Web Indexes
Web Indexes
Don't forget to check out the latest News
Information Indexes

Web Indexes

> News (general)
> Popular (rotators)

Myth Indexes

> Legendary Creatures
> Urban Legend
> American Folklore
> Aliens/Ufo
> Conspiracy Theories
> more

Health Indexes

> Alternative
> Dieting
> more

Plant Indexes

> Air Plants
> more

Web Indexes: Myth: American Folklore: Bonnie And Clyde

Articles in
American Folklore

Annie Oakley
Beast Of Busco
Bigfoot
Billy The Kid
Bonnie And Clyde
Buffalo Bill
Butch Cassidy
Calamity Jane
Casey Jones
Champ
Chupacabra
Daniel Boone
Davy Crockett
Doc Holliday
Furbearing Trout
Geronimo
Hiawatha
Hodag
Jackalope
Jersey Devil
Jesse James
Joe Hill
John Henry
Johnny Appleseed
Kit Carson
La Llorona
Lizzie Borden
Marie Laveau
Mike Fink
Molly Pitcher
Mothman
Nain Rouge
Pancho Villa
Paul Bunyan
Pecos Bill
Pocahontas
Sacagawea
Skunk Ape
Snipe Hunt
Squanto
Squonk
Stagger Lee
The Tooth Fairy
Thunderbird
Wild Bill Hickok
Wyatt Earp

Related:

Taz
 
... Bonnie and Clyde
Pheeds Home |
More Bonnie and Clyde articles & pheeds          

Bonnie and Clyde


Bonnie and Clyde clowning
()

Bonnie and Clyde (Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow) were American criminals who traveled the southwestern United States during the Great Depression, robbing banks and generally causing chaos with their cohorts. It is estimated that they were responsible for as many as thirteen murders, about a dozen small bank robberies and holdups of stores and gas stations too numerous to count.

Bonnie Parker was born on October 1, 1910 in Rowena, Texas. She was fond of creative writing and the arts, and her poem The Story of Bonnie and Clyde is a remarkably personalized account of her escapades. Bonnie was married at sixteen to Ray Thornton, who was in prison on a fifty-five year sentence by their first wedding anniversary. Out of monetary necessity, the young bride took up a waitressing job.

Clyde Barrow was born on March 24, 1909, in Telico, Texas (near Dallas) as one of many children in a poor farming family. His life of crime began when he was arrested in 1926 for auto theft. Undeterred, he continued a series of oft-successful Dallas-area robberies over the next four years. After meeting Bonnie in 1930 in the Dallas neighborhood of Oak Cliff, he was arrested and taken to prison. His subsequent escape attempt was only partially successful--he was free for a week before being caught in Ohio--and so Clyde remained incarcerated until 1932.

After his release, he and Bonnie stole a car in Texas. There ensued a police chase, after which Clyde escaped and Bonnie went to prison for a few months. She was released in June of 1932.

The duo became the leaders of a small group of like-minded criminals later known as the Barrow Gang. Clyde's brother Buck and his wife Blanche are two of its more infamous members. During a police raid in Iowa 1933, Buck was mortally wounded and his wife captured.

Bonnie and Clyde then killed two young highway patrolmen near Grapevine, Texas on April 1, 1934 and another policeman five days later near Commerce, Oklahoma and were in-turn ambushed and gunned down on May 23 later that year near their hide-out in Black Lake, Louisiana by Texas and Louisiana peace officers.

Clyde Barrow is buried in the Western Heights Cemetery and Bonnie Parker in the Crown Hill Memorial Park, both in Dallas, Texas.

They were among the first celebrity criminals of the modern era. Barrow is alleged to have written a letter to the Ford Motor Company praising their "dandy car", signing it "Clyde Champion Barrow", though the handwriting has never been authenticated. (Ford received a similar letter around the same time from someone claiming to be John Dillinger and used both for car advertisements.) Bonnie's aforementioned poem, The Story of Bonnie and Clyde, was published in several newspapers.

In 1967, Arthur Penn directed a rather romanticized film version of the tale. Bonnie and Clyde, which starred Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway, was critically acclaimed and contributed significantly to the glamorous image of the criminal pair. Dorothy Provine also starred in the 1958 movie The Bonnie Parker Story. The first film based on Bonnie and Clyde was made only three years after their deaths and titled You Only Live Once, starring Henry Fonda and Sylvia Sydney.

External link

© 2004-2006 Web-Indexes.Com. All rights reserved.