Sunday, November 19, 2023

DEATH BY SALTED ALMONDS? THE MYSTEROUS END OF THOMAS INCE

FOR JAYJO MCFADDEN:

11/19/1924 - After celebrating his 44th birthday (11/16/1880) aboard newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst's yacht, "Oneida," silent film maker (he will be responsible for making over 800 films), Thomas H. Ince, known as the "Father of the Western" dies at his home in Beverly Hills, California, of heart failure after bringing on an acute bout of indigestion by ignoring the peptic ulcers he is prone to by consuming salted almonds washed down by flutes of champagne (despite Prohibition being in full swing and not ended until the 18th Amendment is repealed on December 5, 1933).  Or did his ending come in a more sinister fashion at the hands of jealous Hearst or someone else on the boat?

Ince - 1922

Thomas Harper Ince is born on November 16, 1880 to English immigrants John E. Ince and Emma Ince in Newport, Rhode Island.  The middle son of three male siblings and a daughter, Ince's father is former "powder monkey" in the British navy that leaves that country's service when his ship docks in San Francisco.  The transplant finds work in America as a reporter and a coal miner before shifting to the east coast in 1887 when Thomas is seven-years-old.  Becoming involved in the Manhattan world of entertainment , John works as an actor and musical agent, while Mrs. Ince, sister Bertha, Thomas, and his brothers, John and Ralph, all work as actors too.  Thomas makes his Broadway debut at 15-years-old in revival of the 1893 play, "Shore Acres."  More work soon follows as Thomas plays child roles for several local stock companies while also spending time as an office boy for theatrical manager Daniel Frohman and starting an unsuccessful vaudeville company called "Thomas H. Ince and His Comedians."  In 1907, Ince meets actress Elinor "Nell" Kershaw and the two will marry on October 19th (the couple will produce three children).  Ince's directing career begins in 1910 when he fortuitously has a chance encounter in New York City with former acting pal, William S. Hart (soon to become the foremost Western star of silent films), who gets his friend a job at the Biograph Company with his future partner, director D. W. Griffith.  Impressed with the young actor and his willingness to take on whatever role is needed in front of or behind the camera, Ince is made a production coordinator at Biograph, a position which quickly leads to his orchestrating several films for Carl Laemmle's (the future founder and owner of  Universal Pictures) Independent Moving Pictures (IMP).  Later in 1910, when a director at IMP is unable to complete work on a small feature film, Ince convinces Laemmle to let him finish making the silent movie.  Off and running, Laemmle sends Ince to Cuba to make one-reel shorts with IMP's newest stars, Mary Pickford and Owen Moore (Ince's first contract is for three months of work at $150 a week).  Tired of trying to make movies (his favorites are Westerns and stories about the American Civil War) while hiding daily from Thomas Edison's Motion Picture Patents Company trust which is trying to corner the market on the American production of films, in September of 1911, Ince takes a position with the New York Motion Picture Company (NYMPC) co-owned by actor-financier Charles O. Baumann and actor-writer Adam Kessell Jr.  Finding out that the pair has recently established a West Coast studio, named Bison Studios, located at 1719 Alessandro Avenue (now Glendale Blvd.) to produce Westerns out of Edendale, California (now Echo Park, California), Ince convinces his two new associates that he should go out west to manage the fledgling operation.  Shortly thereafter, Ince, accompanied by his wife, his cameraman, a property man, and leading lady Ethel Grandin, moves to Southern California where he begins changing the way silent motion pictures are made.   
The Inces At The White House - 1922
William S. Hart
Laemmle

Arriving in Southern California, Ince discovers that his new "studio" isn't much more than "a tract of land graced only by a four-room bungalow and a barn," a situation the New York transplant immediately begins resolving.  Settling on a 460-acre tract of land conveniently called Bison Ranch at the point where Sunset Blvd. and Pacific Coast meet at the coastline, renting the location by the day until he is able to buy the location in whole in 1912 (he also leases 18,000 acres of Palisades Highlands between Santa Monica and Malibu that will one day become Universal Studios), Ince builds the studio of his dreams which of course is unofficially dubbed "Inceville" (before morphing into the Triangle Pictures Corporation, which in turn, will eventually become the headquarters of MGM when some of the operation is transferred to Culver City to escape the occasional winds, sands, and fog).  The first of it's kind, the studio will feature silent stages, an assortment of structures, from humble cottages to large mansions, mimicking the style and architecture of different countries, production offices, film printing labs, a commissary large enough to serve meals to hundreds of workers, dressing rooms, prop houses, elaborate sets, 300 cowboys and cowgirls, 600 horses, cattle, bison, and other livestock (kept in the surrounding hills where Ince also raises feed and garden produce), offshore beyond the breakers is a full-size brigantine suitable for conversion to a variety of sailing vessels, and a whole Sioux tribe (200 in all) living in teepees.  While the Indians, cowboys, and assorted workmen live at the studio, actors, actresses, and other personnel come to the grounds by taking red trolley cars to the Long Wharf at Temescal Canyon and then riding buckboards to wherever they are required with everything lorded over by Ince from the confines of either his production office or from his mansion atop a nearby hill above his creation.
Seaside Inceville (1919)
More Studio
Cowboys & Indians
The Ince Mansion

Revolutionizing the film industry with concepts that are still being used over 100 years later, Ince not only creates Hollywood's first major studio, but also manipulates the methodology in which movies are manufactured, introducing to the craft the "assembly line," filmmaking with individual departments under department heads that report to executive producers and producers on multiple films, while the producers report to the studio chief, Ince.  Model in place by 1913, Ince's changes to the way films are produced allows his studio to go from making one two-reel movie a week, to having his associates produce three two-reelers a week (many of them Westerns, in 1913, as director/producer, Ince will create more than 150 two-reel movies) ... written, filmed, edited, and assembled with a finished product being delivered for distribution seven days later, just in time to fulfill the public's demand for more of the new entertainment.  No longer behind the camera himself, by the end of 1913, Ince is supervising department heads and letting others like Francis Ford and his brother, John Ford, William Desmond Taylor, Reginald Barker, Henry King, Frank Borzage, and Fred Niblo craft their films, while also "discovering" or making into stars on screen talents like William S. Hart, Mary Pickford, Lillian Gish, Douglas Fairbanks Sr., and Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle.  Three fires, the last taking place on July 4, 1922, eventually destroy Inceville, but by then, Ince has relocated to what will become Culver City, on a journey that will have the filmmaker leaving NYMP, partnering with D. W. Griffith and Mack Sennett to form the Triangle Motion Picture Company (named not for the threesome, but for the aerial view of studio that is built at 10202 West Washington Blvd., and eventually becomes Lot 1 of MGM Studios and is now Sony Pictures Studios), selling his portion of Triangle to Griffith and Sennett in 1918, and starting a new studio, Thomas H. Ince Studios, on 14 acres of real estate at 9336 West Washington Blvd., after helping Adolph Zukor form Paramount Pictures (where my namesake grandfather and his brother once worked for years) ... eventually the property will be bought by Cecil B. DeMille, becomes RKO Pictures by 1928, becomes the home of Desilu Productions in 1957, and is now Culver Studios after being sold Sony Pictures Entertainment in 1991.  His films distributed by MGM and Paramount, his style of film production copied by the other Hollywood studios, and failing in several attempts to place his movies in marketplaces across the country, by the end of 1924, Ince can feel his power within the film industry starting to slip away and the studio head enters into negotiations with another major player in the business with the object of making and distributing the movies of the man's mistress.  The man of course was the legendary millionaire newspaperman, William Randolph Hearst.  
Triangle Studios Front Entrance
Movie Poster
Executive Building - Thomas H. Ince Studios

