Showing posts with label Bonnie and Clyde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bonnie and Clyde. Show all posts

Monday, August 7, 2023

Guest Blogger Jennifer L. Wright: Before Bonnie & Clyde

By Guest Blogger Jennifer L. Wright

Bonnie and Clyde.

Were there ever two names more synonymous with one another? In the annals of history, there have been many famous pairs, even more sets of famous lovers, but the names of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow stand alone as perhaps the world’s most romantic yet infamous duo. Their lives and their crimes are irrevocably intertwined. So much so that they have merged from two separate people into a single entity, the history of each practically ignored until the fateful meeting when two halves became whole—and wreaked havoc on a fascinated public.

Bonnie and Clyde; photo: Public Domain

You cannot have Bonnie without Clyde, and vice versa. For all their flaws and faults, there is an air of mysticism around them, the sense that they were destined to be together, true love in its rawest (and most toxic) form.

Which is why I so surprised to discover during research for my Bonnie and Clyde-inspired book The Girl from the Papers that it was not always Bonnie and Clyde. Long before their names ever graced the front of newspapers across the country, there was Bonnie…and Roy.

Bonnie Parker grew up in Cement City, Texas, where she lived with her mother, two siblings, and grandparents. Though it was a poor, working-class suburb, even from an early age, Bonnie had grandiose dreams. She was pretty and smart, commanding attention in every room she entered, and she never lacked for friends or beaus. In another life, Bonnie may have succeeded in her hopes for Broadway or Hollywood, but the chains of poverty were not easily broken, especially during the depression. So, instead, she decided to follow the path that so many women took during that time to ensure their well-being:

She decided to find herself a man.

Roy Thornton and Bonnie (left); photographer
James R. Knight
Bonnie met Roy Thornton in high school. He was tall, good-looking, and well-dressed, three things that ranked very high on Bonnie’s list. Plus, he had money to take Bonnie out on dates, never mind its questionable origins. It took only a short, whirlwind courtship for Bonnie to fall head-over-heels in love. She even got a tattoo of two hearts, labeled “Bonnie” and “Roy,” connected by an arrow, on the inside of her right thigh. The pair were wed on September 25, 1926, just a few weeks before her sixteenth birthday.

The problems started almost immediately afterwards.

Though Bonnie hadn’t cared about how Roy made his money while they were dating, as his wife, she demanded to be brought into the know. He refused. Bonnie nagged. He disappeared, once for ten days at a time, then again for nineteen days, with never an explanation about why or where when he returned. It only caused Bonnie to get more angry. Roy started drinking, which Bonnie hated. There were not-unfounded rumors of an affair. Fights got more explosive and, soon, Roy began using his fists.

Even a hopeless romantic like Bonnie could no longer deny the truth: her fairy tale love had turned into a nightmare.

In a diary entry dated January 1, 1928, seventeen-year-old Bonnie wrote, “I wish to tell you that I have a roaming husband with a roaming mind. We are separated again for the third and last time…I love him very much and miss him terribly. But I intend on doing my duty. I am not going to take him back.”

And she didn’t. Though he finally reappeared in her life in January 1929, Bonnie refused to let him come home. And when he was picked up just a few months later for robbery, ultimately getting sentenced to five years in prison, Bonnie declined any invitation to visit him, nor did she write him any letters. She never saw him again.

But she also never divorced him.

Only a few short months later, in January 1930, Bonnie met Clyde Barrow at a house party celebrating her brother’s marriage, and the two began their passionate but ill-fated rendezvous with destiny.

And though it would be these names that would ultimately go down in history, when the pair met their grisly end at the hands of police in May 1934, Bonnie still had the pair of hearts tattooed on her right thigh.

And she was still wearing Roy Thornton’s wedding ring.




Jennifer L. Wright
has been writing since middle school, eventually earning a master's degree in journalism at Indiana University. However, it took only a few short months of covering the local news for her to realize that writing fiction is much better for the soul and definitely way more fun. A born and bred Hoosier, she was plucked from the Heartland after being swept off her feet by an Air Force pilot and has spent the past decade traveling the world and, every few years, attempting to make old curtains fit in the windows of a new home. She currently resides in New Mexico with her husband, two children, and one rambunctious dachshund. Visit her website at: 
www.jenniferlwright.com


The Girl From the Papers

Inspired by one of America’s most notorious couples, Bonnie and Clyde, Jennifer L. Wright delivers a riveting tale set during the public enemy era of the Great Depression.

Beatrice Carraway has dreams. Although she’s aged out of the childhood pageant circuit, she’s intent on carrying her talents all the way to the big screen—if only she can escape the poverty of West Dallas first. But as the Great Depression drags the working class further and further under, Beatrice struggles just to keep herself, her mother, and her younger sister afloat. After a string of failed auditions, she feels defeated.

And then in walks Jack Turner.


Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Lawmen of Texas Part 2:

The Rangers Ambush Outlaws
by Martha Rogers

The legacy of the Texas Rangers ranges from heroic stories in battle, capturing or killing of notorious bandits like Sam Bass or Bonnie and Clyde to legends of the Lone Ranger and T.V. shows like Walker: Texas Ranger. Most of the legends and stories contain some elements of truth even if they are embellished with retelling.

For some reason, many history buffs and western writers have chosen these lawmen to be heroes of their stories and novels. One thing is certain; they are one of the longest running law enforcement agencies in the country still in existence today.

Although today they mainly patrol our highways in Texas and assist other law enforcement agencies, they live up to the legacy of all those who have gone before.

Two of their more famous encounters with outlaws and fugitives were the ones with Sam Bass and Bonnie and Clyde. One took place in the 19th century, the other in the 29th, but they both ended the deaths of the criminals. 

Sam Bass, born in Indiana in 1851, ran away from home in 1859 and ended up in Texas. Then he was on the move again and traveled to Deadwood, South Dakota. There he formed his first gang of six men. As the gang robbed banks and trains, all but Sam either were killed or fled the territory, leaving Sam alone.


Jim Murphy, Sam Bass, Seaborne Barnes

He returned to Texas in 1871 and formed another gang. Sam is pictured above with two of his main gang members. After more robberies, many law groups were then on their tail, including the Rangers. Jim Murphy, one of the gang, cut a deal with the law to save his father. He led the group to Round Rock, Texas where a skirmish took place. Sam was wounded but Frank Jackson, a loyal friend of Bass as well as gang member, rescued Sam and took him out of town. The Rangers later found him propped against a tree.

Sam identified himself, but unsure if it was really him, Frank Murphy gave confirmation and Bass was arrested. Who actually fired the shot that wounded Bass and caused his subsequent death has been argued about, but the official ruling was that the fatal blow came from Ranger Dick Ware. At right is the headstone and memorial set up for Sam at Round Rock Cemetery.

More information can be found at: http://www.forttumbleweed.net/historybass.html

One of the most famous confrontations with known criminals is that of Bonnie and Clyde. Frank Hamer, pictured at right, is the man who led the investigation and subsequent ambush of the couple in 1934.

Clyde Barrow, age 21, met Bonnie Parker in January of 1930 in Texas when she was 19. Barrow was single, but Bonnie was married to a man in prison after a murder conviction. Clyde went to jail for burglary, but Bonnie helped him escape by smuggling a gun to him. He was captured and sent back to prison but was paroled in 1932.

He met up with Bonnie again, and they headed into a two year crime spree that included auto theft, burglaries, robberies and at least thirteen murders. The couple quickly became famous for their crimes which included a suspicion of killing two Joplin, Missouri policemen and the kidnapping of a couple in rural Louisiana. They later released the couple in the small town of Waldo, Texas.

Their crimes spread across Texas and into Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Louisiana where they robbed and killed numerous people including law officers.


The Texas Rangers commissioned Frank Hamer as Highway Patrol officer and then as a special investigator charged with tracking down Bonnie and Clyde. Hamer began a study of Barrow’s movements and found pattern of circling the
state and skirting along state borders to elude the law. Four other men, Manny Gault, Bob Alcorn, Ted Hinton and Prentiss Oakley joined Hamer in the final ambush in Louisiana that ended in the deaths of Bonnie and Clyde.

Here's a picture of the car after the ambush:

For more information about this infamous couple and their deaths, visit the website: https://www.thevintagenews.com 

You can always visit the museum in Waco and see the artifacts, pictures, and stories of these men who protected our state.

Although the Rangers do not participate in confrontations today like that of Bonnie and Clyde, they are instrumental in helping to keep Texas’ roads and highways safer. Their patrol cars can be seen along every highway in Texas whether a State or Interstate, and they don’t hesitate in pulling over those who are exceeding the posted speed-limits.

In celebration of my 83rd birthday this month, I am giving away a copy of my novella: Lasso Around Her Heart. In the comment section, tell me about your best birthday so far. I'll announce the winner by the 15th. 

Allie Logan promised her mother to take care of the family after her death, and she’s kept that promise for over five years, but now Jarrod Wright comes into her life and threatens that promise. When she learns her of her father’s attempts to arrange a marriage between her and Jarrod by offering him land, she shuts herself off from Jarrod only to find he’s already lassoed her heart. But how can she forgive her father for offering to pay a man to marry her and Jarrod for accepting the offer? 





Martha Rogers is a free-lance writer and multi-published author from Realms Fiction of Charisma Media and Winged Publications. She was named Writer of the Year at the Texas Christian Writers Conference in 2009. She is a member of ACFW and writes the weekly Verse of the Week for the ACFW Loop. ACFW awarded her the Volunteer of the Year in 2014. Her first electronic series from Winged Publications, Love in the Bayou City of Texas, debuted in the spring of 2015.  Martha is a frequent speaker for writing workshops and the Texas Christian Writers Conference. She is a retired teacher and lives in Houston with her husband, Rex. Their favorite pastime is spending time with their twelve grandchildren and five great-grandchildren