Showing posts with label Big Ed Burns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Ed Burns. Show all posts

April 2, 2024

"Big Ed" Burns in Cripple Creek - Story of robbing a dying man.

CHIEF OF CONS
The Morning Times
(Cripple Creek, Colorado)
February 15, 1896
Courtesy of Mitch Morrissey






ig Ed Burns robs a dying man?

     Mitch Morrissey, a Facebook friend and historian for the Denver District Attorney’s Office, found and published an interesting newspaper piece on "Big Ed" Burns, one of the most notorious characters in the West. Burns was a confidence man and crime boss who is believed to have met Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith in Tombstone, Arizona, or one of the surrounding towns in 1882 where Burns was the boss of the top and bottom gang best known in and around the Benson area. Burns later joined Soapy in Denver and followed him to Creede and Alaska.
     In 1889 a man was shot and killed in the Palace Theatre which was run by Bat Masterson at 15th and Blake Streets in Denver. Burns and some of his men were in the house at the time and before the victim of the unknown assassin had breathed his last. Burns took the opportunity to rob the fallen man of a large diamond stud. Burns escaped the officers and before it was reported to Denver District Attorney Ledru R. Rhodes (1886-1889) he left Denver and was never punished for the offense.
     How much of the newspaper article is accurate? Below is the text of the newspaper article. Following the article is some research information I have found over the decades.

The Morning Times
Cripple Creek, Colorado
February 15, 1896

CHIEF OF “CONS.”
Big Jim Burns, Gold-Brick Swindler, Visits Cripple Creek and Sleeps in Jail.

     "Big" Ed Burns, one of the most notorious characters in the West, was arrested last night by Officers Clark and Reynolds. Burns is known all over the United States, and has been known to turn a bunco trick in St. Louis and Chigago [Chicago] on the same day. He will do anything from robbing a coop to a gold brick swindle. He was in Leadville in the early days and was mixed up in a killing in Chicago. He has been chased out of all the larger cities in the West, but strange as it may seem, has only done about eight years all told. He usually has a gang of men around him that are as desperate as himself, and the community where they stop suffer greatly from the depredations inflicted by these men.
     In 1889 a man was shot and killed in the Palace theatre In Denver, which was then run by Bat Masterson. Burns and some of his men were in the house at the time and before the victim of the unknown assassin had breathed his last, Burns had robbed him of a large diamond stud. He escaped the officers and left the country and was never punished for the offense. He has been arrested for robbing hen roosts and selling brass bricks for solid gold.
     The brick scheme was worked by him more successfully than his other games, as he invariably caught his man at night and sold him the bricks under the shades of darkness. His appearance helped him on his scheme no [?] and when he was making a "front," would resemble a man of considerable means. He is about six feet one inch tall, has a rather good-looking face. His stomach is enormous and he weighs about 240 pounds. When he "lies up" for a front he wears a silk hat, a long Prince Albert coat, patent leather shoes and on his shirt front a cluster of diamonds. He also wears a very large diamond ring on his right little finger and carries a heavy gold headed cane in the same hand.
     When dressed thus, he is ready to sell gold bricks. When working this he stops at the best hotel in the city and becomes acquainted with all the prominent men stopping there. He picks out a man who he thinks is the easiest worked, and in confidence tells him about some gold bricks which he-owns. He don’t want to sell them, O no, but would like to borrow some money on them. The man would look at them and that night they would take the bricks in a grip and go out of the city limits to be away from prying eyes. Here they would open the grip, take out the bricks and with a file scrape the edges into a paper and take these to the city to have them tested. Of course the filings would be gold and the next night the money would be loaned. When the time expired for the bricks to be redeemed the man who held them took them to the mint or a jeweler to be sold, where he found their spurious nature. In the meantime Burns would be swelling around another part of the country on the money gained in this way.
     Where Burns has been for the past three years no one seems to know. He arrived yesterday morning and slept in jail last night. He arrived alone but his men are supposed to be on the way and they will be "landed" as soon as they arrive. The charge of vagrancy is placed against him and he will be given hours to leave. He says he came in from Pueblo, but it is thought he came from Oklahoma.
So how accurate is the Cripple Creek newspaper?

[The following information comes from Alias Soapy Smith: The Life and Death of a Scoundrel]