William Randolph Hearst Sr. is born in San Francisco on April 29, 1863 to 42-year-old Missouri millionaire mining engineering George Hearst (he of the famous South Dakota Homestake Mine ... an underground gold mine that will produce more than 40 million troy ounces of gold during its lifetime from 1876 to 2001, a value of more than $79,368,000,000 in 2022 dollars) and his 21-year-old wife, philanthropist and suffragist, Phoebe Elizabeth Apperson.  Recovering from the odious two years of time he spends at Harvard goofing around (among his escapades, he will have pet alligator he names "Champagne Charlie" and he will smuggle a donkey into one of his professors' room with a label on the animal that reads "Now there are two of you!"), before getting expelled for sponsoring huge beer parties in Harvard Square to sending pudding pots converted to chamber pots to his professors with a picture of each teacher deep inside, Hearst takes over his father's newspaper, the San Francisco Examiner, in 1887.  Extremely successful, the paper becomes a communication stepping stone for the newspaperman to expand across the country, adding newspapers in New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and other population centers, diversifying into book and magazine publishing (among them, Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, and Harper's Bazaar), radio station ownership, and extensive real estate ownership of properties in New York City, California, and Mexico, along with maintaining timber and mining rights inherited from his father.  And somehow he also finds time at the age of forty to marry a 21-year-old New York City chorus girl named Millicent Veronica Willson in 1903 (the couple will be married until Hearst's death in 1951 at the age of 88, a union that will produce five children); a marriage that becomes "in name only" once the newspaperman falls in love with another chorus girl, this one named Marion Davies (changed from her birth name of Marion Cecilia Douras) in 1916.
At Harvard
Millicent
Marion

Born on January 3, 1897 in Brooklyn, New York, Marion Cecilia Douras becomes the youngest member of the family (she follows three sisters, Ethel, Rose, and Reine, and older brother, Charles) of New York City lawyer and judge Bernard J. Douras and his wife, Rose Reilly.  Growing up near Prospect Park region of Brooklyn, Marion is educated at the Sacred Heart religious convent on the Hudson River (and for awhile, a convent in Tours, France), but quickly grows cold to her studies and the supervision of the institution's Catholic nuns (and it doesn't help that she is mercilessly teased for having a stutter).  As soon she gets the chance, she leaves school to pursue a dancing career, while changing her last name to Davies (following the example of her sister, Reine), and at the age of seventeen makes her debut in Philadelphia as the star chorine of the 1914 production of the musical-comedy, "Chin-Chin," which takes her to Broadway by October of the same year.  On the "Great White Way" she is an instant sensation and follows her initial hit with successes in "Nobody Home," "Miss Information," and "Stop, Look and Listen," which in turn lead to her signing a 1916 featured performer contract to appear in the "Ziegfeld Follies," and when she isn't performing, she also has a lucrative career as a model for magazine illustrators Harrison Fisher and Howard Chandler Christy.  Her stutter however prevents her from getting lines of dialogue in Ziegfeld's productions, but her beauty and dancing keep her employed, and the source of interest to the horde of werewolves that prowl Broadway nightly, including one with a huge wallet to back up his lusting fantasies, business magnate William Randolph Hearst.

The Model 
The Dancer

Seeing the still teenage Marion perform in the "Follies" at the New Amsterdam Theatre in New York City, Hearst is almost instantly infatuated by the beauty, though she is at first cool to the millionaire, who proceeds to spend every evening of the next eight weeks in a front row seat, gazing at the dancer.  He secretly also arranges for her to be photographed at a New York City studio as a Japanese geisha and white clad American bride.  At first, Davies is terrified of the attentions she receives from Hearst, but eventually, she warms to the older man when the two become intimate by the end of the year while Mrs. Hearst is on one of her frequent solo trips to Europe.  1916 also finds Marion making her screen debut modeling gowns in a fashion newsreel, which she follows up by starring in a movie she also writes, "Runaway Romany" (the film is directed by Marion's brother-in-law, producer George W. Lederer).  Shows and modeling and silent movies alternating, by 1920, Marion appears on the stage for a final time in "Ed Wynn's Carnival," before becoming a full-time screen star with her career managed by her wealthy lover, Hearst.  Always on the lookout for opportunities to enhance Marion's standing in the world of entertainment, Hearst (he will spend over $7,000,000 promoting his mistress, money worth $142,000,000 in 2022 dollars, 21-year-old Marion's first contract gives the actress $500 of her 58-year-old lover's lucre a week) forms Cosmopolitan Pictures in 1918.  Seventeen movies released by the time 1924 begins and Hearst and his mistress are relocated to Southern California, looking for more projects for Marion and reliable distribution of the product produced (previously, Paramount Pictures, Samuel Goldwyn Productions, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer have been used), the millionaire newspaperman enters into discussions with Ince to form a partnership with International Film Corporation.  On Saturday, November 15, 1924, Hearst meets with Ince at the studio head's new palatial home on thirty acres of land above the Beverly Hills Hotel in  Benedict Canyon (the property will be called Dias Dorados, "Golden Days," and feature a main house built in a California Mission style with 35 rooms, 10 bathrooms, and 11 fireplaces (later it will be discovered that the home also includes secret passages and peep holes for observing the occupants of the guest rooms in their beds) ... and a projection room for screening movies made to look like a pirate ship) where the men discuss the news of the day, home building (Hearst has just begun work on a Central Coast home in San Simeon, California that will be called La Cuesta Encantada, the Enchanted Hill, but known by most people as the legendary palace, Hearst Castle), and their upcoming partnership.  Mixing business with pleasure, Hearst asks Ince to join him and a handful of guests that evening on his yacht (Oneida, a beautiful steam vessel 220 feet in length bearing valuable artwork and luxurious accommodations) for final discussions of their partnership, maybe some deep sea fishing between Los Angeles and San Diego, and a celebration of film maker's 44th birthday on Sunday.  There is just one small problem though, Ince has to appear at the Saturday night premiere of his latest film, "The Mirage."  Hearst's solution to the issue though is to convince Ince to take the night train down to San Diego after the premiere where he can join the yacht's celebrants on the journey back to Los Angeles.  Fix agreed too, by midnight on Saturday, Ince is aboard the coast train heading south to San Diego.
1921 Movie Poster
Dias Dorados
The Hearst Yacht, Oneida

