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SECTION 2
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SECTION 3
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Robbed Banks
Title 1
Title 2
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...lived up to
the title bestowed upon him by J. Edgar Hoover's Division of Investigation
and cemented his national notoriety when on March 3, 1934, he broke out of
the Lake
County Jail in Crown Point, Indiana. Dillinger had been in Crown Point
since his extradition from Arizona in January awaiting trial for murder.
On that morning, using a gun which had been carved out of wood, he took
two of his keepers hostage. After locking up the warden, Lou Baker, and getting the drop on the turnkey and one of the national
guardsmen there to prevent such a breakout, he commandeered two machine
guns. After freeing a fellow inmate, he ultimately made his way out a side
door of the "heavily fortified" jail and proceeded to make his
getaway in the sheriff's V-8 Ford.
Dillinger's bold escape set off a flurry of reports of
sightings across the midwest in the days that followed. The escape caused
a political uproar. In the escape he had made one vital mistake, in
driving the stolen car across the state line toward Chicago, he had
violated the one law that could involve federal
agents at the time, the National Motor Vehicle Theft Act. It was an
error that would set the stage for his ultimate demise outside of a
Chicago theater four months later.
John Herbert Dillinger's career in crime had started
inauspiciously enough with the botched robbery attempt of a grocer in his
hometown of Mooresville, Indiana, on September 6, 1924. He had turned 21
years of age just three months earlier. John was sent to reformatory in
Pendleton, Indiana, where he was to meet future colleagues Harry
Pierpont and Homer Van Meter. After serving five years without parole,
an embittered Dillinger requested and received a transfer to the Indiana
State Prison in Michigan City, Indiana, where Pierpont and Van Meter were
already in residence.
By mid-1932 Dillinger had become part of a group of
prisoners intent on escaping. This group included Harry Pierpont as
leader, along with Charles
Makley, John Hamilton, and Russell Clark, and later Walter
Dietrich and James
Jenkins. Since Dillinger's parole date was approaching he was selected
to operate as their connection on the outside, carrying out robberies to
raise funds for the escape.
Subsequent to his parole on May 22, 1933, he began a
series of holdups. During this period Dillinger began to call attention to
himself with his flamboyant style, which included wearing a fashionable
straw hat, and a knack for athletic leaps over the teller's barrier into
the cashier's cage. Not long after securing sufficient funds for the
necessary bribes of guards and officials, along with arranging for the
smuggling of weapons into the prison, he was once again arrested
in Dayton, Ohio. The arrest took place on September 22, 1933, at the
boarding house room of girlfriend Mary Longnaker, with whom he had visited
the Chicago World's Fair that summer.
While lodged in the jail at Lima, Ohio, his companions
carried out their escape on October 12. All ultimately getting away except
for Joseph Jenkins, who after being thrown from the getaway car, managed
to commandeer a vehicle driven by a youth who was able to escape after
tricking Jenkins into checking the gas tank. Jenkins was later shot and
killed by local posse members on alert in Beanblossom, Indiana.
Three of the escapees, Pierpont, Clark
and Makley, soon broke Dillinger out of the Lima jail after badly beating
and shooting Sheriff Jesse Sarber, who died that evening. The gang then
proceeded to Chicago to avoid the intense manhunt throughout Ohio. In
Auburn and Peru, Indiana, they robbed police arsenals acquiring a cache of
weapons including machine guns and also bulletproof
vests.
During the gang's stay in Chicago, several important
events were to transpire. On November 15, Dillinger, with his new
girlfriend, Evelyn
"Billie" Frechette, narrowly escaped a police ambush set up
when an informant had notified the police that Dillinger would be seeing a
dermatologist named Dr. Charles Eye. Dillinger eluded his pursuers after
having his vehicle shot up in a high speed chase.
The publicity mounting, on November 20, the gang carried
out a daring robbery in Racine, Wisconsin. With shots being fired, they
escaped behind a shield of hostages. Then on December 14, John
Hamilton mortally wounded Sergeant William Shanley, when the detective
tried to capture him in a garage where he had followed a lead on a gang
vehicle being repaired there.
With the heat on and the development by the Chicago
police of a special unit called The Dillinger Squad, it was decided by the
gang that they should lay low for awhile. Dillinger reportedly dyed his
hair red and grew a mustache. John and Billie joined Makley, Clark, and
Hamilton in Daytona Beach, Florida. On Christmas Eve, Dillinger and Billie
had a violent argument which culminated with Dillinger beating her and
throwing her out the following morning, providing her with a $1000 and the
keys to his car as a parting gesture.
