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Kaitlyn Personette
American Studies Research Methods
December 8, 2013
Prof. D’Amore
Bonnie and Clyde
Bonnie and Clyde are American Legends, who swept the nation with their
ambitious crime sprees and scandalous fairy tale romance. Fact or fiction is the
question at hand when considering the two star crossed lovers. One might
question how a small group, like the Barrow Gang, would have the ability to
create such a stir in the 1920’s and while some were enemies to the group, most
idolized their courageous acts against the law. Mythologized for their conniving
deception and convincing portrayal of perfect criminals and star-crossed lovers,
Bonnie and Clyde were glorified by the media and the people.
As the general story goes, Bonnie and Clyde were becoming young adults
when the Great Depression hit America. Money was tight and times were tough,
with lack of job opportunity and prosperity, people began to go stir crazy, making
it difficult to gain control. This created a crime culture through media and
literature for those who desired to lash out. Then society had the ability to live
vicariously through their favorite criminal character, distracting them from their
depressing stunted life styles. Crime culture developed as an aftermath of the
devastating World War I. After time to settle in and grow, crime culture characters
began to directly relate to the socio-economic circumstances. This genre became
known as the, “American Hard-Boiled Crime Fiction” spanning from the, 1920’s-
1940’s, (Horsley, 2002). The Postman Always Rings Twice, Black Mask, and
Little Caesar are just three examples of the various fictional crime series of their
time. Though, John Dillinger and Pretty Boy Floyd, for example, were two real
men whose myths and repetition of stories made it into the crime culture of the
1920’s as well.
Bonnie Parker was born in Rowena, Texas, October 1, 1910. Rowena was
a low-end area that struggled, like most of America, when the depression hit. As
a teenager from this area during the 1920’s, teens found it entertaining to make
petty thefts such as taking candy from the local drug store and a soda pop from
the gas station. Bonnie did not begin to create her incriminating image and
career until a little later in life, although she was always involved with bad boys,
as legends have it. According to more than half of my resources while gathering
empirical research, including, CBS News (2013), Rich (1970), Bonnie and Clyde
(2013), and Phillips (1998), as well as the most resent source of evidence, being
the television premier on The History Channel on Bonnie and Clyde, Bonnie
Parker was married to a Mr. Roy Thornton on September 25, 1926, after
dropping out of high school at the mere age of 15, with Ms. Parkers 16th birthday
less than a week away. Mr. Thornton was a “bad boy” convict, who was thrown in
jail and frequently absent in their relationship. This created an unsettling
heartbreak with Bonnie, which made it a paralyzing thought to remove the
wedding ring from her finger for she was wearing it the day that she died
according to the autopsy reports (Rich, 1970). Interestingly enough, when Bonnie
and Clyde were documented “Wanted” people, her title was, “Wanted, Mrs. Roy
Thornton, aliases include Bonnie Barrow, Mrs. Clyde Barrow, Bonnie Parker,”
showing that she was still legally bound to Thornton (FBI).
Bonnie and Clyde may seem far from your typical teens, comparatively
looking at today, although in 1920-1940’s crime culture was booming. Pretty Boy
Floyd, formally known as Charles Arthur Floyd, was a gangster and a bank
robber from Oak Hill, Indiana. Floyd had been committing petty theft since he
was about 16, although was arrested unfortunately for the first time at age 18
after he stole coins from a local post office, approximately $3.50 (Pretty Boy
Floyd, 2009). John Dillinger, as another example was a wild and rebellious child
and teen although he grew up in a more rural section of Indiana. Dillinger had
grown up with a bewildering personality for bullying children and known for
frequently getting in trouble with the law. As a child his fighting and petty thefts
would get him in trouble by his single father, although when he was 19 he was
arrested for grand theft auto. At this point in Dillinger’s life, is where his true life of
crime began, just like Clyde (John Dillinger, 2013).
As Bonnie had a life before Clyde, Clyde had a life before Bonnie. Due to
the overpowering affects of the Great Depression, people were loosing their jobs
and homes. They did not know how they would feed their families or make their
payments. Clyde was the fifth of seven children, born into a poor farming family
in Ellis County, close Telico Texas. This is just a town south of Dallas, which is
very close to Bonnie’s hometown. Being in a large family, in the urban slums,
Clyde and his brother Buck turned to a life of crime at the early age of 16 (Bonnie
and Clyde, 2013). Clyde and Buck had stolen a car and the police chased them
down, drag racing through the streets of Texas. When the police officer finally
caught them, they were instructed to give up and go home as though they were
caught for a candy bar, not grad theft auto. Their lack of punishment was simply
due to the less rigorous law enforcement of the 1920s. When living in low-end
areas, in general, but especially during the depression there were bigger crimes
being committed that enforcement needed to stop (Schneider, 2009).
