290:. It was common for Radke to load the hunters up in his Ford truck and drive down the railroad tracks. One evening, while waiting for the train to pass, Radke, Dr. Owens, Sisler and Paul Simmons all waited in the station. Dr. Owens found a deck of playing cards and the men began to gamble on a game of poker. A short time into their game, three men, two of which were armed, barged into the station wearing masks. The three masked men began to rob the poker players of money, jewelry, and anything of value. Paul Simmons pleaded with the masked men to let him keep his wedding ring, to which they obliged. Sisler, on the other hand, turned his around and hid it. Leeper being a small town, Dr. Owens, noticed one of the coats on the masked men. After the masked men left, Dr. Owens alerted authorities and the three men were apprehended. But during the court trial, for which Sisler had to travel back twice, the Judge determined that the men's gambling, no matter how small, was illegal. The robbers were therefore declared innocent and set free.
322:. The unit, with Leeper in command, hunted for Southern sympathizers. His hunt included mass killings of unarmed men. He allegedly burned villages, cities, and homes. One such story involved the killing of 29 men, referred to as the McGee Massacre or Mingo Swamp Massacre. Leeper and his men sneaked to a house that these Southern sympathizers were staying that night. The McGee clan had just abandoned the Confederate Army to return home to protect their families from Leeper. While the Confederates inside the house sat unarmed, Leeper and his men opened fire. All 29 men died, including Daniel McGee. It is said that he was shot so many times that his torso was almost severed in half.
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to run through his property, although the route would require a cut through two mountains. By 1872, Clarkson
Sawmill had moved to Leeper and set up a shop. This immediately caused the rise of Leeper as a "boom-town." Leeper was not actually a town until 1874, by William T. Leeper's son Sid. By 1881,
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town with a rail station and a post office, and was commonly called Leeper
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and scouts, and sent several letters back recounting each kill in detail. He was eventually found incompetent and released from the Army.
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record for most base hits in a season from 1920 to 2004. One year, Sisler came to Leeper to visit his friend Herman Radke and do some
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orders. When his own farm was ransacked with his family home, he made it a personal goal to hunt down all responsible. During the
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After the war, Leeper served as a member in the 25th
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Encyclopedia of the
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Leeper is named after
William T. Leeper, who served as a Captain in the
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Andy Clark, a black man, was lynched in Leeper on
January 21, 1903.
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in battle. He founded Company D of the Twelfth Regiment of
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Unincorporated communities in Wayne County, Missouri
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Unincorporated community in Missouri, United States
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638:Map of Missouri highlighting Wayne County
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65:Location within the state of Missouri
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876:Keener Cave
853:Ghost towns
730:communities
708:Mill Spring
683:Cedar Creek
678:Black River
655:Mill Spring
590:County seat
308:Mill Spring
294:W.T. Leeper
240:during the
214:Black River
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948:Categories
843:Wappapello
703:Lost Creek
615:Greenville
597:Greenville
365:References
342:guerrillas
238:Union Army
184:feature ID
84:90°42′28″W
81:37°04′30″N
823:Patterson
788:Gravelton
778:Gads Hill
773:Dees Town
768:Coldwater
693:Jefferson
665:Townships
312:Civil War
269:St. Louis
251:bona fide
242:Civil War
222:Routes 34
148:Time zone
139:Elevation
881:Kerrigan
718:Williams
620:Piedmont
359:Arkansas
327:Arkansas
300:Kentucky
218:Piedmont
206:Missouri
121:Missouri
911:Upalika
896:Ojibway
866:Chaonia
813:Lowndes
758:Cascade
748:Burbank
647:Village
232:History
109:Country
901:Platow
861:Barlow
803:Leeper
798:Ladero
783:Gaylor
738:Brunot
673:Benton
607:Cities
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196:is an
194:Leeper
187:750680
128:County
59:Leeper
25:Leeper
891:Kyles
871:Damon
833:Silva
828:Shook
818:McGee
793:Hiram
763:Clubb
753:Burch
698:Logan
688:Cowan
255:Ozark
176:(CDT)
174:UTC−5
153:UTC−6
133:Wayne
117:State
886:Kime
808:Lodi
522:2008
454:2008
397:ISBN
224:and
182:GNIS
284:MLB
167:DST
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