Dillinger returned north two weeks later to go after
Billie in her home state of Wisconsin. He and Hamilton decided to rob The
First National Bank in East Chicago, Indiana, on January 15. During
the getaway Patrolman William O'Malley fired shots at Dillinger only to
have them bounce off the bulletproof vest the outlaw was wearing. In the
exchange of fire that followed Dillinger shot and killed the officer.
Hamilton was wounded by police fire and was helped by Dillinger to the
getaway car.
On January 23,1934, Makley and Clark were forced out of
hiding at the Hotel Congress in Tucson, Arizona, by a fire that broke out
in the hotel that morning. One of the firemen, having recognized them from
a crime magazine photo, notified the sheriff. The same day, Dillinger and
Billie Frechette arrived in town for the reunion of the gang. They did
manage to meet on the 25th, but acting on a tip, the police first arrested
Makley, and then Clark, at the house they had been staying in since the
hotel fire. Later, following leads, the police were able to capture
Pierpont. Dillinger, unaware of these events, arrived at the house where
Makley and Clark had been grabbed, and was arrested by officers just as
they were setting up their stakeout.
Dillinger became a national news item during his
incarceration in the Pima County jail. Newspapermen and photographers
poured in from around the country. While Dillinger and his gang gave
interviews, there was much legal
wrangling behind the scenes over which state would win extradition. He
was eventually extradited to Indiana to stand trial for the O'Malley
killing. The other three were sent to Ohio to be tried for killing Sheriff
Sarber in the Lima breakout. Billie Frechette, arrested with Dillinger,
was released.
On January 30, the plane carrying Dillinger and his
guards arrived
at Chicago Municipal Airport. Waiting at the airport was a large
contingent of police, in addition to the Dillinger Squad. With sirens
wailing, the car carrying the outlaw was accompanied by a caravan of
vehicles and motorcycle cops. Arriving at the sheriff's office in Crown
Point, Indiana, he was greeted by numerous reporters with whom he cracked
jokes. Photographers convinced Dillinger
and Prosecutor Estill to pose, Dillinger cheerfully leaning his arm on
his prosecutor's shoulder, with the sheriff looking congenially on.
The arraignment for the O'Malley killing took place on
February 9, 1934. Louis
Piquett, a Chicago attorney who specialized in representing underworld
characters, acted as his lawyer. After some legal maneuvering, Judge
William J. Murray, set the trial for March 3. During the succeeding weeks
there was little concern about a jailbreak, for along with the
escape-proof reputation of the county jail and the fifty guards employed
there, the sheriff had added armed citizens and National Guardsmen. When
Dillinger bluffed his way out with the wooden
pistol on March 3, it left officials
stunned and the public captivated.
By March 4, Dillinger, having rejoined Billie Frechette,
arrived in St. Paul to add the final members of his new gang. This was to
include John Hamilton and old prison friend Homer
Van Meter (paroled from the Indiana penitentiary nine days after
Dillinger in May 1933). Van Meter brought in fellow criminals, Eddie
Green and his partner Tommy
Carroll. To this group, was added underworld character Lester Gillis,
better known as Baby
Face Nelson, known for his reputation as a trigger-happy killer.
On March 6, the gangsters robbed The Security National
Bank and Trust in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. As Dillinger and Van Meter
collected $49,000 in cash and bonds from the vault, alarm blaring, a large
crowd of onlookers gathered in the street. Nelson, spying off-duty
policeman Hale Keith peering through the window, fired through the glass,
wounding the man. To make their getaway, they took hostages to ride the
running boards of their Packard, acting as a human shield. Once they
arrived at the main highway they threw nails into the road in order to
slow down any pursuing police. When the Packard overheated due to a police
bullet hole in the radiator, the gang stole another car just as the police
closed in. This led to a running gun battle, which nevertheless they were
able to escape from, heading back to their Twin Cities hideout.
At about the same time, a panic arose in Lima, Ohio, at
the trial of Pierpont and Makley, as word got out that Dillinger might try
to break them out. The March 13th robbery of The First National Bank in
Mason City, Iowa, netted only $52,000 of an anticipated $240,000. Both
Dillinger and Hamilton received shoulder wounds and a bystander was
wounded when fired on by Nelson. The gang once again escaped behind a
shield of hostages, all of whom were released after about 45 minutes. Back
in Minneapolis, both Dillinger and Hamilton were treated for their wounds.
John's plans to use his share of the $240,000 to leave the country had to
be abandoned.