With every legend, there comes myth for when someone or something is
idolized and passed down from generation to generation, variations of that story
are created and questioned in return. Many variations of how Bonnie and Clyde
actually met are in question. For example, in the 1967 film, they first meet while
Clyde is attempting to steal Bonnie’s family car. She stares at him, down from the
window, and instead of being fearful and calling the cops, she engaged in flirty
conversation, letting him know that he has been caught red handed. Her
lackadaisical and friendly approach to stopping this crime is typical of their time
(Horsley). Bonnie said she was heading into town, just so she could get to know
the hansom devil. Some versions of their tale say that they met January 20th,
1930 at a party of a mutual friend in Texas (Bonnie and Clyde, 2013) (CBS
News, 2013). At this party they were introduced and began to talk,
instantaneously falling madly in love with each other. The History Channel
premier of Bonnie and Clyde had the most interesting approach to their first
meeting being at Bonnie Parker’s wedding to Roy Thornton. She noticed him
from afar and he gawked at her from across the room (Beatty and Dunaway,
2013).
In most, if not all, versions of Bonnie and Clyde’s story told, they were
attached to the hip from the moment they met. Bonnie was still married to the
imprisoned murderer, Thornton, and Clyde was constantly running from the law.
The couple desperately wanted to desert their mediocre lives in Texas and to run
away together. Unfortunately two weeks after their first meeting, Clyde was
throne in jail after being arrested for burglary (FBI). Bonnie could not stand the
thought of living without him and she refused to be the lover of another man in jail
so she paid him a visit. In this visit she was able to smuggle him a handgun,
which allowed him to escape; although he was recaptured shortly after. He was
thrown in jail and paroled in February 1932 (FBI).
When Clyde got out of jail he swore that he would never be in prison
again. He attempted to live a straight life for he wanted desperately to have a job
and make an honest living. He desired to have the means to buy a house and
support himself with Bonnie along with the hope to start a family. Bonnie and
Clyde were very family orientated. Whenever they had the chance, while on their
wild unlawful adventures, they would call their families to make sure everyone
was okay and doing well back at home (Guinn, Jeff, Simon, and Schuster).
This is similar to John Dillinger who had been arrested several times, for
robberies mainly. He joined the United States Navy, after knowing his fathers
grave disappointment in his rebellious acts. In attempts to straighten himself out,
Dillinger joined forces and when they eventually docked in the Boston Harbor, he
made a great escape (Dillinger, 2013). He was dishonorably discharged from the
US Navy and he proceeded to go home to his father. He eventually married his
sweetheart Beryl Hovious on April of 1924 although Dillinger, much like Clyde,
had trouble settling down. Living by the rules, finding a steady job, and keeping it
was a difficult task for those living in the Great Depression Era. Dillinger’s
marriage ended on June 20, 1929, so he did not have a partner in crime like
Clyde with his Bonnie. Feeling the emotion of failure for not being able to support
themselves or support their loved ones (in an honest way), hit Dillinger and Clyde
hard.
When the stock market bubble finally burst, on October 24, 1929, unsold
goods piled while consumer spending dropped tremendously. After millions of
shares were traded that day and a myriad of them ending up worthless, investors
were wiped out. Consumer confidence diminished, which led to a slow down in
production and employees were being let go as a result (Richardson). Since
there was such great difficulty keeping a job, finding one, created a whole new
challenge. This was a breaking point for Bonnie and Clyde, along with Dillinger
and they decided to commit to a life of crime and rebel against society. Pretty
Boy Floyd did the same as Bonnie, Clyde, and Dillinger. He did not have an
attempt to leave the dark side and become a functioning member of society but
after his release from jail, he vowed that he would never go back. He created
several connections while in the “slammer” and allied with more established
criminals in the Kansas City area (Pretty Boy Floyd, 2009). As Pretty Boy Floyd
made connections, Clyde did as well, for he recruited Ralph Fults to be the third
member of the Barrow Gang while spending time in jail together.
This was the time for these destined convicts to live out their fantasies.
They were now able to live out their Nihilistic point of views to the fullest,
rebelling against society and every person who got in their way. Nihilism was a
popular point of view in the 1920s and 30’s. It promoted an independent
construction of group programming and possibility geared toward the fact that
social organization was so horrific that people innately felt that destruction was
desirable. Bonnie, Clyde, and Ralph Hults began to travel in 1932, robbing
stores to eat and gas stations to keep moving. Buck Borrow, Clyde’s brother, was
released from the Texas State Prison on March 23, 1933 and joined the gang
with his corroborative yet unwilling wife Blanche (FBI). Clyde was the ruler of the
Borrow gang much like Roman Sionis also known as the Black Mask, in the
1930’s comic series. America loved their villians and the Black Mask was a
ruthless Gotham City mob boss who was the ruler of the False Face Society.
Like Clyde being the supreme leader of the South criminal gangland, the Black
Mask was the leader of the Gotham criminal Underworld. Clyde was fighting
against the harsh realities of society while the Black Mask was one of Batman’s
most dangerous challengers (Horsley). There was a thrill of the gray area during
this time of what was good and what was evil and who’s side was “the” side to be
on.
