy) were known for planning bank robberies and being organized criminals.
    • King Fisher. Born in Collin County in 1854, Fisher ran a ranch on Pendencia Creek. The area was known as the Nueces Strip and was considered lawless. Fisher became a leader there and his ranch became a haven for criminals and drifters.
  5. Jul 25, 2018 · Texas outlaw Bill Longley arrived in Houston City in 1866 aboard a puffing steam engine at the tender age of sixteen. He wore overalls, clutching them and gaping wide-eyed at a wild west city. The six-foot tall, lanky boy scanned the railroad platform with cold, small piercing eyes, the eyes of a killer.

  6. Some, however, were a little more complicated. Here are eight of the most notorious Texas outlaws. 1. Jim Miller 1866-1909. Jim Miller. Perhaps the most baffling Texas outlaw was James Brown Miller, known as both “Killer Miller” and “Deacon Jim”. Miller regularly attended the Methodist church, and neither smoke nor drank.

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