Of all Western outlaws, none are more fondly remembered in story and folklore than the "Robin Hood of the West," Butch Cassidy - the alias of Robert LeRoy Parker. Parker was born 13 April 1866 in Beaver, Utah, and was raised by Mormon pioneer parents on a ranch near Circleville, Utah. While a teenager, Parker fell under the influence of an old rustler named Mike Cassidy. Parker soon left home to ride the outlaw trail. For the first several years after leaving home, Parker rode the fringe between being an outlaw and a migrant cowboy. He worked several ranches as well as one time in a butcher shop in Rock Springs, Wyoming, from which he took the name "Butch"; and to not bring shame upon honest parents, he added the name Cassidy, most likely in respect for his old mentor. By 1896 his gang dubbed themselves the "Wild Bunch." This gang consisted of several notorious Western outlaws including Harry Longabaugh, known as the Sundance Kid; Harvey Logan, alias Kid Curry; Ben Kilpatrick, the Tall Texan; Harry Tracy, Elzy Lay, who was Butch's best friend, and several others. Operating around the turn of the century, Cassidy and his partners put together the longest sequence of successful bank and train robberies in the history of the American West. Copyright © 2009-2012 Visitor Information Center, Town of Circleville, Utah
3 Comments
BILL NAGY 23 Oct 2012
NICE INFORMATIONJoanie Holliday 22 Oct 2012
GREAT CAPTURE MARK !!!!! ALWAYS ENJOYED THE STORY OF BUTCH CASSIDY & THE SUNDANCE KID... NEAT PHOTO. JOANIEmarie-claire gallet 22 Oct 2012
Very nice shot and thank you for sharing all these explanations with us! Very interesting! Greetings from France.