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Wild West Donald L. Gilmore |
When the James Gang Ruled the Rails After robbing banks for more than seven years, Jesse and Frank James stopped their first train in July 1873. They liked it so much that they went on to rob at least six more. |
Salon.com October 15, 2002 Allen Barra |
"Jesse James: Last Rebel of the Civil War" by T.J. Stiles The latest and best-ever biography of Jesse James tears down the myth to reveal not a latter-day Robin Hood, but a greedy, press-savvy bandit. |
Wild West Ronald H. Beights |
Jesse James and the Gads Hill Train Holdup Jesse and the gang patted children on the head, bowed to ladies, kidded around, quoted Shakespeare, targeted rich Yankees and wrote their own account of the robbery for the newspapers -- in short, they created a legend. |
Wild West William Bell |
The Reno Gang's Reign Of Terror Long before the James brothers began robbing trains, the Reno brothers tried their hand at it in post-Civil War Indiana, but the outlaw Hoosiers' reign didn't last long. |
AskMen.com Ross Bonander |
Top 10: American Outlaws Whatever the truth might be, one thing is sure: Great outlaws never die. |
Wild West Donna B. Ernst |
The Wilcox Train Robbery Six Wild Bunch members, including the Sundance Kid and Harvey Logan, used more than a touch of dynamite when they held up a Union Pacific train in Wyoming in 1899. |