In the weeks following Mason City, Dillinger was
reported seemingly everywhere, by now having become a Robin Hood-like
figure to the public. In fact, he was recovering from his wound, as he and
Frechette were living as Mr. and Mrs. Cart T. Hellman at the Lincoln
Court Apartments in St. Paul. When the manager of the apartments
became suspicious of their behavior, she notified authorities. The FBI
began surveillance on March 30. On the following morning, the agents and a
local officer knocked on the door. Billie answered and identified herself
as Mrs. Hellman. Upon being told that they were the police she stalled,
saying that she needed to get dressed and closed the door. As the agents
and officer waited, Homer Van Meter walked up the steps. Within a short
time gunfire erupted between Van Meter and the officials. Dillinger opened
fire with his machine
pistol, shooting through the door. He next opened the door, spraying
the hallway with machine gun fire before running down the back stairs. As
he ran, he was hit by a police bullet in the leg. Once again he had
escaped a law enforcement snare. On April 3, as a result of an intense
manhunt, federal agents caught
up with gang member Eddie Green. As he moved as though to draw, the
agents cut him down.
John
and Billie next moved on to the Dillinger
farm in Mooresville, staying there while he recovered from his leg
wound. Authorities soon learned that they had returned to Chicago and were
quickly able to track down and arrest Billie Frechette as she entered a
bar. On seeing the arrest of his girlfriend, Dillinger quickly drove away.
She was taken to St. Paul to stand trial on harboring charges. She was
sentenced in May 1934, receiving two years in jail at Milan, Michigan.
On April 13, Dillinger and Van Meter robbed the Warsaw,
Indiana, police station, making off with guns and three bulletproof
vests. This heist set off an intense manhunt and prompted hundreds of
reports of sightings. In mid-April Dillinger and Hamilton stayed at
Hamilton's sister's home in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. On April 20,
having received a tip, the FBI arrived in town only to discover that the
two outlaws had already moved on.
By an arrangement made in Chicago, the gang decided to
meet in Northern Wisconsin, at the Little
Bohemia Lodge near Mercer. The criminals took up residence beginning
April 20. Along with them they brought Van Meter's girlfriend Marie
Comforti, Nelson's wife Helen and Tommy Carroll's wife Jean. The
Nelsons moved into a cabin next to the lodge, with the rest taking rooms
on the second floor of the lodge itself. They immediately began to enjoy
the rest, relaxing and playing cards.
Within a short time, the owner of the lodge, Emil
Wanatka, had identified Dillinger from a newspaper photo. With his wife
becoming increasingly nervous, and growing tired of the pushy gangsters,
it was decided to find a way to contact the police. Passing the
information on to Mrs. Wanatka's brother, he and her brother-in-law, Henry
Voss, drove to the town of Rhinelander. That afternoon the local sheriff
put him in contact with Melvin Purvis in Chicago. Purvis immediately
chartered two planes to fly into the Rhinelander airport.
Fifteen agents were selected, eleven of whom would fly,
the other four were to drive. Once there, they joined forces with another
group who had flown in from St. Paul. The leader of this group, Assistant
Director Hugh Clegg, assumed overall command of the operation. Expecting
to begin the raid at 4 a.m., it was learned from Voss's wife that
Dillinger and the others had moved their departure up to that evening. The
agents located five vehicles and drew up plans to surround the lodge.
Three agents in bulletproof vests were to come through the front door
while others took up positions around the lodge.
On the trip to the lodge, two of the cars broke down
requiring some of the agents to ride on the running boards of the
remaining cars in the extreme cold. Just before 8 p.m., they arrived at
their destination and immediately blocked the driveway with two of the
cars. They then began to move in on foot.
As they neared the lodge, they were suddenly confronted
by barking dogs, which Voss had failed to warn them of. The agents rushed
into position, thinking that those inside had been alerted. At just this
moment, three of the visitors to the lodge headed to their car, while two
of the lodge employees came outside to check on the barking. As the three
men began backing their car out, the agents opened fire believing it was
gang members getting away. One of the occupants of the car was killed
instantly.
Hearing the gunfire outside, the gang quickly moved into
place and opened fire, Nelson shooting from the cabin. Within moments, as
previously planned, Dillinger, Van Meter and Hamilton, followed by Carroll
went out the back of the lodge. They headed down to the adjacent lake and
escaped to the north on foot. Nelson soon escaped, heading the opposite
direction along the shore. While he headed south, the others soon located
vehicles to steal, and got away.
