Monday, October 22, 2012
Pretty Boy Floyd is Shot and Killed - 1934
On this date in 1934, Charles "Pretty Boy"
Floyd is shot by FBI agents in a cornfield in East Liverpool, Ohio.
Charles Floyd grew up in a small town in Oklahoma. When
it became impossible to operate a small farm in the drought conditions of the
late 1920s, Floyd tried his hand at bank robbery. He soon found himself in a Missouri
prison for robbing a St. Louis payroll delivery. After being paroled in 1929,
he learned that Jim Mills had shot his father to death. Since Mills, who had
been acquitted of the charges, was never heard from or seen again, Floyd was
believed to have killed him. Moving on to Kansas City, Floyd got mixed up with
the city's burgeoning criminal community. A local prostitute gave Floyd the
nickname "Pretty Boy," which he hated. Along with a couple of friends
he had met in prison, he robbed several banks in Missouri and Ohio, but was
eventually caught in Ohio and sentenced to 12-15 years. On the way to prison,
Floyd kicked out a window and jumped from the speeding train. He made it to
Toledo, where he hooked up with Bill "The Killer" Miller. The two
went on a crime spree across several states until Miller was killed in a
spectacular firefight in Bowling Green, Ohio, in 1931. Once he was back in
Kansas City, Floyd killed a federal agent during a raid and became a nationally
known criminal figure. This time he escaped to the backwoods of Oklahoma. The
locals there, reeling from the Depression, were not about to turn in an
Oklahoma native for robbing banks. Floyd became a Robin Hood-type figure,
staying one step ahead of the law. However, not everyone was so enamored with
"Pretty Boy." Oklahoma's governor put out a $6,000 bounty on his
head. On June 17, 1933, when law enforcement officials were ambushed by a
machine-gun attack in a Kansas City train station while transporting criminal
Frank Nash to prison, Floyd's notoriety grew even more. Although it was not
clear whether or not Floyd was responsible, both the FBI and the nation's press
pegged the crime on him nevertheless. Subsequently, pressure was stepped up to
capture the illustrious fugitive, and the FBI finally got their man in October
1934.
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