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KS 66285
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ARIZONA
LEGENDS
Outlaw Gang Lost Loot |
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Red Jack Gang Outlaw Loot
“Red Jack” Almer, also known as
Jack
Averill, led the
Red Jack Gang, preying on
Arizona
stagecoaches during the early 1880s, particularly along the San Pedro
River. On one such occasion the gang held up a stage near Riverside
on August 10, 1883. The Wells Fargo guard immediately insisted
that the stage was not carrying any gold and when he began to resist
the bandits, a female passenger jumped from the stage and called him a
liar.
The woman, however, was none other than
“Red Jack” Almer disguised as a female. Almer, who had witnessed
the gold being placed under a seat, had signaled his men to move on
the stagecoach. When the guard went for his gun,
Almer pulled
one from his long flowing skirts and the next thing you know, the
guard laid dead upon the ground. Taking almost $3,000 in
currency and gold, the gang fled
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Stage Coach Robbery, 1911
This image available for photographic prints
HERE!
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Finally Sheriff
Bob Paul organized a strong posse to put an end to
Almer's Gang of
robberies. Tracking the gang down one by one, the posse
found
Almer hiding near Willcox,
Arizona
on October 4, 1883 and in the ensuing gunfight, “Red
Jack” was
shot down by Sheriff Bob and his posse when he tried to battle his
way out.
In their many stagecoach robberies the
gang was said to have buried their loot in areas near the Willcox
Hideout. Legend has it that about $8,000 in gold coins is
buried somewhere in the vicinity of Prescott,
Arizona.
Bronco Bill Loses
Against Wells Fargo
“Bronco
Bill” Walters might have started out his life as a
cowboy and a
railroader, but he soon found a more lucrative future as a train
and stagecoach robber. At one point he joined
Black Jack Ketchum’s gang, and then later formed his own group
of bandits, working primarily in
New
Mexico and
Arizona. Credited with shooting several men and committing a number of
robberies, he soon was targeted by
Wells Fargo as a foe to
eliminate.
Having robbed several stagecoaches in
eastern
Arizona, Wells Fargo had had enough and sent for two
no-nonsense lawmen by the names of
Jeff Milton and
George
Scarborough. Soon, the two lawmen, along with a posse,
caught up with
Bronco Bill near the gang’s hideout outside of Solomonville,
Arizona.
In the ensuing gunfight, one gang
member was killed and
Bronco Bill was wounded. However, he lived
to stand trial, was convicted of train robbery and sentenced to
prison for life. However, he was released in 1917 and moved
to Hachita,
New
Mexico, where he worked as a wrangler for the Diamond A Cattle
Company. He was later killed when he fell from a windmill
tower he was repairing.
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Though one would
think that he would have returned to any buried treasure site, there
is no evidence that he did and the Wells
Fargo loot was never
recovered. Legend has it that areas outside of Solomonville,
Arizona
may yet hold the stolen cache.
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, © September, 2004
Back to
Arizona Treasure Tales
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