On this date in 1933, the notorious Ma Barker gang robs a
Federal Reserve mail truck in Chicago, Illinois, and kills Officer Miles
Cunningham.
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Sein Fein Leader Michael Collins is killed (1922) & Ma Barker gang robs Federal Reserve Truck (1933)
On this date in 1922Irish revolutionary and Sinn Fein
politician Michael Collins is killed in an ambush in west County Cork, Ireland.
In the early part of the century, Collins joined Sinn
Fein, an Irish political party dedicated to achieving independence for all
Ireland. From its inception, the party became the unofficial political wing of
militant Irish groups in their struggle to throw off British rule. In 1911, the
British Liberal government approved negotiations for Irish Home Rule, but the
Conservative Party opposition in Parliament, combined with Ireland's anti-Home
Rule factions, defeated the plans. With the outbreak of World War I, the
British government delayed further discussion of Irish self-determination, and
Collins and other Irish nationalists responded by staging the Easter Up-Rising of
1916. In 1918, with the threat of conscription being imposed on the island, the
Irish people gave Sinn Fein a majority in national elections, and the party
established an independent Irish parliament, Dail Eireann, which declared
Ireland a sovereign republic. In 1919, Collins led the Irish Volunteers, a
prototype of the Irish Republican Army, in a widespread and effective guerrilla
campaign against British forces. Two years later, a cease-fire was declared,
and Collins was one of the architects of the historic 1921 peace treaty with
Great Britain, which granted autonomy to southern Ireland. In January 1922,
Sinn Fein founder Arthur Griffith was elected president of the newly
established Irish Free State, and Collins was appointed as his finance
minister. He held the post until he was assassinated by Republican extremists
in August 1922.
Netting only a bunch of worthless checks, the Barkers
soon returned to a crime with which they had more success—kidnapping. A few
months later, the Barkers kidnapped wealthy banker Edward Bremer, demanding
$200,000 in ransom. After Kate Clark married George Barker in 1892, she gave
birth to four boys: Herman, Lloyd, Arthur, and Freddie. Ma Barker, as Kate was
known, was ostensibly responsible for discipline in the family, but she let her
boys run wild. She defended her children no matter what they did, saying,
"If the good people of this town don't like my boys, then the good people
know what they can do." All the Barker boys became involved in crime
during their childhood: In 1922, Lloyd robbed a post office and received a
25-year sentence in federal prison; that same year, Arthur "Doc"
Barker got a life sentence in Oklahoma for killing a night watchman, though
later it would turn out that he was innocent; Freddie was next to see the
insides of a holding cell after robbing a bank. While he was serving time in
Kansas, Herman committed suicide in the midst of a heated gunfight with police
after robbing a bank in Missouri. Herman's death inspired Ma Barker to pressure
authorities to release her other sons, and Doc and Freddie were set free. With
Ma masterminding their criminal enterprise, the Barkers were at the center of
the Midwest's burgeoning criminal community. When they tired of bank robberies,
the Barkers tried their hand at kidnapping. Their first victim, William Hamm,
earned the gang $100,000 in ransom. Although the Bremer abduction in 1933
produced twice as much, it brought them a lot of heat from federal authorities.
With the FBI on their trail, Doc and Freddie attempted plastic surgery. But
this half-baked idea left them only with disfiguring scars, and Doc was captured
in early 1935. Doc, who was later killed while attempting to escape from
Alcatraz in 1939, refused to talk to authorities, but police found papers in
his hideout that led them to Ma and Freddie in Lake Weir, Florida. After a
ferocious shootout lasting 45 minutes, the Barkers lay dead from the fusillade,
machine guns still at their sides. Twelve years later, Lloyd Barker was finally
paroled. He too met a violent demise, but not at the hands of the police, his
wife shot him dead in 1949. Father George Barker, who was never part of the
Barker gang, was the family's sole survivor.
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