  • Burns’ first known arrest in Denver was in June 1883. During a second arrest two months later, he escaped in handcuffs. 
  • In 1887 while in Santa Monica and Los Angeles, he was arrested at least three times and was the defendant in the first recorded court case of the shell game in Los Angeles. 
  • In Denver in late April, early May 1889, Burns received fifteen days for stealing a valise. 
  • Within two months he was arrested for waving a pistol around on 32nd and Holladay streets, vowing to shoot someone. His wife had run off with another man, and he was searching for them. 
  • In 1890 Burns was in Denver where he was known as a smooth operator. On July 16, 1890, Chief of Detectives Loar gave him twenty-four hours to leave the city [note that I do not include the 1889 dying man robbery. I did not find the story in Denver newspapers]. 
  • Burns then vanished until 1892 when he showed up in Creede, probably as a member of the soap gang. He dropped in and out of the gang as he traveled around the state. 
  • In February 1896 he was with Jeff and “ten fierce men” when arrested for vagrancy in Cripple Creek and ordered to leave [this is likely the foundation of the newspaper article in The Morning Times]. 
  • On March 10, 1896, in Denver, he witnessed the saloon shooting of Aquilla “Dick” Hawkins. The Denver Evening Post wrote, “He was never suspected of earning a dollar honestly, and was always regarded as a crook who might be guilty of committing any crime from petite larceny to murder.”
MY THOUGHTS
For the most part the Morning Times article is accurate in regards to Burns' past in Chicago, Leadville, etc. It's hard for me to accept the story regarding the Palace Theater and Burns' robbery of the dying man, based on the lack of a Denver newspaper confirmation. I'm not saying it didn't happen though. The date and vagrancy charge is true, but something the newspaper missed is that Burns was traveling with Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith who apparently escaped notice in the papers.








 









Nov 13, 2009
Feb 10, 2010
May 20, 2010
Sep 12, 2010
Apr 07, 2011
Apr 04, 2020












"Big Ed" Burns: pages 43, 77-79, 101-02, 120, 176, 210, 405, 487, 489, 571.






"Horse sense is a good judgment which keeps horses from betting on people."
—W.C. Fields










April 4, 2020

Con man "Big Ed" Burns arrested in Cincinnati 1891


"BIG ED" BURNS
The Wichita daily Eagle
February 14, 1891

(Click image to enlarge)








trong Arm Workers in Trouble.
"Big Ed" Burns




      Confidence man "Big Ed" Burns has a history all his own, but is just a shadow to most historians. Most know him as Ed Byrnes(sic), leader of the Top and Bottom Gang in Benson, Arizona. Burns was one of the men who warned Wyatt Earp that the "cow-boys" were out for blood, just before the gunfight behind the OK Corral. Later, Burns joined bad man "Soapy" Smith in Denver and Creede, Colorado, and followed Soapy north to Skagway, Alaska in 1898.
     Today's post centers around an 1891 newspaper clipping regarding the arrest of Burns in Cincinnati, Ohio. Of interest is the artist rendition of Burns, which is the only known likeness I have ever seen. Below the newspaper clipping I transcribed the text for ease of reading.  


Copy of original article
(transcribed below)
The Wichita daily Eagle
February 14, 1891

(Click image to enlarge)


The Wichita daily Eagle
(Wichita, Kansas)
February 14, 1891

“Strong Arm Workers” in Trouble.

      Three men were arrested at Newport, Ky., recently who have turned out to be the ringleaders of a gang of sneak thieves who have committed a number of bold depredations in the neighborhood of Cincinnati. They were Frank Hayes, alias Lang; Frank Thompson, alias McCarthy, and James Williams. Upon investigation it was found that Hayes is none other than the notorious Big Ed Burns, of Chicago, whose specialty has been “strong arm work.” He recently served a term in the Stillwater penitentiary for robbing a room at the Fischer house, Minneapolis. Subsequently he was arrested on suspicion at Chicago and given time to leave town. He then visited Cincinnati, and in conjunction with Thompson and Williams, committed a series of robberies of the “strong arm” type, which means the spoliation of the victims by main strength. Williams was recently a drug clerk, and new to the business. He made a full confession, and the whole gang will soon be under lock and key.











"Big Ed" Burns
Nov 13. 2009
Feb 10, 2010
May 20, 2010
Apr 7, 2011











"Big Ed" Burns: pages 43, 77-79, 101-02, 120, 176, 210, 405, 487, 489, 571.





"Gambling in itself is bad enough even when the game is square (honest); but your professional gambler never plays the game that way. He is an expert with cards. His seemingly innocent shuffle of the pack gives him a full knowledge of where every card is located. He deals you a hand good enough to induce you to make dangerously high bets, but not high enough to win. He lures his victim by small winnings to destruction in the end. He uses cards so cleverly marked on the back that he can read the values of your hand as well as if he were looking over your shoulder, and governs his play accordingly."
—Harry Houdini, The Right Way to Do Wrong, 1906.



APRIL 4


1812: The territory of Orleans becomes the 18th state and will be known as Louisiana.
1818: The U.S. flag was declared to have 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars and that a new star would be added for each new state.
1841: President William Harrison dies of pneumonia at the age of 68. He is the first president to die in office.
1848: Thomas Douglas is the first San Francisco public teacher.
1850: The city of Los Angeles is incorporated.
1862: The Civil War Battle of Yorktown begins as Union General George B. McClellan closes in on Richmond, Virginia.
1873: Bad man John Wesley Hardin shoots and kills Deputy John B. Morgan in a saloon at Cuero, Texas.
1878: Dick Brewer, ranch foreman of John Tunstall's horse ranch, is shot dead by Jesse “Buckshot Roberts” Andrews, at Blazer's Mill, New Mexico Territory.
1878: Outlaw Sam Bass and his gang rob the Texas and Pacific railroad at the Eagle Ford, Texas station, getting away with about $233.95. Soapy Smith later witnessed the shooting death of Sam Bass in Round Rock, Texas.
1887: Susanna M. Salter is elected as the first female mayor in the US, of Argonia, Kansas.
1895: William "Tulsa Jack" Blake of the Doolin-Dalton Gang is killed by Deputy Marshal Will Banks in a gun battle in Major County, Oklahoma. Blake took part in numerous bank robberies and train robberies, including the battle with US Marshals in Ingalls, Oklahoma in 1893.
1930: Denver, Colorado policeman Sam Howe dies. He had been with the Denver police for 48-years, starting in 1873. His name and a monetary figure grace the pages of one of bad man “Soapy” Smith’s notebooks.




