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Nevada History: The Real Story As Told By State
Archivist
No Sundance
In Winnemucca, But Maybe Some Of Butch Cassidy's Gang
by Guy Rocha, Nevada State Archivist
This has become the best known instance of fantasy overtaking reality
in Nevada. The story goes that Butch Cassidy, the Sundance Kid, and
several companions robbed the First National Bank in Winnemucca on
September 19, 1900. The story became so popular the town began holding
an annual Butch Cassidy Days celebration.
Then in the fall of 1982 the myth was challenged by the Humboldt
Historian, which published a carefully researched article by Lee
Berk. Berk, who had unearthed papers of banker George Nixon that
contained new evidence, had replowed all the old ground--bank records,
investigative files, newspaper accounts--and discovered that although
Wild Bunch members pulled the heist, Butch was not among them.
For instance, Nixon had negatively identified Cassidy. That is, after
viewing photographs of the Wild Bunch outlaws, Nixon had said positively
that Cassidy was not among the robbers. A web of additional evidence
also supported the Berk thesis, such as placing Cassidy six hundred
miles from Winnemucca robbing a passenger train in Tipton, Wyoming on
August 29, 1900, twenty-one days before the Winnemucca holdup. The bank
robbers were known to have camped in a field north of Winnemucca ten
days before the holdup. If Cassidy had committed both crimes, it would
have entailed making the six hundred-mile ride from Tipton to Winnemucca
in eleven days. "I figured that Cassidy couldn't have gotten there,"
according to Berk. "He had to go on horseback."
Where the story originated, no one knows for sure, but it may have
been the work of the Pinkerton Detective Agency, which, after the
robbery, issued two wanted cards listing the robbery among Butch's and
Sundance's credits. According to an entry for Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid in The Mythical West: An Encyclopedia of Legend, Lore,
and Popular Culture (2001), "the majority of the gang's crimes...
took place between 1896 and 1901. During that period, those in which
both Butch and Sundance actively participated included no more than two
train robberies and one bank job." The Winnemucca bank robbery is not
listed as the one bank job.
The myth includes a photograph of the Wild Bunch sent from Fort
Worth, Texas, to the First National Bank a few months after the robbery.
An unsigned note thanked the bank for the cash. The photo of five men
included Harry Longabaugh (the Sundance Kid) and Robert Leroy Parker
(Butch Cassidy). The presumption was that everyone in the photo was
associated with the robbery. Only three of the gang entered the bank and
robbed it of $32,640, giving birth to a legend. In fact it was the
Pinkertons who sent George Nixon the photograph more than five months
after the robbery. A Wells Fargo detective in Fort Worth found the photo
at the Swartz photography studio and recognized the Wild Bunch gang.
Wells Fargo sent a copy of the photo to the Pinkertons, who were
investigating the robbery on behalf of the American Bankers Association.

From left to right: Harry Longbaugh ("the Sundance Kid"), Bill
Carver, Ben Kilpatrick, , Harvey Logan ("Kid Curry"), and George Leroy
Parker ("Butch Cassidy"). Photograph taken at Swartz Studio, Fort
Worth, Texas. (Western History Collection, University of Oklahoma
Library, Norman OK) Note: For further reading on this subject, a well written synopsis of
the "Great Winnemucca Bank Robbery" by David Toll can be found in the
May/June 1983 issue of Nevada Magazine.
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