Arriving in San Diego on Saturday morning, Ince boards a waiting port tender that transports him to where Oneida is anchored in the harbor.  Greeted by Marion Davies, wearing a white captain's billed cap and holding a large bouquet of colorful birthday balloons in each hand, the producer is shown to his room before joining Hearst's and Davies' guests, a group which includes the most famous comedian in the world, "The Little Tramp," 35-year-old actor Charlie Chaplin, 30-year-old actress and screenwriter Signe Auen, 29-year-old stage and screen actress Aileen Pringle, 28-year-old film actress Margaret Livingston (rumored to be Ince's mistress), Marion Davies' sisters, Ethel and Reine, and Marion's niece Pepi, 60-year-old British romance novelist Elinor Glynn, licensed physician, screenwriter, and the 43-year-old head of Hearst's Cosmopolitan Productions, Dr. Daniel Carson Goodman (licensed, but non-practicing at the time), and 43-year-old New York-based Hearst reporter, Louella Parsons.  A fun cruise of the California coast soon becomes something else when Ince, celebrating both his 44th birthday and his imminent partnership with Hearst, ignores his doctor's recommendations on items not to consume for the sake of the filmmaker's peptic ulcer condition, and indulges in an unhealthy amount of rich food topped off with flutes of bubbling champagne and salted almonds at dinner, bringing on a bout of indigestion so acute that Ince is taken to shore, accompanied by Dr. Goodman, and put on a train to Los Angeles for medical treatment.  The train ride only makes it to Del Mar however (a journey of only twenty miles), where as Ince's condition worsens, the studio head is checked into the town's Stratford Inn where he is watched over by Goodman, local doctor Truman A. Parker, and a nurse named Jessie Howard.  The trio is discharged from watching over Ince when his wife Nell arrives in Del Mar (along with the couples' oldest son, William), and with another car ride, the producer is placed in his bed at his Benedict Canyon mansion, where his care becomes the responsibility of Dr. Ida Cowen Glasgow (Ince's personal physician).  There, on the morning of Wednesday, November 19th, surrounded by his wife, brothers, and children, weakened by his stomach issues, Ince suffers a massive heart attack and dies.  The death easily explained, a few days later after his funeral, Ince's remains are cremated and his ashes are scattered by his family in the Pacific Ocean (on the day before Christmas) while the people aboard the yacht all seem to become very reticent about discussing the mogul's death before getting on with their lives.
Greeting Ince
Headlines

Rumors of an alternate tale of Ince's "indigestion" begin almost immediately and linger to this day.  In the other reality, the real cause of Ince's death is murder in the form of the studio head being mistakenly shot by an insanely jealous Hearst, who believes he is killing Marion's paramour (not as secretly as they might like, the two have been seeing each other off-and-on for over a year), Charlie Chaplin, or the death is caused when the publisher's potshot misses Chaplin and hits Ince instead, or the killing takes place when Chaplin and Hearst fight over the newspaperman's bejeweled derringer, and when the weapon is discharged in the men's tussle, the bullet fired accidentally hits the birthday celebrant.  And there is talk that Ince is killed by Livingstone for raping the young actress when the two first meet, intimacy that will eventually lead to Davis and Hearst adopting the little girl the actress gives birth to)  Seemingly backing up the bullet version of Ince's death are some of the actions of the yacht's guests afterwards ... Hearst's papers falsely claim that the events took place at San Simeon rather than off San Diego, Chaplin at first claims he wasn't even on the yacht the weekend of Ince's death and claims in his biography that Ince died at San Simeon and the death took place two weeks later than the mogul's death certificate reads), as does Louella Parsons as she maintains she wasn't even in California at the time.  And adding it's weight to the shooting death tale for a day, the Hearst rival LA Times runs a headline that reads, "Movie Producer Shot on Hearst Yacht!" (the headline is gone by the time the paper's evening edition is published).  The San Diego District Attorney, Chester C. Kempley, announces he is launching an investigation into Ince's mysterious death, but drops the matter after interviewing only Dr. Goodman, Dr. Parker, and nurse Howard (she will state that the death was caused by "bad liquor") , saying he is satisfied that no criminal activity took place related to Ince's death.  But if that is the case, why does Chaplin's longtime valet and secretary, Toraichi Kono, tells his wife that he saw the producer removed from the yacht bearing a still bleeding wound to his head, and the story soon is being spread by the Beverly Hills Japanese domestic workers of numerous Hollywood luminaries.  Though not on the yacht at the time, Davies' nephew, Charles Lederer, will pass on the murder tale to director Peter Bogdanovich (and he also hears the tale from Orson Welles) when he is making his movie about the fatal yacht party, 2001's "The Cat's Meow," and writer Glyn will later claim that everybody aboard the yacht was sworn to secrecy about what happened, and in some cases, bought off with large cash payments or other goodies (and suddenly from 1924 on, a good way NOT to be invited to Hearst Castle for a weekend of partying with William and Marion is to bring up Thomas Ince's name).  Though she has money of her own from her own family and Ince's death (she will sell Dias Dorados to Universal studio head, Carl Laemmle, in 1927 for $650,000 ... a total of roughly $10,000,000 in today's dollars) Nell Ince is said to flee to Europe after her husband's death (she actually goes seven months later) and uses her secret "hush" assets to build a seven story manor on Franklin Avenue called Chateau Elysee (among its residents will be Edward G. Robinson, Bette Davis, Errol Flynn, Katharine Hepburn, Carole Lombard, Humphrey Bogart, Clark Gable, and Cary Grant), and across the street, an apartment building called Villa Carlotta (Marion Davies will have an apartment there for a time, as will Louella Parsons, who gets to reside in the penthouse unit, the building's only two-story abode).
Chaplin & Kono
Livingston
Chateau Elysee
Villa Carlotta