Forcing his way into a nearby lodge owned by a man named
Koerner, Nelson was holding the occupants hostage when Emil Wanatka and
his brother-in-law arrived in front with the two employees from Little
Bohemia. Nelson commandeered their vehicle and prepared to leave with Emil
and Koerner as hostages, unaware that Koerner had already called the FBI
when he noted Nelson's suspicious arrival.
At this moment, Agents Jay Newman, W. Carter Baum and a
local constable named Christiansen pulled into the driveway. As they
pulled next to his car, Baby Face jumped out and ordered the agents and
the officer out at gunpoint. He then proceeded to open fire on all three,
killing Baum on the spot. The hostages dove for cover. After unloading his
weapon at everything in sight, Nelson took the Ford the agents had been
using and headed south at high speed.
Back at the lodge, the three gangster's women, who had
been hiding in the basement, surrendered and were arrested. As Dillinger,
Van Meter and Hamilton raced toward St. Paul after the battle, they were
spotted by waiting lawmen, who began chasing the stolen Packard the gang
was driving. As they exchanged fire one of the police bullets caught
Hamilton in the back.
Eventually eluding their pursuers, they hijacked another
car and headed for Chicago with the wounded Hamilton. Nelson holed up at
the Lac Du Flambeau Indian Reservation until a few days had passed, then
made his way to Marshfield, Wisconsin, and obtained a car. The women were
jailed in Madison.
The entire raid came to be seen by the public as a
disaster, bringing heavy criticism on the FBI and Hoover. As the
controversy raged, five days later, Dillinger and Van Meter finally found
medical attention for Hamilton, through Doc Barker of the equally
notorious Barker gang. In the end, Hamilton died of his wound and was
buried in a gravel quarry.
On May 5, 1934, spurred on in part by the lawlessness of
the likes of Dillinger, The House Of Representatives passed numerous laws
covering crimes typical of those committed by the motorized bandits of the
time. While Dillinger went into hiding in Calumet City, Illinois, Bonnie
and Clyde were killed by a posse outside Gibsland, Louisiana, on May
23, 1934.
In an attempt to evade the intensifying manhunt, John
had his lawyer Piquett, and his investigator Arthur
O'Leary, locate a plastic surgeon to alter his appearance. They
arranged for Dr.
Wilhelm Loeser and an assistant, Dr. Harold Cassidy, to operate. On
May 27, at the home of James Probasco, they went to work on his face.
Several days later, they worked on the tips of his fingers, attempting to
remove his fingerprints. The end results of the work were highly
debatable. Some friends on seeing John later, thought he looked like he
had the mumps.
A short time later, the women arrested at Little Bohemia
were released and placed on probation. Tommy Carroll, reunited with his
wife, drove to Waterloo, Iowa. Acting on a tip, police looked for and then
located their car parked in an alley. Later as the Carrolls emerged from a
nearby restaurant, the police approached. Carroll went for his gun but one
of the officers knocked it from his hand. As he began to run he was shot
four times. He would later die
in the hospital. The ranks of the Dillinger gang were thinning.
On June 30, still hoping to raise money to leave the
country, Dillinger with Van Meter and another man who may have been Pretty
Boy Floyd, robbed the Merchant's National Bank in South Bend, Indiana.
During the robbery and it's aftermath, there was much gunfire with Van
Meter shooting an officer, who later died. Van Meter himself suffered a
severe head wound. The resultant take was a mere $4,800 between them.
The day after the robbery a man known as Jimmy Lawrence
met his girlfriend, Polly
Hamilton, for a date. He had been seeing her for two weeks. She was
renting out a room from a Romanian immigrant named Anna
Sage. Sage was currently facing deportation proceedings, stemming from
her convictions resulting from charges related to her running brothels in
Gary, Indiana, and East Chicago. Only Sage knew that Jimmy Lawrence, was
in fact, John Dillinger. While living quietly in his new identity, the
manhunt was continuing. Hoover had appointed Samuel
Cowley to head up the investigation in Chicago.
On July 20, 1934, Anna Sage contacted acquaintance Martin
Zarkovich, an East Chicago police sergeant, and offered to reveal the
whereabouts of John Dillinger in return for both the reward money and help
in blocking her deportation. Zarkovich contacted Melvin Purvis. At
subsequent secret meeting with Purvis and Cowley she outlined her offer
and received assurance that they would help with her deportation problem.
She told them that she would be going with John and Polly to the movies at
the Marbro the following evening.
