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: The Northfield Tragedy; or the Robber's Raid A Thrilling Narrative; A history of the remarkable attempt to rob the bank at Northfield Minnesota; the Cold-Blooded Murder of the Brave Cashier and an Inoffensive Citizen. The Slaying of Two of the Brigands. T
THE NORTHFIELD TRAGEDY OR THE ROBBER'S RAID
A THRILLING NARRATIVE.
A HISTORY OF THE REMARKABLE ATTEMPT TO ROB THE BANK AT NORTHFIELD, MINNESOTA. THE COLD-BLOODED MURDER OF THE BRAVE CASHIER AND AN INOFFENSIVE CITIZEN. THE SLAYING OF TWO OF THE BRIGANDS. THE WONDERFUL ROBBER HUNT AND CAPTURE GRAPHICALLY DESCRIBED. BIOGRAPHIES OF THE VICTIMS, THE CAPTORS & THE NOTORIOUS YOUNGER AND JAMES GANG OF DESPERADOES.
John Jay Lemon 26 Minnesota Street St. Paul, Minnesota 1876
THE NORTHFIELD TRAGEDY.
LAYING OUT THE WORK.
A MURDER PLANNED.
It appears that an old man named Gallager, living in a log cabin on the skirts of the woods surrounding Vernon, was supposed to have in his possession a considerable sum of money. The old gentleman lived alone, was known for his parsimony, and thought to be "a penurious niggard of his wealth." The plan of these young villians was to go to the house of the supposed miser, disguised, pretend to be "lost chicken hunters in the woods," and induce the old man to come out and show the way. Getting him into the woods they were to extort from him by threats the whereabouts of his supposed hidden treasure, if threats failed, they were to have recourse to torture, and that failing to murder!
JESSE JAMES RECOGNIZED.
Returning to the five strange men in Mankato, they are next seen on the streets on Monday morning when a young man, Chas. Robinson who was acquainted with the notorious Jesse James, went up to one of them and remarked, "How do you do, Jesse, what brings you up this way." When the man addressed eyeing the speaker keenly from head to foot, replied, "I guess you have mistaken your man" and vaulting into the saddle, galloped away. With this incident, the five men who had attracted so much notice, excited so much admiration, and aroused many vague suspicions, disappeared from Mankato. The same day five similarly dressed, similarly mounted, and similarly appearing, strangers, arrived in Janesville, a village, on the Winona & St. Peter railroad, in Waseca county, about 18 miles from Mankato. As at Mankato they stopped at different hotels, two slaying at the Johnson house, and two at the Farmers' Home. No one know where the fifth slept, but on leaving the village on the Tuesday morning they halted some little distance out, and one, taking off his duster, rode back toward the village waving it over his head; he was followed in the maneuver by another when all four rode away. It is thought this was a signal for the fifth man, who, it is supposed, stopped at some house in the neighborhood.
Those, who stopped at the Johnson house, never made their appearance at the public table until all of the rest of the boarders had finished their meals, and during their stay in the town declined to admit a chambermaid to their room to arrange it. After their departure several packs of playing cards were found in their room torn up and thrown on the floor, and several handful of buttons of various sizes were scattered about, showing that the inmates had been indulging in a protracted game of "poker." The girls who waited on them at table, say they were quiet and polite, and never made any trouble.
Cordova is the next place these "gay cavaliers" turn up, all five of them staying at the same hotel, three occupying one room, and two another with a commercial traveler, W. W. Barlow, of Delavan, Wis., who describes them as polite, jocose fellows. They talked considerably of cattle, and from their language and peculiar dialect, Mr. Barlow thought them to be cattle dealers from the south. They left the hotel at 7 o'clock in the morning, politely raising their hats as they rode off. Cordova is about eighteen miles, almost directly north from Janesville.
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