Though she at first claims to not even be in California during the yachting party, newspaper columnist Louella Parsons is most certainly a member of the celebration off San Diego, works for William Randall Hearst, and seemingly benefits greatly from keeping her mouth shut about Ince's death.  Born Louella Rose Oettinger in Freeport, Illinois on August 6, 1881, the 43-year-old Parsons writes her first movie gossip column for the Chicago Record Herald in 1914, and begins working for Hearst in 1918 when the businessman buys the Chicago paper.  Moving to New York City, she then writes for another Hearst newspaper, the New York Morning Telegraph, and comes to the millionaire's attention when she publishes an interview with Marion Davies (heaping praise on the former showgirl, the two women will become good friends afterwards and in 1923, Parsons will sign on with Hearst to become the $200-a-week motion-picture editor of the New York American, where her continuing praise of Davies leads to     a new cultural catchphrase due to Parsons ongoing use of it in almost every one of her columns ... "Marion never looked lovelier."  After Ince's death, Parsons will be a founding member of the New York Newspaper Women's Club, make Palm Springs a popular resort for Hollywood stars after she spends months there battling tuberculosis, take her gossip column to the radio in the 1930s, appear in bit parts in a number of films, and becomes known as the "First Lady of Hollywood," for the make-or-break power she wields in her column, a column which at it's height will be read by over 20 million people a day, appears in over seven hundred newspapers around the world, and lasts until December of 1965.  A huge success, but for the rest of her life (she dies of arteriosclerosis in Santa Monica nursing home on December 9, 1972 at the age of 91) and beyond, there is speculation that Parsons makes good, thanks to Hearst's support because she never admits to being on the yacht when Ince dies, and never writes about the subject in her gossip column; while additionally years later, being one of the most vocal critic's of Orson Welles's 1941 fictional take on the newspaper mogul's life, "Citizen Kane."
Parsons, Davies, Hearst, Chaplin, Valentino
Parsons
Citizen Kane

All the players now gone for many years and Ince's body cremated, the mogul's death is officially ruled heart failure ... and perhaps that is exactly what happened.  At the funeral service of Ince on Friday, November 21, 1924, the filmmaker's body lays in his open coffin for viewing for an hour and no one reports any bullet wounds (along with family, attending the service will be Davies, Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and comedian Harold Lloyd ... noticeably absent is Hearst).  Tired of repeatedly being questioned about events on his yacht in November of 1924, Hearst years later will state to a journalist, "Not only am I innocent of this Ince murder, so is everybody else!"  While Ince's widow will frustratingly complain, "Do you think I would have done nothing if I even suspected that my husband had been the victim of foul play on anyone's part?"  Indeed ... and yet, why does Parsons write about coming to power as a gossip queen based on a "gruesome story," but never elaborates on details of that story, while legendary silent film director, W. D. Griffith will say of the matter in public, "All you have to do to make Hearst white as a ghost is mentioning Ince's name.  There's plenty wrong there, but Hearst is too big to touch."  And there is actress Lita Grey, Chaplin's second wife (she is 15 and pregnant when the couple secretly marry in Empaime, Sonora, Mexico in 1924), who will glory in later years in telling the story supposedly told to her by Chaplin, on how the actor almost died aboard Hearst's yacht in 1924.  Pick the reality you prefer, no one but God and his ghosts will ever know for sure what took place, but if your choice is for sex, murder, and conspiracy, along with numerous articles and discussions on the Internet, one can explore those scenarios in the 1996 novel, "Death at San Simeon" by Hearst's granddaughter, former kidnap victim Patricia Hearst and writer Cordelia Frances Biddle, the 1999 film about the making of "Citizen Kane," "RKO 281" (in which screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz is depicting telling Orson Welles about Ince's death), premiered in Los Angeles in 1997, there is playwright Steven Peros' take on the yacht, the play "The Cat's Meow," and the 2001 movie version of the play directed by Peter Bogdanovich (he is told the murder story while interviewing Orson Welles) and starring Kirsten Dunst as Marion Davies, Edward Hermann as Hearst, Cary Elwes as Ince, and Eddie Izzard as Chaplin.
Movie Poster

As for the trio of celebrities at the center of the rumors, Charlie Chaplin will go on making movies, both silent and speaking, until 1967, be kept from re-entering the United States in 1952 because of his association with the Communist Party and personal peccadillo's involving his taste for teenage girls in his bed, wins three Academy Awards (two honorary and one for the music he composes for the movie, "Limelight"), receives a long standing ovation (12 minutes in length, the longest ovation to date in Oscar history) from the audience at the Academy Award ceremonies of 1972 after his triumphant return to the United States after an absence of 20 years, and dies in his sleep after suffering a stroke at his home in Switzerland on Christmas Day of 1977 at the age of 88.  Hearst will continue with his many ventures until things go south for him during the 1930s and his bankruptcy (he is in debt for millions and can't pay the interest on the many loans he has taken) is narrowly avoided.  His health failing, Hearst will die in the Beverly Hills mansion he shares with Davies on August 14, 1951 at the age of 88 after suffering a heart attack.  Davies, the #1 film star in 1924, will go on making movies until 1937, hosts with Hearst, gatherings for Hollywood luminaries and the elite of the world at their Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, and San Simeon residences, helps keep Hearst solvent by giving the newspaperman monies she collects from selling off real state, jewelry, and artwork she has acquired over the years, marries a sea captain in Las Vegas after Hearst's death (by this time she is a raging alcoholic that drinks from the time she awakes until she falls asleep at night ... her marriage to the sea captain will last until her death, although she twice files for divorce from the man), gives massive sums of money to various charities, and dies as a result of malignant osteomyelitis (a bone infection) in Los Angeles in 1961 at the age of 64 (she will leave behind an estate valued at $20 million, equivalent to $195,857,461 in 2022); her funeral at Hollywood's Immaculate Heart of Mary Church will be attended by a who's-who of movie makers that includes "America's Sweetheart," actress Mary Pickford, Pickford's third husband, actor Charles "Buddy Rogers," silent comedian Harold Lloyd, movie star Glenn Ford, Clark Gable's last wife, actress Kay Williams, and Olympic swimmer and Tarzan actor Johnny Wiessmuller.
Dinner At Hearst Castle - Chaplin, Writer George Bernard Shaw, Marion, MGM Studio
Boss Louis B. Mayer, And Actor Clark Gable
Hearst And His Dog Helen
At San Simeon
Marion's Funeral

Mostly forgotten now, under strange circumstances, revolutionary pioneering movie mogul, Thomas Harper Ince, passes away in Beverly Hills at the age of 44 on November 19, 1924.        
Ince



       









  






     




            





  









 

Monday, October 9, 2023

WILD WEST OUTLAWRY, SOUTHERN STYLE

10/9/1890 - Not as well known as many of the outlaws of the Wild West, the criminal resume of Reuben Houston "Rube" Burrow, a bandit that with his brother Jim and various associates had terrorized Alabama, the Indian Territory, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas for four years, comes to it's unsurprisingly conclusion on October 9, 1890 when the bandit, having escaped from the posse that had placed him in custody the day before, instead of immediately fleeing the region, goes after Linden, Alabama merchant and part time law officer Jeff "Dixie" Carter to recover a rifle and money he was carrying before being arrested.  A bad idea, in the shootout that takes place at the entrance to Carter's store, Burrow dies from a shot to the chest at the age of thirty-four.