The Barrow Gang, now consisting of five people, were wanted by the law
but not as much as they strictly wanted Bonnie and Clyde, dead or alive. In the
History Channel’s portal of Bonnie and Clyde’s story, Bonnie wanted to be known
and held to a high degree. She drove down to the local newspaper and
threatened a women reporter who did not include her name when reporting on
the crimes Bonnie and Clyde committed (Grainger and Hirsch). Once Bonnie was
officially in the public eye she had begun to create a connection with the people
leaving her trail of photographs and letters to be found by reporters in a way that
no man would. This created a frenzy of followers and their articles were booming,
one crime after another. Bonnie showed the public the love story behind the
crimes through her Poems. For example, “The Trails End” (see Appendix A)
which portrayed them in a heroic light describing their time spent together and
the love they had to defying the law as well as love they had for each other. This
created a beacon of hope for the women who were feeding their children bread
without butter and struggling their husband’s jobless. With 13 to 15 million people
jobless in America, it made society think that if Bonnie and Clyde could survive
living on the land and love then so could they (Hunter).
The bloody trail powered by love is why society was more intrigued with
them then Dillinger or Pretty Boy Floyd. Their romance being involved was a hit,
catering to men and women during the depression era. As their nation wide crime
spree continued newspaper articles headlines stated, “WANTED for Murder and
Rape” in Arkansas (CBS, 2013). The gang embarked on a series of robberies
and murders although they were not known to be rapists. They left their trail of
evidence and law enforcements made great efforts to put a halt to their criminal
activities. In Iowa on July 29, 1933, during a shootout Buck was fatally wounded
and Blanche was captured, allowing Bonnie and Clyde to make another great
escape with their wingman Ralph Fults (FBI). Fults was eventually captured in
Huston, Texas in November of 1933, and then the two love birds were the only
ones left to be caught. All of America was watching and waiting for the infamous
Bonnie and Clyde to be captured dead or alive. It was a matter of where are they
and when will they be stopped. America was getting excited to see what was
going to happen next for they were unpredictable to the public eye. Police Texas
Ranger Frank Hamer, had been on their trail for a while and I believe that he
desired to always be linked with title of, “the man who stopped the criminal
couple of the century”. A similar thought pattern to Lee Harvey Oswald, who
assassinated JFK, and John Wilkes Booth, who was Abraham Lincoln’s
assassin. Although our presidents were not criminals, their obsessions with the
Presidents caused them to do what ever it took to have their names linked with
the others eternally (Steele, 2001).
Bonnie and Clyde committed 13 murders and several robberies and
burglaries along with suspicion on murdering two police officers at Joplin,
Missouri and kidnapping a man and a woman in rural Louisiana who they
released in Waldo, Texas (FBI). They were sighted all through out the south,
allowing links to be made, regarding bank robberies and automobile thefts and
murders from Lufkin and Dallas, Texas to Stringtown, Oklahoma. They even
kidnapped a deputy at Carlsbad, New Mexico and then made their way back into
Victoria, Texas to steal a car, then off to Wharton, Texas where they murdered
another deputy and moved onto Abilene and Sherman, Texas to rob and murder
some more. As the list goes on, their patterns became clearer and clearer to law
enforcement.
As Bonnie wrote in her poem most famous poem, The Trails End, “They
don't think they're too smart or desperate, they know that the law always wins.
They've been shot at before; but they do not ignore, that death is the wages of
sin. Some day they'll go down together they'll bury them side-by-side. To few it'll
be grief, to the law a relief but it's death for Bonnie and Clyde,” knowing that they
were never going to make it out of their adventure alive and she let the public
know that it was okay for she embraced their immanent death for it would not be
tragic but an adventurous love story indeed.
Hamer and his posse set up an ambush to catch and kill Bonnie and
Clyde on May 23, 1934 on a rural road in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Through
FBI investigations, civilian sightings, and their bloody trail of crime it was not too
difficult of a task, with combined efforts, to pin point where they would be. Bonnie
and Clyde’s two-year crime spree was about to come to an end. Just before
dawn Bonnie and Clyde were driving approximately 85 mph in a stolen, 1934
Ford, four-door Delux with a V-8 engine. The police were hiding in the bushes
and recognized the infamous couple. The opened fire put over 100 bullets in
each of their bodies, killing them instantly. The Dallas Journal read, “KILL CLYDE
BARROW AND BONNIE PARKER, OUTLAW COUPLE DIE IN BATTLE ON
ROAD WITH SHERIFF’S POSSE” (FBI).
American responded is greif when their favorite bad-ass couple of the
century were finally stopped. The bodies were brought to Conger Furniture Sore
and Funeral Polar in downtown Arcadia, Louisiana with a population of 2,000. An
estimated 10,000 people swarmed into this small town with in hours to try and
catch a glimpse of their hero’s bodies (Schneider, 2009). People lined up for
miles down the road to pay their respects and for it was the last time their bodies
would be together. Although they wanted to be buried side by side, Mrs. Parker,
Bonnies mother, wanted Bonnie to be buried with her immediate family in Dallas,
Texas. The sudden end to Bonnie and Clyde sold 500,000 newspapers in Dallas
alone. Cards were sent to Bonnie and Clyde’s respected families from Pretty Boy
Floyd and John Dillinger (Schneider, 2009). This was the beginning of the end for
the crime culture era for Dillinger and Floyd were ambushed and killed only
months after Bonnie and Clyde. Enforcement began to lock down and become
more serious than ever.
