258:, Volume 20 by "a man from Missouri", who described himself as "a disinterested student of train robbing", indicated that appearances were strategically important to Marion and his crew. In preparation for the Glendale robbery, he noted, Hedgepeth, "his three pals" and his wife "assembled in that city and rented a house in a fashionable quarter of the town. They furnished the house well, and during the two or three weeks prior to the holdup, each robber purchased for himself swell attire piece by piece, so as not to attract attention."
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article titled "The
Debonair Killer", David P. Grady noted: "Marion Hedgepeth looked like a dude, but 'dangerous' and 'deadly' fit him better". The dark-complexioned, wavy-haired six footer, who roamed from town to town as a
222:, in October 1864, although his date of birth has erroneously been given as April 14, 1856. He allegedly ran away from home at age 15, worked as a cowboy, and was an outlaw by the time he was 20, having killed in
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had sought to capture
Hedgepeth and his gang for years, noted that Marion Hedgepeth once gunned down another outlaw who had already unholstered his pistol before Hedgepeth had drawn his revolver.
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Hedgepeth was arrested at the age of 15 after he and Henry
Sanders robbed the general store in Prairie Home in 1880. In November 1883, he was sentenced to serve a term of seven years in the
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saloon robbery at 18th and Avers Avenue. He died at St. Anthony's
Hospital and was buried in the Cook County Cemetery on the grounds of the Cook County Poor Farm at Dunning.
347:, which eventually resulted in the notorious killer's unmasking, conviction and execution in 1896. For this and other considerations, Hedgepeth was pardoned by Missouri
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14 years into his 25-year term. He was released sick with tuberculosis and "looked like a skeleton and appeared 60 years old."
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and brought back to
Missouri for trial. Convicted, he was sentenced in 1893 to 25 years in the
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Hedgepeth was shot and killed by Edward
Jaburek on December 31, 1909, during a botched
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Despite his swell appearance, however, Hedgepeth "was a deadly killer and one of the
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Hedgepeth Died a Robber. The End of the
Missouri Bandit in a Chicago Saloon Holdup.
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and diamond stickpin. WANTED posters noted that his shoes were usually polished.
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On
November 30, 1891, Hedgepeth and the other members of Slye-Wilson gang (
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Dark and
Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective
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He was arrested in 1907 in Omaha, for the burglary of a storage house at
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in March 1908, and upon appeal was released after serving one year.
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The fates of the other three members of the "Hedgepeth four" were:
421:"United States Census, 1900", database with images, FamilySearch (
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People shot dead by law enforcement officers in the United States
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187:(October 1864 – December 31, 1909) – also known as the
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Her Sacque of
Sealskin: A Chapter of Western Bandit History
425: : 27 January 2022), Prisoner Marion Hedgepeth, 1900.
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Office of Cook County Coroner No. 31295, Death Certificate
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and disbanded. After being relentlessly pursued by the
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https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M3CH-KY1
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575:Depraved: The Definitive True Story of H.H. Holmes
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496:. Vol. 20. Express Gazette. 1895. p. 64
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525:, January 4, 1910. Retrieved October 14, 2014
439:Marion Hedgepeth: Missouri's Forgotten Outlaw
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400:Lucius Wilson was involved in the killing of
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769:Recipients of American gubernatorial pardons
561:. Vol. 14, no. 27. 3 March 1892.
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702:Marion Hedgepeth jailbreak attempt foiled
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629:. Office of Cook County Coroner. 1909.
35:Hedgepeth's February 1892 arrest photo
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464:Grady, David P. (July–August 1996).
759:People from Cooper County, Missouri
714:Bookrags entry for Marion Hedgepeth
605:. Quill Driver Books. p. 241.
517:"Missouri Bandit Shot By Officer",
361:. He was convicted and sent to the
578:. Simon and Schuster. p. 89.
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304:of safe blowers and highwaymen".
754:Outlaws of the American Old West
707:, December 17, 1893, Wednesday.
687:ODMP memorial for James A Harvey
281:Criminal career and consequences
665:ODMP memorial for S.B.McLemore
383:Adelbert Slye was arrested in
313:James "Illinois Jimmy" Francis
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676:State Republican Feb 11, 1892
309:Adelbert Denton "Bertie" Slye
254:An article published in the
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341:Missouri State Penitentiary
287:Missouri State Penitentiary
63:December 31, 1909 (aged 45)
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572:Schechter, Harold (2004).
654:The North American Review
640:list of Wild West outlaws
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234:Appearance and reputation
185:Marion Columbus Hedgepeth
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45:Marion Columbus Hedgepeth
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437:Barker, Dean A. (2020).
291:Jefferson City, Missouri
218:Hedgepeth was born near
744:Criminals from Missouri
557:"The Board of Crimes".
385:Los Angeles, California
363:Iowa State Penitentiary
220:Prairie Home, Missouri
52:Prairie Home, Missouri
466:"The Debonair Killer"
390:James Francis killed
359:Council Bluffs, Iowa
317:Lucius "Dink" Wilson
327:. The gang fled to
325:St. Louis, Missouri
91:The Handsome Bandit
75:Cause of death
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559:The Weekly Gleaner
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48:October 1864
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519:Springfield
298:Kansas City
723:Categories
709:Full story
409:References
333:Pinkertons
249:bowler hat
238:In a 1996
214:Early life
169:California
749:Fugitives
476:3 January
245:hired gun
205:Wild West
197:Derby Kid
97:Derby Kid
705:NY Times
273:, whose
224:Colorado
199:and the
173:Missouri
161:Colorado
156:State(s)
500:28 June
472:: 64–65
374:Chicago
323:, near
265:in the
228:Wyoming
165:Wyoming
147:Country
139:Victims
134:Details
120:Larceny
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521:(Mo.)
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208:outlaw
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607:ISBN
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502:2012
478:2013
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60:Died
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.