Rube Burrow

Settling in Lamar County in 1825, Tennessee native Allen H. Burrow moves to Alabama and marries local county girl Martha Caroline Terry in August of 1849.  The union of the two will produce ten children in all, five boys and five girls, two of the brothers will eventually become bandits, while oldest brother, John, confines his law breaking to harboring his brothers while they are on the run from the law, and youngest family member, Ann Eliza, will serve as a secret conduit for communications between the brothers, their family, and various local associates.  Reuben, the chief lawbreaker in the family, is born on Monday, December 11, 1854, while his partner in crime, his youngest brother, James Buchanan "Jim" Burrow, is born four years later in 1858.  Nothing out of the ordinary in either of the boy's childhoods, Rube has no loftier goals in life than to marry, raise a family, and support his kin through the sweat of his brow as a farmer.  As a youth of eighteen, Rube leaves Alabama and goes to work on his uncle's ranch in Stephenville, Texas, saving money to someday buy his own place.  In 1876, he marries Virginia Catherine Alverson (the union will produce two children that will be raised by Reuben's parents), but she dies in 1881 of yellow fever.  Dreams of normalcy not quite dissuaded as Burrow becomes the county's crack cowboy, capable of herding cattle through the Texas wilderness, converting broncos into ranch horses, and hitting anything he aims at with his rifle or revolver, he marries again in 1884 to Miss Adeline Hoover of Erath County, Texas, but disaster strikes when he loses an entire season of the crops he has planted on his farm and separates from his wife.  Thirty years old and his only crimes putting his brand on a handful of unmarked steers, something snaps inside the Texan and he decides it will be easier to steal the money he needs, rather than work for it against the vagaries of fate.  Putting together a small band of outlaws, on December 1, 1886, Rube leads his brother Jim, Nep Thornton, and Henderson Bromley in morning robbery of the Fort Worth and Denver Railway train stopping at the town of Bellevue in the Indian Territory.  Attacking as the train stops at a water tank a few hundred yards from the train station, everyone wearing masks, Thornton keeps his weapon on the engineer and fireman, while the two Burrows and Bromley go through the train robbing it's passengers of roughly three hundred dollars in cash, over a dozen watches, and a brace of Colt revolvers belonging to a small squad of buffalo soldiers escorting a handful of miscreants to prison (Burrow offers to free the men, but they would all rather remain in custody than have more serious charges added to their sentences).  Believing the express car is filled with armed guards, the outlaws avoid the car and miss out on greatly increasing the amount of their loot.  Mounted, the men ride off and aren't seen again until they resurface on January 23, 1887 at the train depot in Gordon, Texas.
Before Going Rotten
The News

Improving on their robbery techniques, at about 11:30 in the morning the gang covers the engineer, fireman, and conductor with their weapons and move the train a few hundred yards out of the city.  On the group's second robbery, the Texas and Pacific Railway is plundered of $2,275 from the Pacific Express Company (after a ten minute battle with the express agent that has the gang fire over fifty rounds into the car before the man surrenders) and over $2,000 in assets robbed from the train's registered mail.  Then retreating into a nearby forest where they have hidden their mounts, the gang rides off to the north to throw pursuit off, before circling south and turning back on a path to their homes, where to not raise attention, the men go back to their ranching activities.  Ill-gotten gains put to good use, the Burrow Brothers buy a small ranch with the money their robberies have produced, and hire a future gang member, William Brock.  No repercussions from their robberies yet to find any of the men, in May of 1887, the outlaws are ready to strike again, but an uncooperative Mother Nature unleashes a storm on the region and the men are unable to cross the swollen Brazos River until the beginning of June.  Picking the lonely whistle stop of Ben Brook, Texas (a small town about a hundred miles south of Fort Worth), on June 4, 1887, the men hide in a stand of trees until early evening, then descend on another train belonging to the Texas and Pacific Railway, moving it forward on to trestle where the robbers depredations can not be interfered with (Rube Burrow and Bromley blacken their faces with burnt cork, while Jim Burrow and Brock use pocket handkerchiefs as masks).  On the gang's third robbery, they leave Ben Brook over $2,500 wealthier than when they arrive and again vanish into the vastness of Texas without any problems, easy larceny that makes Rube decide to visit the town again in September, and surprisingly, the robbery comes off without a hitch as the gang recreates its June activities against the same railroad employees as before, leaving with between $2,500 and $30,000 in railroad assets.  Still unknown to authorities, in November Rube and Jim decide to return to Alabama for a visit with their folks in the company of Jim's wife and Rube's two children.  A break from ranching and robbery, the brothers spend time with mom and dad, other relatives, say hello to numerous friends, and walk the streets of the county seat, Vernon, unmolested.  Returning to Texas in December, the gang assaults a train belonging to the St. Louis, Arkansas, Texas Railroad at a small train station in the town of Genoa, Arkansas, north of the town of Texarkana.  Jumping aboard and covering the engineer, the train is brought to a stop less than a mile outside of town where the rest of the bandits are waiting.  The first train robbery to hit the Southern Express Company in seventeen years, the band of outlaws ride off with a gain of over $10,000 to $40,000 in plunder (unfortunately for the desperadoes, some of the money has been collected for the Illinois state lottery and is under the protection of the William Pinkerton Detective Agency), but the heist doesn't go as easily as expected ... another express agent refuses to open the door to his car and the train robbers spend thirty minutes converting the man's hiding place into a wooden block of Swiss cheese before then threatening to transform the car into ashes.  And this time in their retreat back to their ranching duties (after the Burrows and Brock engage with a posse out of Texarkana before escaping), clues are left behind in the form of two rubber coats and a slouch hat (sold in the small town of Dublin) that are identified as belonging to the outlaws, but their the trail blanks out .... for a time.
Robbing Passengers - True West Illustration
Headlines
Rube (L) And Jim

