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OLD
WEST LEGENDS
Outlaw Roy Gardner's Loot |
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McNeil Island Federal Penitentiary in 1937.
The prison closed in 1981. Photo courtesy National Archives
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In the early 1900s
train robber and gunrunner, Roy Gardner, began his career of thievery
in Arizona
and
California. On April 16, 1920 the curly-headed young man
stole $78,000 in cash and securities from a mail truck in San Diego,
California.
Though it was a smooth job, the outlaw was arrested just three days
later. Soon his name would become as well known to the lawmen of
California
as Jesse James.
Sentenced to 25 years
in McNeil's Island
Federal Penitentiary near Tacoma, Washington, Gardner vowed to never
serve the sentence, even though no one had successfully escaped this
high security prison. On June 5, 1920, Gardner was on his way to
Washington to serve his sentence, but when he and two other prisoners
were being returned from the diner to their compartment, the outlaws
attacked the guards and escaped.
On May 19, 1921,
Gardner boarded the mail car of a Southern Pacific train, tied up the
clerk and fled the train in Roseville,California,
with $187,000 in cash and securities.
Two days Gardner
was arrested again while playing a game of cards in a Roseville,
California
pool-hall. Attempting to reduce his long sentence, he offered to lead
the lawmen to the money. However, he must have changed his mind
when, after leading the officers on a wild goose chase of the
surrounding hills, he announced, "I guess I have forgotten where I
buried that money."
Gardner was given an additional twenty-five years at McNeill's Island
and on June 10, Deputy Marshals Mulhall and Rinckell set out from San
Francisco with their prisoner. Gardner again vowed that he would
not serve the sentence and the very next night just before the train
was nearing the Portland, he managed to escape once again.
However,
he was soon recaptured when an alert hotel proprietor in
Centralia,
Washington
alerted
the law.
This time a heavily
ironed Gardner traveled once again to Tacoma,
Washington
,
on June 17, 1921. Four miles long and two miles wide, McNeil's Island,
surrounded by an expanse of icy water and swift tidal currents, would
make escape impossible -- no one had ever managed it before.
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However, on the afternoon of Labor Day, September 5,1921,
as Gardner watched a baseball game between two prison teams, he would once
again make an escape. Sitting between to fellow prisoners by the names of
Lawardus Bogart and Everett Impyn, Gardner suddenly said "Now," when a
batter sent a ball far out into center field. As the guards in the
towers had their eyes on the ball and the runners, the three men crawled
through a hole in the fence and were on the other side before they were
spotted.
Making for a
nearby pasture where they could shelter behind the
livestock, bullets began to kick at their feet before they could reach the
herd. Continuing to dash across the field toward timber, Impyn was
shot dead. When Gardner had almost reached the timber, a bullet tore
through his left leg and he went down. At almost the same time he saw
Bogart fall, waving weakly for him to go on.
Within ten minutes
after the break prison launches carrying guards scoured the beaches and
confiscated every boat on the shoreline. As Gardner hid in the
timber darkness came and went and at daybreak he was still at liberty.
Warden Maloney believed there was no way that Gardner could have escaped
the island, but as two more days passed, and not a single trace of the
Gardner could be found, he began to think differently.
Two more weeks passed
and the authorities had to admit the Gardner had probably gotten off the
Island. Nothing more was heard from Gardner until November 3, 1921,
when a lone bandit held up the Southern Pacific train at Maricopa,
Arizona. Though nothing was taken, the
mail clerk thought it was Gardner.
On
November 15, Gardner attempted to hold up a mail train in Phoenix,
Arizona, but the
mail clerk was a powerful man and fought back. The gun discharged
but no one was hit.
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This time there would be no escape. Another twenty-five years were added
to Gardner's sentence and he was taken to
Leavenworth
(Kansas)
Federal Penitentiary but was later moved to the Atlanta Federal
Prison. While there he attempted yet another escape, but this one
was unsuccessful and he paid for it with twenty months in solitary
confinement.
When he came out of the "hole" he was crazy and ended up spending time in
St. Elizabeth Hospital for the Insane, at Washington, D. C., but was later
removed to
Alcatraz to complete his sentence.
Gardner made several
futile appeals for clemency, but was not released until 1939. He ended his
own life in a small hotel room in San Francisco, explaining that men who
served more than five years in prison were doomed and that he was old and
tired.
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Alcatraz
today.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Two Guns Camp, December, 2004, Kathy
Weiser.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Thus ended a criminal career and somewhere, an
estimated $250,000 of his loot still remains hidden. Gardner had
neither the time nor the opportunity to spend is ill gotten wealth, nor
partners to share it with.
Legend has it that he hid some $16,000 in gold coins in the
cone of an extinct volcano near
Flagstaff,
Arizona
before he was captured during a train robbery in 1921. But, where is
the rest?
California?
Washington? Or somewhere in between?
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, © September, 2004
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
The
Whole 66 Package -
EZ66 Guide,
Eight
State Map Series,
Route 66 Dining & Lodging Guide,
and Images of 66. Retails for $73.80, but you get it here for $66.95.
Save money on the books and on shipping. Ships Priority Mail.

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