DEAD OR ALIVE?
Few Western outlaws have been more often memorialized in story
and folklore than Butch Cassidy -- the alias of Robert LeRoy
Parker. Parker was born April 15, 1866 in Beaver, Utah, and was
raised by Mormon pioneer parents on a ranch near Circleville,
Utah. While a teenager, Parker fell under the influence of an
old rustler named Mike Cassidy. Parker soon left home to ride
the outlaw trail. For the first several years after leaving home, Parker rode
the fringe between being an outlaw and a migrant cowboy. He
worked several ranches as well as one time in a butcher shop at
Rock Springs, Wyoming, from which he took the name
"Butch"; and to not bring shame upon honest parents,
he added the name Cassidy, most likely in respect for his old
mentor. Moving from rustler, for which he served a two-year stint in
a Wyoming jail from 1894 to 1896, to master planner of the
robbery of trains, banks, and mine payrolls came naturally for
Cassidy. With his quick wit and native charm, coupled with his
fearlessness and bravery, he never lacked for willing companions
to assist in his plans. By 1896 his gang had dubbed themselves
the "Wild Bunch." This gang consisted of several
well-known Western outlaws including Harry Longabaugh, known as
the Sundance Kid; Harvey Logan, alias Kid Curry; Ben Kilpatrick,
the Tall Texan; Harry Tracy, Elzy Lay (who was Butch's best
friend), and several others.
Operating around the turn of the century, Cassidy and his
partners put together the longest sequence of successful bank
and train robberies in the history of the American West
including several in eastern Oregon. Successfully eluding the law became ever harder as the West
grew more populated and law enforcement became better organized,
however. When the railroads hired the Pinkerton Agency to chase
down Cassidy, he and Harry Longabaugh went to South America and
purchased a ranch in Argentina. After a few short years of
trying to make it as honest ranchers, the pair again turned to
easier methods of obtaining money. After robbing banks in
several South American countries, the pair was finally trapped
by troops in Bolivia.
What happened afterwards is the central myth surrounding
Cassidy. Some claim he and Sundance were killed, others
emphatically believe that another pair of outlaws were killed by
the troops and that Cassidy and Longabaugh purposefully let it
be known they had been killed. The oft-told stories relate that
the pair returned to the West and lived out their lives under
alias names and identities. Like many other Western figures,
Butch Cassidy has become larger than life. His name still
generates fond recollections from many Utah old-timers who love
to tell stories about him. Whether he died in South America or
died of old age under one of the several identities that are
attributed to him may never be fully proven.
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