Visiting the local villages and ranches in the region, the clues at first appear to be dead ends, no one knows what the cost mark of "K. W. P." inside the hat means or who the coats belong to.  Eventually though, a detective arrives in Alexander, Texas and meets the salesman that sold the coats to a man he identifies as Brock, and a few days later Brock's home is near Dublin is located and he is traced to being in Texarkana, while at the same time, a different Pinkerton agent hones in on a Waco, Texas man who seems to have suddenly come into a great amount of money which he is lavishly spending, a man named Brock that hangs around with two Alabama brothers named Burrow, men that fit the description of the train robbers.  Deciding they have enough hard evidence that would behoove the detectives to find more, Brock is arrested on the last day of 1887 and then "sweated" by the Pinkertons, with the 5'11" 180-pound 31-year-old illiterate being identified as one of the men involved in the robbery by the train's engineer and several witnesses stated they'd seen Brock around Genoa's train depot prior to the robbery.  Cracking in less than a week, Brock soon admits to participating in the robbery, identifies his companions as being the Burrows, and gives details about the gang's other train jobs, while also giving out the Lamar County, Alabama location of his confederates (for his help with the case, Brock will be given a very light sentence).  Lamar County now the hot spot of the hunt, as 1888 begins, three Pinkertons, Assistant Superintendent John McGinn, Carney, and Wing, meet up with County Sheriff Fillmore Pennington and come up with a sting operation out of Vernon in which they pose as capitalists from Galveston seeking to buy land in the area, with hopes that the bogus offers for Lamar County real estate will perk the curiosity of the brothers and lead to surprise arrests the next time the men are in town.  Seeing through the ruse however, both Burrows stay out of Vernon (it is also raining heavily in the area) and keep track of the detectives and sheriff with the help of their families and friends.  Coming up with a more aggressive plan to put the brothers into custody, on the evening of January 10, 1888, a posse consisting of Superintendent McGinn, Deputy Sheriff Jerry, Sheriff Pennington, and Pinkerton Detectives Williams, Carney, Wing, and Wilbosky ride for the home of suspect Jim Burrow ... there is a problem however, Deputy Sheriff Jerry, serving as the group's guide incorrectly identifies the wrong home as belonging to Burrow ... not once, not twice, but three times.  Darkness over by the time the team finally heads for the right home, the advantage of surprise gone, the posse is within 150-yards of Jim Burrow's place when the outlaw spies the men's approach,  Grabbing his Winchester rifle, Jim throws a few rounds the posse's way before bolting out of the back door and vanishing into a nearby forest.    
Brock

For the next two weeks the bandits remain in the area, hidden by family and friends (typical of the Robin Hood tales told about Burrow during this period is that the outlaw disguises himself and actually joins one of the large posses chasing him, and that he pays $700 for a meal at a lonely widow's cabin so she will be able to make her mortgage payments to the bank and then robs his money back once the banker has shown up at the cabin to receive the woman's money).  Finally deciding that it is safe enough to leave the area the authorities are searching, seeking to put some distance between themselves and the Pinkertons, the Burrows board a southbound passenger train belonging to the Louisville and Nashville Railway at Brock's Gap, Alabama.  Immediately the heat is turned up once more on the manhunt for the train robbers when the engine's conductor thinks his new passengers look like the Burrows and he sends a telegram ahead asking for a Montgomery, Alabama police officer to meet the train when it pulls into the town's depot.  Pulling into Montgomery in a downpour, the train is met by Captain John W. Martin of the Montgomery Police Department, who in turn is joined by the station's regular police presence, Officer McGee.  Suspicious characters identified by the conductor, pretending they're railroad men, the pair offer to show the two Burrows a place to stay for the evening and secretly guide the pair towards the town's jail.  Arriving at the entrance door to the facility, Martin announces to the men that they are under arrest, but those words instantly set off the outlaws and after a brief scuffle the pair flee down the street with Rube disappearing after exchanging gunfire with a local printer named Neil Bray, who tries to help the authorities and is almost killed by a bullet to his chest.  Meanwhile, less swift and lucky than his older brother, Jim Burrow trips over a fire hydrant making his escape and is quickly swarmed into custody, eventually confessing to his name and crimes.  Police and citizens swarming about the region, just before evening the next day, two officers locate Rube hiding in a cabin in the black section of town.  Once again, fleetness of foot and marksmanship allow Rube to escape the authorities through a nearby swamp, but only after using up the last of his bullets and taking a wounding load of number eight birdshot to his face and neck that the outlaw will carry with him for the rest of his life.  Out of the swamp, Burrow steals a pair of boots and a horse and riding hard through the night, loses any pursuit coming his way in the forested bottom lands of the Alabama River.
Escaping A Posse
Jim Burrow

Meanwhile, a belligerent Jim Burrow is placed in custody and then sent to Texarkana to stand trial for train robbery, and for the next few months, breaking him out of jail becomes Rube's number one priority.  Making his former ranch hand, Lewis Waldrip (his real name is Leonard C. Brock, though he is not William Brock's brother, the same last name for two of the outlaws is a coincidence, and in a ruse to make the new Burrow Gang more feared, the cowboy calls himself Joe Jackson after one of the ferocious outlaw lieutenants of the Sam Bass Gang), his new partner in outlawry, Burrow returns to Lamar County where he hides out with Jackson while formulating a plan to free Jim (hiding in plain sight, part of the time the men work on a plantation picking cotton).  Not to be, in October of 1888, Burrow receives word that his brother has died in jail from a mysterious disease which is now believed to have been tuberculous.  Brother gone, Rube shifts back to being a train robber again, hitting a northbound Illinois Central train at Duck Hill, Mississippi on the evening of December 15, 1888.  While the outlaws take over $2,000 from the express car, Conductor John Wilkenson, armed with a revolver, and a young passenger from Jackson, Tennessee, Chester Hughes, armed with a Winchester .38-caliber rifle belonging to a black passenger, attack the express car bandits ... a bad decision that costs Hughes his life, compliments of three slugs that hit the man's stomach within six inches of each other from the rifle of Rube Burrow (brought back to the coach he was riding in, Hughes dies in the arms of his sister a few minutes later).  Leaving authorities clueless as to who the bandits are, Burrow and his partner vanish into the wilds of Alabama, highly amused that their crimes are being blamed on another desperado named Eugene Bunch.  Hiding out again in Lamar County, protected by family and friends, Rube foolishly draws the wrath of law enforcement down on his supporters when he murders another man in July of 1889 in the town of Jewel, country storekeeper and the town's postmaster, 41-year-old Moses Jobe Graves.
Rube
Jackson

Seeking to effectively disguise himself while in hiding, in 1889, Rube orders a wig and moustache from a novelty company in Chicago.  Paying five dollars for the items, Burrow requests that the order gets sent to Lamar County for pickup by a W. W. Cain.  A problem with the order arises though when postmaster Graves receives Burrow's poorly secured package with some of it's contents protruding, and curiosity tickled, he opens the order and discovers the disguise.  Taking on more authority than he is invested with, Graves refuses to release the order to Burrow's brother-in-law, Jim Cash, and when he gets the word about what has happened, an angered Rube goes to Graves' store to pick up his own mail.  Entering the store as evening falls, Rube finds Graves sorting that day's mail with a female clerk, and once more, the request that the order be released is refused by the postmaster as Burrow's blood begins to boil.  "I have such a package," Graves responds to Burrow's request, "but don't propose to give it to you," after Rube identifies himself as W. W. Cain.  "Then take that," Burrow responds, pulling his pistol and shooting the postmaster in the chest.  "I guess you'll not open any more of my mail!"  Turning his gun on the clerk, he then tells the woman to give him his order, which she does with alacrity.  Disguise received and made useless by the killing of Graves, Burrow flees into the night as once again the county floods with law enforcement agents, this time with a big difference though, with the killing, Burrow has lost the support of the community that had formerly sheltered the outlaw.
Pinkerton Flyer