October 12, 2012

Wyatt Earp's Vendetta Posse Rider: The Story of Texas Jack Vermillion by Peter Brand









yatt Earp’s Vendetta Posse Rider: 
The Story of Texas Jack Vermillion




      Fans of Soapy Smith and my book may recognize the name Vermillion. He was a member of the Soap Gang 1888-89 and was involved in a few key adventures with Soapy, including the attack on the offices of the Glasson Detective Agency in Denver, and the 1889 shootout at the Pocatello train station. In January 2011 Linda Wildman, a member of the Vermillion family, contacted me and started sharing some of her family history and photographs. With her permission I posted the information and photographs, but what neither of us knew, was that author Peter Brand was already working with other members of the family for a book he wanted to publish on "Texas Jack." This was causing a lot of turmoil  for Linda so naturally I immediately removed the post. Nineteen months later I can now announce that Brand's book is published and for sale.Below is my review of the book.

Author: Peter Brand
Paperback: 152 pages
Illustrated: 67 historic photographs
Publisher: Unknown
Date published: 2012
Language: English
ISBN- 978-0-578-10612-0
Retail price: $25.00
Purchase here:


      I am absolutely enamored by author Peter Brand’s new book, Wyatt Earp’s Vendetta Posse Rider: The Story of Texas Jack Vermillion. This is the first complete and authentic historical biography of the man known as “Texas Jack,” and later as “Shoot-Your-Eye-Out-Jack.” Mr. Brand brings new respect to the Vermillion story, and it will most undoubtedly remain the primary chronicle of John Oberland Vermillion for decades to come. Mr. Brand can be proud of his accomplishment in admirably propelling “Texas Jack” up the ladder of historical fame and giving him his own place in history. Whether you’re a fan of the old west, Wyatt Earp, or Soapy Smith, you will find Mr. Brand’s book a very engaging and valuable edition to your book collection. I highly recommend it.
      For many decades “Texas Jack” Vermillion has been a mysterious and largely unknown figure, perhaps even an oddity of history; a gun-fighting carpenter, befriended by legendary lawman, Wyatt Earp and bunco boss, Soapy Smith. No one seemed to know much about him, and quick as he appeared on the scene, he was gone again, remaining just a footnote in the histories of the nineteenth century American west. For many years most historians thought John Wilson Vermillion was the famed “Texas Jack,” but Peter Brand successfully uncovers and explores the true identities and captivating histories of John W. Vermillion, as well as John Oberland Vermillion, the bona fide “Texas Jack.” Thanks to Mr. Brand the mysterious, unknown “Texas Jack” is no more.
     Mr. Brand’s book is composed the way a good biography should be. One of its strongest points is that the known facts, the author’s theories, opinions, and conclusions are well defined and separated, giving the reader the opportunity to judge and come to his or her own conclusion. Another strong point is Peter’s clever formula for compelling the reader to continue exploring the entire book rather than piece read. Whereas some Wyatt Earp and Soapy Smith fans might be tempted to skip to the sections of their choice, Mr. Brand uses John O. Vermillion’s own quotes in such a way that keeps the reader engrossed to the very last page. I don’t recall having seen this method used in a biography as successfully as it is done here; A perfect adaption considering Vermillion is largely known mostly to Earp fans.
      For the fans of Soapy Smith there is a lot to take in and value from Mr. Brand’s book. Besides the bountiful information on Vermillion, there are accounts of his associates who went on to become members and friends of the Soap Gang themselves, such as “Big Ed” Burns (Byrnes), James Bruce, George Millsap, Sam Emrich, and “Fatty” Gray. I won’t go into the details here but there is so much value in this book that I plan to keep it at the ready, as I continue to absorb and utilize Mr. Brand’s fine research for my own work. After I have exhausted the supply of treasures contained within the 152 pages, I will designate a spot of honor on my bookshelves for this important work.


 








"Texas Jack"/"Shoot-Your-Eye-Out Jack" Vermillion
August 8, 2010
September 11, 2010
January 10, 2011
August 1, 2011










"Texas Jack"/"Shoot-Your-Eye-Out Jack" Vermillion: pages 75, 88, 92-92, 162-63, 165, 170, 175.





"Here 'Soapy' Smith and his gang of outlaws and murders operated along the trail; here he was killed; here is his dishonored grave, between the mountains which will not endure longer than the tale of his desperate crimes, and his desperate expiation."
—Ella Higginson,
Alaska The Great Country
, 1917