Since Bonnie and Clyde’s death the couple lives on through the
societies love of romance and crime. Movies such as, the 1967, Bonnie and
Clyde staring Beatty and Dunaway and the 2013, History Channel Premier of the
most recent portrayal of Bonnie and Clyde, staring Grainger and Hirsch,
exemplify altering versions of the legends, keeping the excitement and story
alive. Performers such as Serge Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot (1968), Eminem
(1997), Jay-Z and Beyonce (2003), Haystak (2008), and Great Northern (2012),
have all wrote songs keeping the rebellious lovers that America loves, alive and
unforgotten even in todays society.
Their unruly lifestyle and passionate love affair will never be forgotten.
Although, they were cold-blooded killers, they lived off of the land and love,
giving society an adventures hope for when times are threatening. Not only were
Bonnie and Clyde idolized when alive but they managed to keep interest in the
publics eye nearly 80 years after their defeat. No matter if their tales are true their
myth will forever live on.
Works Cited
Beatty, W. (Performer), & Dunaway, F. (Performer) (1967). Bonnie and clyde
[Television series episode]. In Beatty, W. (Executive Producer),Bonnie
and Clyde. Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.
“Bonnie and Clyde.” The Biography Channel website. 2013.
http://www.biography.com/people/groups/bonnie-and-clyde
Burnett, W. R. (1929). Little ceasar .
Cain, J., & McCoy, H. (1934). The postman always rings twice.
Cardenas, Alfredo. "My Life with Bonnie and Clyde by Blanche Caldwell Barrow;
John Neal Philips."Texas State Historical Association. 110.1 (2006): 152
154.Print. <
CBS News, . N.p.. Web. 29 Oct 2013. <http://www.cbsnews.com/8301
3445_162-054623/love-and-bullets-the-real-bonnie-clyde/>.
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Famous Cases. (n.d.).Bonnie and clyde.
Retrieved fromwebsite: http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/history/famous
cases/bonnie-and-clyde
Grainger, H. (Performer), & Hirsch, E. (Performer) (2013). Bonnie and clyde
[Televisionseries episode]. In Zadan, C. (Executive Producer), The history
channel . Sony Pictures Television.
Guinn, Jeff, Simon, and Schuster. Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of
Bonnie and Clyde. 1. 2010. Print.
Hammet, D., & Daly, C. (1920). Black mask.
Horsley, L. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.crimeculture.com/Contents/Hard
Boiled.html
Hunter, Stephen. “Clyde And Bonnie Died from Nihilism.” Commentary 127.7
2009:77-80. Academic Search Complete Web. 12 Nov. 2013.
“John Dillinger.” The Biography Channel website 2013.
http://www.biography.com/people/john-dillinger-9274804
Phillips, John. "Running with Bonnie and Clyde: The Ten Fast Years of Ralph
Fults." Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association . 39.1 (1998): Pg.
117-119. Print.
“Pretty Boy Floyde.” The Biography Channel website 2009.
Richardson, R. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.history.com/topics/great
depression
Rich, Carroll. "The Autopsy of Bonnie and Clyde."Western States Folklore
Society. 29.1(1970): 27-33. Print. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/1498682>.
Schneider, Paul. Bonnie and Clyde: the lives behind the legend. 1. Henry Holt
and Co.,2009. Print.
Steele, P. W. (2001). The family story of bonnie and clyde. Louisiana History:
The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, 42(4), 492-493.
Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/4233802
Appendix A
The Trails End
A Poem By: Bonnie Parker
You've read the story of Jesse James of how he lived and died. If you're still in
need; of something to read, here's the story of Bonnie and Clyde. Now Bonnie
and Clyde are the Barrow gang I'm sure you all have read. How they rob and
steal; and those who squeal, are usually found dying or dead. There's lots of
untruths to these write-ups; they're not as ruthless as that. Their nature is raw;
they hate all the law, the stool pigeons, spotters and rats. They call them cold-
blooded killers they say they are heartless and mean. But I say this with pride
that I once knew Clyde, when he was honest and upright and clean. But the law
fooled around; kept taking him down, and locking him up in a cell. Till he said to
me; "I'll never be free, so I'll meet a few of them in hell" The road was so dimly
lighted there were no highway signs to guide. But they made up their minds; if all
roads were blind, they wouldn't give up till they died. The road gets dimmer and
dimmer sometimes you can hardly see. But it's fight man to man and do all you
can, for they know they can never be free. From heart-break some people have
suffered from weariness some people have died. But take it all in all; our troubles
are small, till we get like Bonnie and Clyde. If a policeman is killed in Dallas and
they have no clue or guide. If they can't find a fiend, they just wipe their slate
clean and hang it on Bonnie and Clyde. There's two crimes committed in America
not accredited to the Barrow mob. They had no hand; in the kidnap demand, nor
the Kansas City Depot job. A newsboy once said to his buddy; "I wish old Clyde
would get jumped. In these awful hard times; we'd make a few dimes, if five or six
cops would get bumped" The police haven't got the report yet but Clyde called
me up today. He said, "Don't start any fights; we aren't working nights, we're
joining the NRA." From Irving to West Dallas viaduct is known as the Great
Divide. Where the women are kin; and the men are men, and they won't "stool"
on Bonnie and Clyde. If they try to act like citizens and rent them a nice little flat.
