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LTC Stephen F.
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Edited 7 y ago
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Thanks Maj Marty Hogan for letting us know that February 3 is the anniversary of the birth of American bank robber Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd
Eternal turmoil Pretty Boy Floyd
Images: 1934 body of Pretty Boy Floyd lies on display in a morgue in East Liverpool, Ohio; 1934 body of Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd is propped on a slab, East Liverpool, Ohio; 1930s $23,000 Reward poster for Pretty Boy Floyd; 1934 panoramic shot of the funeral back home in Oklahoma for Pretty Boy Floyd.
Background:
"Pretty Boy Floyd was best known for his constant run-ins with police and violent bank robberies.
Synopsis
Born in Georgia in 1904, Pretty Boy Floyd was known for his constant run-ins with police and violent bank robberies. Floyd was arrested for a payroll robbery in the mid-1920s and went on to rob numerous banks after his release. He was often viewed favorably by Oklahoma locals, who called him "the Robin Hood of the Cookson Hills." After being accused of taking part in the Kansas City Massacre, Floyd was gunned down and killed by FBI agents in 1934.

Early Life
Charles "Pretty Boy" Arthur Floyd was born in Adairsville, Georgia, on February 3, 1904, one of many children. His family soon after moved to Oklahoma, where they owned a farm and were extremely poor.
Floyd would come to earn the nickname "Choc" due to his appreciation of Choctaw beer. He turned to crime to escape the poverty of the Depression era, which hit farmers in the "Dust Bowl" especially hard.
At 20 years old, Floyd married Ruby Hardgraves; they had a son, Charles Dempsey "Jack" Floyd, who was born while the elder Floyd was serving a four-year prison sentence for a robbing a Kroger store payroll delivery in St. Louis, Missouri. (Hardgraves divorced Floyd during the latter part of his imprisonment, though the two would rekindle their relationship in the early 1930s.) After serving time, Floyd also received another nickname, "Pretty Boy," from a girlfriend at a Kansas City boardinghouse, though he came to hate the moniker.

A Life of Crime
Upon his release, Pretty Boy Floyd was thought to have killed a man who was accused, but acquitted, of killing his father. He became a hired gun for bootleggers along stretches of the Ohio River.
Known for his reckless use of a machine gun, Floyd began robbing banks in Ohio with a group of gangster accomplices, and soon moved on to other territories. During his crime spree, bank insurance rates in Oklahoma were reported to have doubled. He became popular with the public by allegedly destroying mortgage papers at many of the banks he robbed, liberating many debt-ridden citizens. (These acts were never fully verified and may in fact be myth.) Known for sharing money he'd lifted with others, he was often protected by Oklahoma locals, who dubbed him "Robin Hood of the Cookson Hills."

Kansas City Massacre
One of the more memorable events that Floyd was accused of taking part in was the Kansas City Massacre. It was reported that Floyd, along with Vernon Miller and Adam Richetti, attempted to prevent their friend—Frank Nash—from being returned to a U.S. penitentiary located in Leavenworth, Kansas. In an elaborate plot to free Nash, the gang proceeded to release fire on officials who were guarding the convict on the morning of June 17, 1933, at the Union Railway Station in Kansas City, Missouri. Nash got caught in the crossfire and died, along with two officers, a police chief and an FBI agent. Floyd himself denied taking part in the events; a biographer later called into question Floyd's presence at the massacre while the FBI, via its website, continues to assert his involvement.

Final Years
After John Dillinger was caught and killed, Floyd became "Public Enemy No. 1," and a $23,000 bounty was offered for his capture, dead or alive. Floyd avoided the authorities for more than a year after the massacre, using the alias Mr. George Sanders and going into hiding with Richetti and two women, Rose and Beulah Baird.
It wasn't until Wellsville, Ohio, Police Chief J.H. Fultz was told that suspicious individuals were lurking outside of town that authorities found the men, with Richetti apprehended and Floyd making his escape. He was later found in an East Liverpool cornfield and a shootout ensued. Floyd was shot twice, with his last words being, "I'm done for; you've hit me twice." Two FBI agents left to get an ambulance but Floyd died 15 minutes after he was shot, on October 22, 1934.
A record numbers of gatherers, well into the thousands, attended Charles Floyd's funeral at Akins Cemetery. The gunman's legend was put into song as part of Woody Guthrie's "Pretty Boy Floyd."
Thanks for mentioning me SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL

"Pretty Boy Floyd", performed by John McCutcheon in concert at the Institute of Musical Traditions, Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington, MD, USA on September 18, 2011.
John McCutcheon is a nationally touring troubadour described by The Washington Post as folk music's "Rustic Renaissance Man," a moniker flawed only by its understatement. Besides his usual circuit of major concert halls and theaters, John is equally at home in an elementary school auditorium, a festival stage or at a farm rally, but it is in live performance that John feels most at home."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JdeTr3lWPnY


FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC Stephen C. LTC Orlando Illi LTC (Join to see) LTC Ivan Raiklin, Esq. Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Capt Seid Waddell Capt Jeff S. CPT Jack Durish MSgt Robert C Aldi SFC Stephen King MSgt Danny Hope SGT Gregory Lawritson Cpl Craig Marton SP5 Mark Kuzinski
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Thank you for the share Joe.
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SSgt Donald Libby
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Thanks for sharing. Those times were wilder than the old west.
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