On July 22, all available agents were briefed on the
setup. At 5:30 p.m., Sage called and confirmed that they would attend a
movie that night at either the Marbro, or the Biograph theater. Secondary
plans were quickly made to have Purvis and Agent Ralph Brown stake out the
Biograph. Spotting Dillinger and the women arrive at the Biograph,
where Manhattan Melodrama featuring Clark Gable was showing, Agent Brown
immediately called Cowley. Agents quickly surrounded the theater. Purvis
was stationed left of the entrance.
At 10:30 p.m., Dillinger and his companions exited the
theater. Purvis having identified him, lit his cigar, the prearranged
signal. Purvis and Agent Herman E. Hollis closed in from behind with guns
drawn. As he neared the alleyway down from the theater, glancing over his
shoulder, he began to run into the alley. Agents Hollis, Charles Winstead,
and C. Hurt fired five times. Three bullets hit Dillinger and he fell face
down. One shot, probably fired by Winstead, had entered his neck and
exited under his right eye, killing him.
Taken
to the
Alexian Bros. Hospital, he was pronounced
dead at 10:30 p.m. From there his body was transported to the Cook
County Morgue, where a huge crowd gathered and a number of photos
were taken. The FBI checked his fingerprints, and in spite of his
attempts to have them obliterated, were able to make a positive
identification. An autopsy was then performed. The next day the
body was put on display at the morgue and thousands came to look at
the infamous John Dillinger. Newspapers were filled with stories of his
betrayal by a "woman in red", soon identified by the press as Anna
Sage.
The body was next transferred to McCready Mortuary. On
July 24, the remains were taken to the E.F. Harvey Funeral Parlor in
Mooresville. The casket was soon moved from there to his sister's home in
Maywood. A crowd of thousands gathered outside the Crown Hill Cemetery, as
the twenty car funeral
procession arrived. Dillinger's body was then buried. Due to countless
rumors that would go on for years, that it wasn't Dillinger's body in the
ground, John Dillinger Sr. soon made arrangements to have 3 ft. of
reinforced concrete poured into the ground above the grave, lest anyone
attempt to dig up the coffin.
Of his surviving companions, Van Meter was trapped
and killed a month later in St. Paul. Shortly thereafter, Makley was
killed and Harry Pierpont wounded in a failed jailbreak. Pierpont would
soon go to the electric chair. Russell Clark received a life sentence for
his part in the Sarber killing. On November 27, 1934, Baby Face Nelson,
while traveling with Helen Gillis and armed companion John Paul Chase,
were spotted by Federal Agents Samuel Cowley and H.E. Hollis. During the
gun battle that followed, Nelson killed Cowley and Hollis, but was himself
mortally wounded. His body,
having been dumped not far away, was discovered the next morning.
The passing of John Dillinger and his gang marked the
beginning of the end of an era of lawlessness in American history. His
short life had ended violently, but his legend would continue to grow with
the passage of time. Little would he have imagined that, in the end, he
would be remembered as the most notorious outlaw of his time.
Copyright © 1997 Bob
Fischer
| Banks robbed by Dillinger and associates |
| July 17, 1933 |
$3500 |
Commercial Bank, Daleville, Indiana |
| August 4, 1933 |
$6700 |
Montpelier National Bank, Montpelier, Indiana |
| August 14, 1933 |
$6000 |
Bluffton Bank, Bluffton, Ohio |
| September 6, 1933 |
$21000 |
Massachusetts Avenue State Bank, Indianapolis |
| |
| Banks robbed by Dillinger/Pierpont combined |
| October 23, 1933 |
$76000 |
Central National Bank, Greencastle, Indiana |
| November 20, 1933 |
$28000 |
American Bank & Trust, Racine, Wisconsin |
| December 13, 1933 |
$8,700 |
Unity Trust & Savings Bank, Chicago |
| |
| Bank robbed by Dillinger and Hamilton |
| January 15, 1934 |
$20000 |
First National Bank, East Chicago, Indiana |
| |
| Banks robbed by second Dillinger Gang with Van
Meter and “Baby Face” Nelson |
| March 6, 1934 |
$49500 |
Securities National Bank & Trust, Sioux Falls, SD |
| March 13, 1934 |
$52000 |
First National Bank, Mason City, Iowa |
| June 30, 1934 |
$29890 |
Merchants National Bank, South Bend, Indiana |
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John Dillinger in 1934, age 31

1933 Mug Shot

1934 Wanted Poster

Crown Point
Greeted by numerous reporters
at the sheriff's office, photographers convinced Dillinger
and Prosecutor Estill to pose.

Weapons taken from the
Dillinger Gang
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