About the third night; they're invited to fight, by a sub-gun's rat-tat-tat. They don't
think they're too smart or desperate they know that the law always wins. They've
been shot at before; but they do not ignore, that death is the wages of sin. Some
day they'll go down together they'll bury them side-by-side. To few it'll be grief, to
the law a relief but it's death for Bonnie and Clyde.

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Bonnie and Clyde

  • 1. Kaitlyn Personette American Studies Research Methods December 8, 2013 Prof. D’Amore Bonnie and Clyde Bonnie and Clyde are American Legends, who swept the nation with their ambitious crime sprees and scandalous fairy tale romance. Fact or fiction is the question at hand when considering the two star crossed lovers. One might question how a small group, like the Barrow Gang, would have the ability to create such a stir in the 1920’s and while some were enemies to the group, most idolized their courageous acts against the law. Mythologized for their conniving deception and convincing portrayal of perfect criminals and star-crossed lovers, Bonnie and Clyde were glorified by the media and the people. As the general story goes, Bonnie and Clyde were becoming young adults when the Great Depression hit America. Money was tight and times were tough, with lack of job opportunity and prosperity, people began to go stir crazy, making it difficult to gain control. This created a crime culture through media and literature for those who desired to lash out. Then society had the ability to live vicariously through their favorite criminal character, distracting them from their depressing stunted life styles. Crime culture developed as an aftermath of the devastating World War I. After time to settle in and grow, crime culture characters began to directly relate to the socio-economic circumstances. This genre became known as the, “American Hard-Boiled Crime Fiction” spanning from the, 1920’s- 1940’s, (Horsley, 2002). The Postman Always Rings Twice, Black Mask, and
  • 2. Little Caesar are just three examples of the various fictional crime series of their time. Though, John Dillinger and Pretty Boy Floyd, for example, were two real men whose myths and repetition of stories made it into the crime culture of the 1920’s as well. Bonnie Parker was born in Rowena, Texas, October 1, 1910. Rowena was a low-end area that struggled, like most of America, when the depression hit. As a teenager from this area during the 1920’s, teens found it entertaining to make petty thefts such as taking candy from the local drug store and a soda pop from the gas station. Bonnie did not begin to create her incriminating image and career until a little later in life, although she was always involved with bad boys, as legends have it. According to more than half of my resources while gathering empirical research, including, CBS News (2013), Rich (1970), Bonnie and Clyde (2013), and Phillips (1998), as well as the most resent source of evidence, being the television premier on The History Channel on Bonnie and Clyde, Bonnie Parker was married to a Mr. Roy Thornton on September 25, 1926, after dropping out of high school at the mere age of 15, with Ms. Parkers 16th birthday less than a week away. Mr. Thornton was a “bad boy” convict, who was thrown in jail and frequently absent in their relationship. This created an unsettling heartbreak with Bonnie, which made it a paralyzing thought to remove the wedding ring from her finger for she was wearing it the day that she died according to the autopsy reports (Rich, 1970). Interestingly enough, when Bonnie and Clyde were documented “Wanted” people, her title was, “Wanted, Mrs. Roy
  • 3. Thornton, aliases include Bonnie Barrow, Mrs. Clyde Barrow, Bonnie Parker,” showing that she was still legally bound to Thornton (FBI). Bonnie and Clyde may seem far from your typical teens, comparatively looking at today, although in 1920-1940’s crime culture was booming. Pretty Boy Floyd, formally known as Charles Arthur Floyd, was a gangster and a bank robber from Oak Hill, Indiana. Floyd had been committing petty theft since he was about 16, although was arrested unfortunately for the first time at age 18 after he stole coins from a local post office, approximately $3.50 (Pretty Boy Floyd, 2009). John Dillinger, as another example was a wild and rebellious child and teen although he grew up in a more rural section of Indiana. Dillinger had grown up with a bewildering personality for bullying children and known for frequently getting in trouble with the law. As a child his fighting and petty thefts would get him in trouble by his single father, although when he was 19 he was arrested for grand theft auto. At this point in Dillinger’s life, is where his true life of crime began, just like Clyde (John Dillinger, 2013). As Bonnie had a life before Clyde, Clyde had a life before Bonnie. Due to the overpowering affects of the Great Depression, people were loosing their jobs and homes. They did not know how they would feed their families or make their payments. Clyde was the fifth of seven children, born into a poor farming family in Ellis County, close Telico Texas. This is just a town south of Dallas, which is very close to Bonnie’s hometown. Being in a large family, in the urban slums, Clyde and his brother Buck turned to a life of crime at the early age of 16 (Bonnie and Clyde, 2013). Clyde and Buck had stolen a car and the police chased them
  • 4. down, drag racing through the streets of Texas. When the police officer finally caught them, they were instructed to give up and go home as though they were caught for a candy bar, not grad theft auto. Their lack of punishment was simply due to the less rigorous law enforcement of the 1920s. When living in low-end areas, in general, but especially during the depression there were bigger crimes being committed that enforcement needed to stop (Schneider, 2009). With every legend, there comes myth for when someone or something is idolized and passed down from generation to generation, variations of that story are created and questioned in return. Many variations of how Bonnie and Clyde actually met are in question. For example, in the 1967 film, they first meet while Clyde is attempting to steal Bonnie’s family car. She stares at him, down from the window, and instead of being fearful and calling the cops, she engaged in flirty conversation, letting him know that he has been caught red handed. Her lackadaisical and friendly approach to stopping this crime is typical of their time (Horsley). Bonnie said she was heading into town, just so she could get to know the hansom devil. Some versions of their tale say that they met January 20th, 1930 at a party of a mutual friend in Texas (Bonnie and Clyde, 2013) (CBS News, 2013). At this party they were introduced and began to talk, instantaneously falling madly in love with each other. The History Channel premier of Bonnie and Clyde had the most interesting approach to their first meeting being at Bonnie Parker’s wedding to Roy Thornton. She noticed him from afar and he gawked at her from across the room (Beatty and Dunaway, 2013).