Deciding that the best reason to leave Lamar County is to pull off another train robbery, in September of 1889, Burrow and Jackson, accompanied by a new associate, Burrow's cousin, 28-year-old Rueben Smith, and ride out of the state following the Tombigbee River, eventually reaching the town of Buckatunna, Mississippi, roughly seventy-three miles north of Mobile.  The town a stop for the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, scouting sixty miles of Mississippi wilderness, Burrow selects a railroad trestle on Buckatunna Creek as the site for his seventh train robbery.  Launching their raid in the early morning hours of Wednesday, the 25th, the outlaws follow the outline of their other successful robberies (the entire job lasts a little less than thirty minutes), control is gained over key individuals of the train's personnel (Burrow begins the job by using the same words he has used at Genoa and Duck Hill, "Don't be uneasy.  I intend to rob this train or kill every man on it."), the engine is moved on to a convenient trestle, and before vanishing into the night, the express car is plundered of $4,000 in cash and registered mail.  Job completed (Before fleeing the scene, Burrow will quip to his captives, "Listen you, tell that boss of yours that I won't rob no more of his old cars unless he puts steps on them, it's too much trouble"), the men make their way back to Lamar County (incredibly, while one of the biggest manhunts in U.S. history takes place in Alabama, Burrow spends a whole day chatting about his life with a reporter for the Atlantic Constitution).  Enjoying his looted wealth, Smith decides to enhance his plunder by joining up with an outlaw buddy named Jim McClung and taking down the disbursing officer of the Indian agency at the town of Kavanaugh, but the men change their minds when they note the amount of peace officers in the area and make their way back to Alabama, before they reach shelter though, both bandits are arrested in the waiting room of the train station at Amory, Mississippi by three members of the local police force (McClung goes peaceably, but Smith has to be beaten into his handcuffs and custody ... jail the next stop for both men, Smith will sentenced the following year to life behind bars for his role in the Buckatunna robbery). 
Smith

Hidden in back rooms, barns, and hay lofts, only coming out at night, the pair of bandits still on the loose determine in October of 1899 to leave Lamar County and relocate to some safer spot in Florida (easier said than done, authorities will spend months chasing Burrow and Jackson across southern Alabama, and in two days of misery for everyone involved on both sides, Pinkerton agents will spend two days of outlaw hunting chasing Burrow over Blount County, Alabama's Raccoon Mountains before turning away from the desperado after having Pinkerton agents William Penn Woodard and Harry Annerton shot to death, three possemen severely wounded, and four tracking hounds exhausted into death).  Crossing the Alabama River at the town of Gainsville, the men split up with plans to rendezvous with each other in a couple of months to plan another train robbery, but never meet up again as Jackson is located in Lamar County, secretly followed, and then arrested by over a dozen agents while riding a Georgia Pacific train at Columbus, Mississippi (put in irons, Jackson will be brought to Memphis, Tennessee, and confesses to his part in Burrow's robberies, but unable to face being hung or sentenced to life in prison for his crimes, commits suicide on November 10, 1890, by jumping headfirst from the top of the four story cellblock where he is being kept, a jump of sixty feet).  No outlaw confederates remaining at liberty, the authorities believe Burrow will recruit a new gang from various associates, but the man now being called the "King of Train Robbers" decides his deadly criminal talents are adequate enough to not require partners and goes into action next by his lonesome, after spending weeks hiding out in the swamp lands of northwest Florida's Santa Rosa County (1,260 square miles of wilderness, occupied by only 7,500 people), sleeping out in the open every night and never venturing inside any roofed buildings.  On the night of September 1, 1890, the outlaw hits the northbound express of the Louisville and Nashville Railway at Flomaton, Alabama (about 75 miles north of where Burrow has been hiding).  Both revolvers pulled, Burrow takes control of the engine and the engineer, has the train moved forward to a bridge over the Escambia River (about a mile to the north of the depot), simulates there is a bigger gang of outlaws involved by emptying a pistol into the darkness on first the left side and then the right side of the train while calling to a host of invisible fiends, forces the engineer to break into the express car using a coal pick, has the Southern Express Company messenger put loot from his car in a sack, and then vanishes into the night with a meager reward for his dangerous exertions of only $256.19.  The escapade will be Burrow's last train robbery.
Where The Postmaster Died
Escambia River Bridge
Wanted Poster

Fatally weary of Burrow's criminal transactions, the authorities flood the region with money and operatives to end the outlaw's career, and in 1890, their efforts finally bear fruit.  Guided by a Judas named John Barnes, who had tried to join Burrow's gang the year before, a posse led by Southern Express Company detective Thomas Jackson, moves in on a cabin belonging to a Burrow associate named Welles, but leaves the area when Jackson receives a report that Burrow has returned to Alabama, but he hasn't.  Unaware that Barnes has been helping the authorities, Burrow shows up on the man's front door asking for breakfast (Barnes believes he is about to be assassinated for working with the authorities, but Burrow never acknowledges recognizing the man, and after finishing his breakfast and purchasing some supplies, the bandit heads into the woods.  Positive identification made, posses focus on nearby Alabama River crossings and close in on the outlaw, with his trail freshest for two trackers that Jackson sends forth to cover the eastern bank of the river ... local planter John McDuffie and local farmer and merchant, Jefferson Davis "Dixie" Carter (he is named after the former president of the Confederacy).  Assets arrayed for Burrow's downfall, the two men soon receive word from two colored sharecroppers, Jesse Hildreth and Frank Marshal, that Burrow is at the abandoned cabin of another black man named George Ford, a cabin in an open field where anyone approaching can be seen from 200 yards away.  Storming the locale out of the question, duplicity is decided upon and Hildreth and Marshall again act as if they want to help the outlaw in his flight.  
The George Ford Cabin Where Burrow Is Captured
Jesse Hildreth (Seated) And Frank Marshall
- The Two Black Farmers That Assisted In The 
Burrow Arrest

