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Wanted Man

The Forgotten Story of an American Outlaw

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
One September night in 1891 the Wild West went east. A masked man boarded the American Express Special train as it sped through New York State and single-handedly stole a fortune. His name was Oliver Curtis Perry, and he instantly became the country's most wanted man.
While detectives searched in vain, the public and press couldn't get enough of the handsome, charismatic young robber whose physical daring was matched by stories of a troubled childhood and romantic life. Women adored him, boys worshipped him: America was falling in love. Five months later he defied belief by robbing the same train again. This time, after one of the most extraordinary chases in history, he was caught and sentenced to forty-nine years hard labor.
But if the authorities believed they had beaten this celebrity criminal they were badly mistaken. Perry's prison life proved as remarkable as his robberies as he turned escape artist, protestor, hunger-striker, and finally poet in his determination to win his freedom. In Wanted Man, Tamsin Spargo brings this extraordinary portrait of a forgotten man to life once more as she tells his story of adventure and tragedy.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 1, 2004
      Even a scholarly British cultural historian like Spargo can fall prey to the romance of the American train robber. Captivated by a photograph of the handsome Oliver Curtis Perry (1865-1930), she vividly relates his dramatic life in a popular but prodigiously researched biography. In 1892, Perry robbed the American Express Special of a fortune in jewelry and cash as it sped out of Syracuse, N.Y. Identified by a former colleague, he was pursued by Pinkerton detectives while his exploits were sensationalized in tabloid stories that celebrated his daring. Five months later, trying to rob the same train, he was caught after an exciting chase that included Perry's hijacking of another train. Severely emotionally damaged by virtual abandonment in childhood, Perry could still be charming and worked the media to his advantage. His supporters included Amelia Haswell, who ran a Christian mission. Spargo vividly describes the trial that resulted in a 49-year jail sentence, as well as Perry's desperate attempts at escape, which led to his incarceration in facilities for the criminally insane. During this period, Perry deliberately blinded himself and went on a hunger strike to protest the conditions of his imprisonment. While entertainingly bringing her subject to life, Spargo also reveals the terrible conditions that existed in New York State prisons and asylums during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Photos, map.

    • Library Journal

      September 27, 2004
      Even a scholarly British cultural historian like Spargo can fall prey to the romance of the American train robber. Captivated by a photograph of the handsome Oliver Curtis Perry (1865-1930), she vividly relates his dramatic life in a popular but prodigiously researched biography. In 1892, Perry robbed the American Express Special of a fortune in jewelry and cash as it sped out of Syracuse, N.Y. Identified by a former colleague, he was pursued by Pinkerton detectives while his exploits were sensationalized in tabloid stories that celebrated his daring. Five months later, trying to rob the same train, he was caught after an exciting chase that included Perry's hijacking of another train. Severely emotionally damaged by virtual abandonment in childhood, Perry could still be charming and worked the media to his advantage. His supporters included Amelia Haswell, who ran a Christian mission. Spargo vividly describes the trial that resulted in a 49-year jail sentence, as well as Perry's desperate attempts at escape, which led to his incarceration in facilities for the criminally insane. During this period, Perry deliberately blinded himself and went on a hunger strike to protest the conditions of his imprisonment. While entertainingly bringing her subject to life, Spargo also reveals the terrible conditions that existed in New York State prisons and asylums during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Photos, map.

      Copyright 2004 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from November 1, 2004
      Spargo, raised in Cornwall, England, and now a professor in Liverpool, has had a long-standing fascination with the American Wild West, fueled by the fact that one of her uncles was a carpenter for Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and built a shooting range for Annie Oakley. This book takes off from a single photograph taken in the 1890s (featured on the cover of the book) of a train robber who looks handsome, intelligent, a bit conflicted, and curiously contemporary. The outlaw, Oliver Curtis Perry, robbed a train steaming through New York of a fortune (twice), bringing the Wild West to the East. Perry became, to the 1890s, the kind of romanticized hero/villain that John Dillinger and Bonnie and Clyde became in the early twentieth century. This book is a remarkable blend of biography, history, and cultural study, as Spargo (in an arrestingly and refreshingly nonacademic way) both presents Perry's heart-pounding exploits as robber and prison escape artist and explores the ways in which he manipulated the press of the time to win public sentiment. Spargo also shows how the public, against a backdrop of robber barons amassing huge fortunes at public expense, was ripe for the picking by this Robin Hood-like outlaw. Fast paced, action packed, and absolutely intriguing.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2004, American Library Association.)

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