  • 5. In most, if not all, versions of Bonnie and Clyde’s story told, they were attached to the hip from the moment they met. Bonnie was still married to the imprisoned murderer, Thornton, and Clyde was constantly running from the law. The couple desperately wanted to desert their mediocre lives in Texas and to run away together. Unfortunately two weeks after their first meeting, Clyde was throne in jail after being arrested for burglary (FBI). Bonnie could not stand the thought of living without him and she refused to be the lover of another man in jail so she paid him a visit. In this visit she was able to smuggle him a handgun, which allowed him to escape; although he was recaptured shortly after. He was thrown in jail and paroled in February 1932 (FBI). When Clyde got out of jail he swore that he would never be in prison again. He attempted to live a straight life for he wanted desperately to have a job and make an honest living. He desired to have the means to buy a house and support himself with Bonnie along with the hope to start a family. Bonnie and Clyde were very family orientated. Whenever they had the chance, while on their wild unlawful adventures, they would call their families to make sure everyone was okay and doing well back at home (Guinn, Jeff, Simon, and Schuster). This is similar to John Dillinger who had been arrested several times, for robberies mainly. He joined the United States Navy, after knowing his fathers grave disappointment in his rebellious acts. In attempts to straighten himself out, Dillinger joined forces and when they eventually docked in the Boston Harbor, he made a great escape (Dillinger, 2013). He was dishonorably discharged from the US Navy and he proceeded to go home to his father. He eventually married his
  • 6. sweetheart Beryl Hovious on April of 1924 although Dillinger, much like Clyde, had trouble settling down. Living by the rules, finding a steady job, and keeping it was a difficult task for those living in the Great Depression Era. Dillinger’s marriage ended on June 20, 1929, so he did not have a partner in crime like Clyde with his Bonnie. Feeling the emotion of failure for not being able to support themselves or support their loved ones (in an honest way), hit Dillinger and Clyde hard. When the stock market bubble finally burst, on October 24, 1929, unsold goods piled while consumer spending dropped tremendously. After millions of shares were traded that day and a myriad of them ending up worthless, investors were wiped out. Consumer confidence diminished, which led to a slow down in production and employees were being let go as a result (Richardson). Since there was such great difficulty keeping a job, finding one, created a whole new challenge. This was a breaking point for Bonnie and Clyde, along with Dillinger and they decided to commit to a life of crime and rebel against society. Pretty Boy Floyd did the same as Bonnie, Clyde, and Dillinger. He did not have an attempt to leave the dark side and become a functioning member of society but after his release from jail, he vowed that he would never go back. He created several connections while in the “slammer” and allied with more established criminals in the Kansas City area (Pretty Boy Floyd, 2009). As Pretty Boy Floyd made connections, Clyde did as well, for he recruited Ralph Fults to be the third member of the Barrow Gang while spending time in jail together.
  • 7. This was the time for these destined convicts to live out their fantasies. They were now able to live out their Nihilistic point of views to the fullest, rebelling against society and every person who got in their way. Nihilism was a popular point of view in the 1920s and 30’s. It promoted an independent construction of group programming and possibility geared toward the fact that social organization was so horrific that people innately felt that destruction was desirable. Bonnie, Clyde, and Ralph Hults began to travel in 1932, robbing stores to eat and gas stations to keep moving. Buck Borrow, Clyde’s brother, was released from the Texas State Prison on March 23, 1933 and joined the gang with his corroborative yet unwilling wife Blanche (FBI). Clyde was the ruler of the Borrow gang much like Roman Sionis also known as the Black Mask, in the 1930’s comic series. America loved their villians and the Black Mask was a ruthless Gotham City mob boss who was the ruler of the False Face Society. Like Clyde being the supreme leader of the South criminal gangland, the Black Mask was the leader of the Gotham criminal Underworld. Clyde was fighting against the harsh realities of society while the Black Mask was one of Batman’s most dangerous challengers (Horsley). There was a thrill of the gray area during this time of what was good and what was evil and who’s side was “the” side to be on. The Barrow Gang, now consisting of five people, were wanted by the law but not as much as they strictly wanted Bonnie and Clyde, dead or alive. In the History Channel’s portal of Bonnie and Clyde’s story, Bonnie wanted to be known and held to a high degree. She drove down to the local newspaper and
  • 8. threatened a women reporter who did not include her name when reporting on the crimes Bonnie and Clyde committed (Grainger and Hirsch). Once Bonnie was officially in the public eye she had begun to create a connection with the people leaving her trail of photographs and letters to be found by reporters in a way that no man would. This created a frenzy of followers and their articles were booming, one crime after another. Bonnie showed the public the love story behind the crimes through her Poems. For example, “The Trails End” (see Appendix A) which portrayed them in a heroic light describing their time spent together and the love they had to defying the law as well as love they had for each other. This created a beacon of hope for the women who were feeding their children bread without butter and struggling their husband’s jobless. With 13 to 15 million people jobless in America, it made society think that if Bonnie and Clyde could survive living on the land and love then so could they (Hunter). The bloody trail powered by love is why society was more intrigued with them then Dillinger or Pretty Boy Floyd. Their romance being involved was a hit, catering to men and women during the depression era. As their nation wide crime spree continued newspaper articles headlines stated, “WANTED for Murder and Rape” in Arkansas (CBS, 2013). The gang embarked on a series of robberies and murders although they were not known to be rapists. They left their trail of evidence and law enforcements made great efforts to put a halt to their criminal activities. In Iowa on July 29, 1933, during a shootout Buck was fatally wounded and Blanche was captured, allowing Bonnie and Clyde to make another great escape with their wingman Ralph Fults (FBI). Fults was eventually captured in