Duped, totally unsuspicious, Burrow is making ready to depart the cabin at about 1:00 in the afternoon when he hands Hildreth his prized Marlin rifle for wrapping in an oil cloth.  Dropping the weapon upon completing its wrapping, Burrow is distracted for a split second and Hildreth and Marshall jump on the outlaw and a brutal fight starts in which Hildreth tries to maintain a grip on Burrow as his smaller partner, Marshall, jumps in to assist, getting paid for his efforts by the outlaw biting into Marshall's shoulder with his teeth and stomping on Hildreth's bare feet as the trio crashes about the cabin.  No time given to signal McDuffie and Carter that they can approach, the men hear the commotion coming from Ford's cabin and rush forward just as Burrow is about to break free and leap out of the structure's front door.  Weapons drawn and Burrow covered, the outlaw is disarmed and searched, being found to be in possession of his Marlin rifle, a .45-caliber revolver, a Bowie knife, a greasy cloth travel bag, and $175 in cash.  The largest city in the area Demopolis, Alabama, about eighteen miles away, the decision is made to take the prisoner to the county seat of Linden, Alabama, a journey of only nine miles.  Hands tied in front, arms pinned to his body by tight cords of rope, and feet tied under the animal he will be riding, Burrow is placed on McDuffie's horse, with McDuffie mounted behind the bandit, and accompanied by Carter, Hildreth, and Marshall, the five men uneventfully make it to Linden just as night is falling.  The Linden sheriff and his keys absent as the man is out in the countryside trying to track down the now captive Burrow, the outlaw is placed in one of the rooms in the jail, still bound with iron shackles around his ankles with a chain securing them to the floor.  There, Burrow spends the next several hours entertaining the many visitors he receives with comedic stories of his numerous criminal escapades.  Hands untied when dinner is brought to the jail for the outlaw, the jail slowly empties out until only McDuffie, Hildreth, and Marshall remain guarding the prisoner (though there are over forty armed possemen about the town).  Tired and not feeling well after his day of exertions, Carter goes across the street to his store for some rest, carrying Burrow's rifle and his money.
Carter (Top) & McDuffie (Bottom)

Infamous for his bold moves and doing the unexpected, Burrow unleashes one more role of the dice to regain his freedom.  Still up, at 4:00 in the morning, the outlaw tells his jailors that he is hungry after his long day, and when told that nothing is available in town that late at night, the bandit overs a compromise, stating that his traveling bag, deposited on the courthouse steps by George Ford, contains an assortment of fruits and snacks that should keep the outlaw satisfied until his official jail breakfast can be served.  Sack given to Burrow after passing through McDuffie's quick check for contraband, the outlaw returns to his story telling while sharing ginger snaps and candy with McDuffie, Hildreth, and Marshall.  Captors in a state of compliancy after spending hours with the friendly desperado, no one responds quickly enough to stop Burrow once he reaches into the bottom of his sack and pulls out a revolver instead of another cookie.  Not a comic anymore, Burrow covers the men with his weapon as he is released from his bindings while threatening to blow off the head of anyone who gives him trouble ... McDuffie is relieved of his gun and then put in Burrow's shackles, then Marshall is shackled to McDuffie.  Wanting his rifle and money returned before exiting the town, taking the key to the jailyard, Burrow exits the jail demanding that Hildreth take him to wherever Carter has retired to for his rest.  Being told the man he is seeking is across the street, the pair walk across the quiet street where Burrow, pretending to be a railroad detective, knocks on the door to the store until a clerk answers and the man is told that Carter is wanted immediately at the jail   Hearing his presence is requested, Carter leaves the room he was resting in and walks to front of the building, where he is startled to find the armed bandit standing in the doorway.  "Give me my money or I'll shoot your head off," Burrow commands from behind his revolvers, but it is an order which Carter refuses to obey though he tells the outlaw "All right."  Not alright at all, instead of complying, Carter reaches into his pocket and brings out a .32-caliber Smith & Wesson pistol.  Reacting to Carter drawing his weapon, Burrow fires on his opponent, but anticipating the outlaws reaction he throws his body violently to the right, and instead of being hit in the chest, Burrow's bullet goes through the businessman's left shoulder, just above his collarbone ... an injury that Carter responds to by emptying his pistol at Burrow.as he falls to his knees.  Revolver emptied, though the men are separated by only a few feet, only Carter's fourth shot hits Burrow, but it is the only hit necessary  Dead facing his enemy and with his boots on, hitting the outlaw in the upper abdomen, the inevitable round punches through Burrow's portal vein and he too drops to the floor, bleeding out into death in seconds.  The outlaw is thirty-four years old.
Gunfight
Scene Of The Shootout - Downtown Linden 

Celebrity status gained in death, a coroner's inquest is held that identifies the body as belonging to Burrow and how the killing took place before ruling the death as totally justified.  Those tasks completed, Burrow is treated with preservatives and sent on to Demopolis, where hundreds of locals view the body.  The outlaw then begins a train ride back to Lamar County on a locomotive traveling between Birmingham, Alabama and Memphis, Tennessee, stopping at various towns along the route for the folks that have gathered to see the corpse of the infamous outlaw, with officials estimating the body will be seen by over 5,000 Alabamians before it arrives in the town of Sulligent.  Almost home, in Sulligent the body is given over to Rube's father, Allen, by representatives of the Southern Express Company (along with being viewed by another huge crowd).  Home with daddy, the next morning, on Friday, October 10th, Burrow is buried on Friday morning at the cemetery of the Fellowship Church, about four miles northeast of the county seat of Vernon. 
Final Resting Place

While Burrow's journey stops outside the Fellowship Church, the bandit's pistols, belt, and Marlin rifle continue on to Memphis, where they are put on display at the office of the Southern Express Company and viewed by a host of newspaper boys, clerks, porters, merchants, bankers, shopkeepers, business men, lawyers, and regular citizens, the region's rich and poor, male and female, black and white ... so many folks that exhibition goes on for over a week, and Burrow's final possessions are placed in a glass case so they can't be molested by the public (too big for the case, the rifle is hung from a peg where it is out of reach).  Relief across the region as word goes out that the bandit has finally been stopped (after one of the biggest manhunts in the history of the United States), the men personally responsible for providing the outcome wanted are acknowledged and rewarded.  McDuffie, believing his error in not searching Burrow's sack better could have led to disaster, receives a pep talk from the Southern Express Company, along with the cash award the company was offering for the bandit.  A cash award is also given to Hildreth and Marshall for their part in the arrest, with Hildreth also receiving glowing praise from the Alabama governor, Thomas Seay, for his heroic actions in a published letter that is sent from the Democratic politician to the Southern Express Company.  And Burrow's killer is rewarded too, as Carter receives over $1,000 in cash, but his biggest reward though is surviving his encounter with the robber, instead of going down with a bullet in his heart.  But the rest of his life does come at a cost, his nicely timed jump changes the impact site of Burrow's bullet, putting the round into Carter's brachial plexus of nerves, causing paralysis of the shopkeeper's left arm, which he keeps supported in the cradle of a large white bandage for the rest of his life.
A Burrow Smith And Wesson Revolver
The Infamous Marlin Rifle

10/9/1890 - Rube Burrow is killed in Alabama and the position of King of the Train Robbers opens up ... again.
Burrow