The last outlaws The desperate final days of the Dalton Gang

Tom Clavin, 1954-

Book - 2023

"The Last Outlaws is the thrilling true story of the last of the great gang of outlaws and the most brazen heist in history. The Dalton Gang consisted of four brothers and their rotating cast of accomplices who saw themselves as descended from the legendary James Gang. They soon became legends themselves, beginning their career as common horse thieves, before graduating to robbing banks and trains. On October 5, 1892, the Dalton Gang attempted the most brazen heist of that era: robbing two banks in broad daylight in Coffeyville, Kansas, simultaneously. The gang was made up of Grat, Bob and Emmett Dalton; Bill Power and Dick Broadwell. As the gang crossed the plaza to enter the two banks, the Daltons were recognized by townspeople, who ...raised the alarm. Citizens armed themselves with weapons from nearby hardware stores and were ready for the gang when they tried to leave the banks. The ensuing gun battle was a firefight of epic proportions. When the smoke cleared eight men were dead including Grat and Bob Dalton, Bill Power and Dick Broadwell. For the first time ever, the full story of the Dalton Gang's life of crime, culminating in this violent heist, are chronicled in detail--the final act of the Wild West, its last bloody gasp." --

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
History
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Tom Clavin, 1954- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvii, 267 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 251-253) and index.
ISBN
9781250282385
  • Map
  • Author's Note
  • Prologue
  • Act I. The Daltons
  • Chapter 1. Mayhem in Minnesota
  • Chapter 2. Midwest Manhunt
  • Chapter 3. Dalton Descendants
  • Chapter 4. "This Catastrophic Contest"
  • Chapter 5. The Judge and His Hangman
  • Chapter 6. A Heroic Dalton Death
  • Chapter 7. They Got Their Man
  • Chapter 8. Deputy Daltons
  • Chapter 9. Beyond the Law
  • Chapter 10. Reunion in California
  • ACT II. The Gang
  • Chapter 11. Railroad Robbers
  • Chapter 12. The Searchers
  • Chapter 13. The Wharton Train
  • Chapter 14. "He Got Me Too"
  • Chapter 15. A Dispute with Doolin
  • Chapter 16. "Cesspool of Abominations"
  • Chapter 17. Red Rock Robbery
  • Chapter 18. Two Hundred Shots
  • ACT III. The Lawmen
  • Chapter 19. A King's Ransom
  • Chapter 20. The Danish Deputy
  • Chapter 21. A Dodge City Man
  • Chapter 22. Closing In
  • Act IV. The Shoot-Out
  • Chapter 23. A Town in Its Time
  • Chapter 24. "The Last Trick"
  • Chapter 25. "A Flash of Lightning"
  • Chapter 26. Bloody Work Begins
  • Chapter 27. Saying Their Prayers
  • Chapter 28. "Death Alley"
  • Chapter 29. A Ghastly Scene
  • Act V. The Desperadoes
  • Chapter 30. Broken Brother
  • Chapter 31. Lead Flies in Ingalls
  • Chapter 32. More Badges Than Bandits
  • Chapter 33. A Doomed Dalton
  • Chapter 34. End of Their Days
  • Chapter 35. The Last Desperado
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

American West expert Clavin (Wild Bill, 2019; Lightning Down, 2021) delivers a solid and definitive recapitulation of one of history's most notorious outlaw gangs. The Dalton gang, made up of several relatives of the infamous Younger gang and their ruffian associates, had a brief but bloody criminal career that culminated in a legendary gunfight which left eight men dead, including five of their own. A greed- and hubris-fueled attempt at a double bank robbery would be the Dalton gang's ultimate downfall and lead to what many consider the end of the Wild West era. Clavin recounts the personal histories of the gang members, lightly exploring the root causes of their turn to banditry. Much attention is also given to the lawmen tasked with bringing down the gang and the general atmosphere of the time. Clavin deftly balances academic writing with thrilling descriptions of the Dalton gang's felonious escapades. While hardcore western fans won't discover any fresh information, readers will still enjoy this Old West crime caper. Recommended wherever westerns and American history are popular.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The Dalton Gang's failed attempt to rob two banks at once in Coffeyville, Kans., in October 1892 was "arguably final confirmation of the end of the Wild West," according to this detailed and digressive history. Journalist Clavin (Tombstone) sets the stage for a fine-grained narrative of the shoot-out by first explaining the Daltons' place in the history of the Old West's train- and bank-robbing gangs (the Daltons were cousins to the Youngers of the James-Younger Gang) and profiling individual Daltons and the lawmen known as the Three Guardsmen who pursued them. Coffeyville was a prosperous, relatively peaceful place when the Daltons trained their sights on it. On the morning of October 4, the gang of five rode into town, three of them headed for First National Bank and two for the Condon Bank. The Condon Bank trio lost valuable time due to a cashier's lie that the safe was on a time lock and would open in 10 minutes. The two outlaws at First National had more success, but town residents had raised the alarm and armed themselves, some with guns commandeered from a local hardware store. The resulting shoot-out left four citizens and four gang members dead. Though Clavin's build-up takes too many detours, the exciting climax entertains. Patient Wild West history buffs will be rewarded. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The prolific Western historian turns in a sometimes rip-snorting, sometimes turgid account of a notorious gang of outlaws. The Dalton Gang, made up of brothers and assorted lieutenants, committed various acts of outlawry as far afield as California before heading home to concentrate on the southern Great Plains. It was in an apparent effort to outdo a kindred gang, by robbing two neighboring banks in the same raid that the boys got into serious trouble, with four dead men stretched out on a board in Coffeyville, Kansas. Clavin, who's been writing about the Wild West for years, does a good job of portraying the attendant mayhem, with all its gore: "The bullet found the cashier's face, entering right below the left eye and exiting at the base of his skull." The author draws on the larger context of Wild West ruffians to tell his story, since by the time the Daltons came along and went, it was 1892, when the frontier was said to be closed. Some of that context seems like padding: The story of the James Gang is both well known and goes on longer than necessary, and the bits of breezy telescoping ("Not to worry: Deputy Marshal Madsen would have another crack at the Dalton brothers") don't add much, either. Still, Clavin ably stitches the yarn together, and he does well to bookend his story with the sole surviving Dalton, who, after serving time, tried to make it in Hollywood. Readers familiar with the 1973 Eagles album Desperado and other bits of pop Western lore will be pleased to find Bill Doolin and Bitter Creek Newcomb in the cast, as well as Cattle Annie, and, among the good guys, Bill Tilghman. Fans of outlaw tales won't find much new, but they'll likely enjoy the book all the same. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.