  • 9. Huston, Texas in November of 1933, and then the two love birds were the only ones left to be caught. All of America was watching and waiting for the infamous Bonnie and Clyde to be captured dead or alive. It was a matter of where are they and when will they be stopped. America was getting excited to see what was going to happen next for they were unpredictable to the public eye. Police Texas Ranger Frank Hamer, had been on their trail for a while and I believe that he desired to always be linked with title of, “the man who stopped the criminal couple of the century”. A similar thought pattern to Lee Harvey Oswald, who assassinated JFK, and John Wilkes Booth, who was Abraham Lincoln’s assassin. Although our presidents were not criminals, their obsessions with the Presidents caused them to do what ever it took to have their names linked with the others eternally (Steele, 2001). Bonnie and Clyde committed 13 murders and several robberies and burglaries along with suspicion on murdering two police officers at Joplin, Missouri and kidnapping a man and a woman in rural Louisiana who they released in Waldo, Texas (FBI). They were sighted all through out the south, allowing links to be made, regarding bank robberies and automobile thefts and murders from Lufkin and Dallas, Texas to Stringtown, Oklahoma. They even kidnapped a deputy at Carlsbad, New Mexico and then made their way back into Victoria, Texas to steal a car, then off to Wharton, Texas where they murdered another deputy and moved onto Abilene and Sherman, Texas to rob and murder some more. As the list goes on, their patterns became clearer and clearer to law enforcement.
  • 10. As Bonnie wrote in her poem most famous poem, The Trails End, “They don't think they're too smart or desperate, they know that the law always wins. They've been shot at before; but they do not ignore, that death is the wages of sin. Some day they'll go down together they'll bury them side-by-side. To few it'll be grief, to the law a relief but it's death for Bonnie and Clyde,” knowing that they were never going to make it out of their adventure alive and she let the public know that it was okay for she embraced their immanent death for it would not be tragic but an adventurous love story indeed. Hamer and his posse set up an ambush to catch and kill Bonnie and Clyde on May 23, 1934 on a rural road in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Through FBI investigations, civilian sightings, and their bloody trail of crime it was not too difficult of a task, with combined efforts, to pin point where they would be. Bonnie and Clyde’s two-year crime spree was about to come to an end. Just before dawn Bonnie and Clyde were driving approximately 85 mph in a stolen, 1934 Ford, four-door Delux with a V-8 engine. The police were hiding in the bushes and recognized the infamous couple. The opened fire put over 100 bullets in each of their bodies, killing them instantly. The Dallas Journal read, “KILL CLYDE BARROW AND BONNIE PARKER, OUTLAW COUPLE DIE IN BATTLE ON ROAD WITH SHERIFF’S POSSE” (FBI). American responded is greif when their favorite bad-ass couple of the century were finally stopped. The bodies were brought to Conger Furniture Sore and Funeral Polar in downtown Arcadia, Louisiana with a population of 2,000. An estimated 10,000 people swarmed into this small town with in hours to try and
  • 11. catch a glimpse of their hero’s bodies (Schneider, 2009). People lined up for miles down the road to pay their respects and for it was the last time their bodies would be together. Although they wanted to be buried side by side, Mrs. Parker, Bonnies mother, wanted Bonnie to be buried with her immediate family in Dallas, Texas. The sudden end to Bonnie and Clyde sold 500,000 newspapers in Dallas alone. Cards were sent to Bonnie and Clyde’s respected families from Pretty Boy Floyd and John Dillinger (Schneider, 2009). This was the beginning of the end for the crime culture era for Dillinger and Floyd were ambushed and killed only months after Bonnie and Clyde. Enforcement began to lock down and become more serious than ever. Since Bonnie and Clyde’s death the couple lives on through the societies love of romance and crime. Movies such as, the 1967, Bonnie and Clyde staring Beatty and Dunaway and the 2013, History Channel Premier of the most recent portrayal of Bonnie and Clyde, staring Grainger and Hirsch, exemplify altering versions of the legends, keeping the excitement and story alive. Performers such as Serge Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot (1968), Eminem (1997), Jay-Z and Beyonce (2003), Haystak (2008), and Great Northern (2012), have all wrote songs keeping the rebellious lovers that America loves, alive and unforgotten even in todays society. Their unruly lifestyle and passionate love affair will never be forgotten. Although, they were cold-blooded killers, they lived off of the land and love, giving society an adventures hope for when times are threatening. Not only were Bonnie and Clyde idolized when alive but they managed to keep interest in the
  • 12. publics eye nearly 80 years after their defeat. No matter if their tales are true their myth will forever live on.
  • 13. Works Cited Beatty, W. (Performer), & Dunaway, F. (Performer) (1967). Bonnie and clyde [Television series episode]. In Beatty, W. (Executive Producer),Bonnie and Clyde. Warner Bros.-Seven Arts. “Bonnie and Clyde.” The Biography Channel website. 2013. http://www.biography.com/people/groups/bonnie-and-clyde Burnett, W. R. (1929). Little ceasar . Cain, J., & McCoy, H. (1934). The postman always rings twice. Cardenas, Alfredo. "My Life with Bonnie and Clyde by Blanche Caldwell Barrow; John Neal Philips."Texas State Historical Association. 110.1 (2006): 152 154.Print. < CBS News, . N.p.. Web. 29 Oct 2013. <http://www.cbsnews.com/8301 3445_162-054623/love-and-bullets-the-real-bonnie-clyde/>. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Famous Cases. (n.d.).Bonnie and clyde. Retrieved fromwebsite: http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/history/famous cases/bonnie-and-clyde Grainger, H. (Performer), & Hirsch, E. (Performer) (2013). Bonnie and clyde [Televisionseries episode]. In Zadan, C. (Executive Producer), The history channel . Sony Pictures Television. Guinn, Jeff, Simon, and Schuster. Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie and Clyde. 1. 2010. Print. Hammet, D., & Daly, C. (1920). Black mask. Horsley, L. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.crimeculture.com/Contents/Hard Boiled.html Hunter, Stephen. “Clyde And Bonnie Died from Nihilism.” Commentary 127.7 2009:77-80. Academic Search Complete Web. 12 Nov. 2013. “John Dillinger.” The Biography Channel website 2013. http://www.biography.com/people/john-dillinger-9274804 Phillips, John. "Running with Bonnie and Clyde: The Ten Fast Years of Ralph Fults." Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association . 39.1 (1998): Pg. 117-119. Print.
  • 14. “Pretty Boy Floyde.” The Biography Channel website 2009. Richardson, R. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.history.com/topics/great depression Rich, Carroll. "The Autopsy of Bonnie and Clyde."Western States Folklore Society. 29.1(1970): 27-33. Print. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/1498682>. Schneider, Paul. Bonnie and Clyde: the lives behind the legend. 1. Henry Holt and Co.,2009. Print. Steele, P. W. (2001). The family story of bonnie and clyde. Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, 42(4), 492-493. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/4233802
  • 15. Appendix A The Trails End A Poem By: Bonnie Parker You've read the story of Jesse James of how he lived and died. If you're still in need; of something to read, here's the story of Bonnie and Clyde. Now Bonnie and Clyde are the Barrow gang I'm sure you all have read. How they rob and steal; and those who squeal, are usually found dying or dead. There's lots of untruths to these write-ups; they're not as ruthless as that. Their nature is raw; they hate all the law, the stool pigeons, spotters and rats. They call them cold- blooded killers they say they are heartless and mean. But I say this with pride that I once knew Clyde, when he was honest and upright and clean. But the law fooled around; kept taking him down, and locking him up in a cell. Till he said to me; "I'll never be free, so I'll meet a few of them in hell" The road was so dimly lighted there were no highway signs to guide. But they made up their minds; if all roads were blind, they wouldn't give up till they died. The road gets dimmer and dimmer sometimes you can hardly see. But it's fight man to man and do all you can, for they know they can never be free. From heart-break some people have suffered from weariness some people have died. But take it all in all; our troubles are small, till we get like Bonnie and Clyde. If a policeman is killed in Dallas and they have no clue or guide. If they can't find a fiend, they just wipe their slate clean and hang it on Bonnie and Clyde. There's two crimes committed in America not accredited to the Barrow mob. They had no hand; in the kidnap demand, nor the Kansas City Depot job. A newsboy once said to his buddy; "I wish old Clyde would get jumped. In these awful hard times; we'd make a few dimes, if five or six cops would get bumped" The police haven't got the report yet but Clyde called me up today. He said, "Don't start any fights; we aren't working nights, we're joining the NRA." From Irving to West Dallas viaduct is known as the Great Divide. Where the women are kin; and the men are men, and they won't "stool" on Bonnie and Clyde. If they try to act like citizens and rent them a nice little flat. About the third night; they're invited to fight, by a sub-gun's rat-tat-tat. They don't think they're too smart or desperate they know that the law always wins. They've been shot at before; but they do not ignore, that death is the wages of sin. Some day they'll go down together they'll bury them side-by-side. To few it'll be grief, to the law a relief but it's death for Bonnie and Clyde.