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Rmccamey

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,665
Location
Central Texas
Traces of Texas reader Charles Chaney saw a photo of Dallas socialite Inez Thomas posted on ToT and was so taken by it that he colorized it. This portrait was taken in the early 1920s in Washington, D.C. Prior to this she had represented Dallas as the "Duchess of Dallas" at the 1916 San Antonio Fiesta.

Inez Thomas.jpg
 
Messages
11,912
Location
Southern California
Wow, never saw that one before. A Good book on Bonnie and Clyde is "Go Down Together".
It's been a while since I've read it, but another good book on Bonnie and Clyde is "My Life With Bonnie and Clyde" by Blanche Caldwell Barrow, Clyde's sister-in-law (married to his brother Buck). She only spent four months with her husband as part of "the gang", but served six years in prison for "assault with intent to kill" the sheriff of Platte County, Missouri as a result of their association.
 
Messages
15,238
Location
Somewhere south of crazy
It's been a while since I've read it, but another good book on Bonnie and Clyde is "My Life With Bonnie and Clyde" by Blanche Caldwell Barrow, Clyde's sister-in-law (married to his brother Buck). She only spent four months with her husband as part of "the gang", but served six years in prison for "assault with intent to kill" the sheriff of Platte County, Missouri as a result of their association.
Good to know. Blanche had some eye problems stemming from the Platte County raid by the police.

I've never been much of a B&C aficionado. I should read some of those, as I haven't gotten much beyond Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. Although "The Highwaymen" was very good.
Loved the Highwaymen!
 

Woodtroll

One Too Many
Messages
1,216
Location
Mtns. of SW Virginia
I've never been much of a B&C aficionado. I should read some of those, as I haven't gotten much beyond Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. Although "The Highwaymen" was very good.

Yes, "The Highwaymen" was a great movie - a nice break from all the fantasy action crap that's being produced these days.

Like you, I'm not a "fan" of Bonnie and Clyde, and certainly don't think they were heroes of any sort. You might still find "Go Down Together" interesting, though. It does tell the story of the couple, but included in all of that is an awful lot of background information about the conditions of the country and the people in that time period. There's quite a bit of insight into Frank Hamer's character, as well. And even though the book focuses on Bonnie and Clyde, it certainly does not hold them up as heroes or role models. If I remember correctly, at times it stops just short of calling them "murdering white trash", whch I think may be pretty accurate. At any rate, I thought the book was very well done.
 
Messages
19,128
Location
Funkytown, USA
Yes, "The Highwaymen" was a great movie - a nice break from all the fantasy action crap that's being produced these days.

Like you, I'm not a "fan" of Bonnie and Clyde, and certainly don't think they were heroes of any sort. You might still find "Go Down Together" interesting, though. It does tell the story of the couple, but included in all of that is an awful lot of background information about the conditions of the country and the people in that time period. There's quite a bit of insight into Frank Hamer's character, as well. And even though the book focuses on Bonnie and Clyde, it certainly does not hold them up as heroes or role models. If I remember correctly, at times it stops just short of calling them "murdering white trash", whch I think may be pretty accurate. At any rate, I thought the book was very well done.

When I was younger I romanticized the gangster criminals of the era, but had no fantasy they were good or worth rooting for. Since I was a lad in the 60s, and my father and I like to go to the drive-in, I was fed a steady diet of "Pretty Boy Floyd;" "Dillinger," with Warren Oates; "Bonnie & Clyde;" and of course the piece de resistance, "Big Bad Mama."

Since then, I've done some reading on the era and activities, but mostly through long news or magazine articles or analyses. I should pick up one of the books.
 
Messages
17,583
She only spent four months with her husband as part of "the gang", but served six years in prison for "assault with intent to kill" the sheriff of Platte County, Missouri as a result of their association.

Good to know. Blanche had some eye problems stemming from the Platte County raid by the police.
The location is near me. The cabins, the tavern & the nearby Castle were torn down yrs ago. The highways have been rerouted at least twice since then so most people don't know the actual spot where everything once stood. Even the public marker was erected in the wrong location in order to remain on public land. About the only thing still standing from that time is the Platte County Courthouse where Blanche was put on trial.

The original acreage was the site of new construction a few yrs ago in prep for a new bldg. It belongs to Farmland Industries now, their corporate headquarters. During the excavation people in the know were metaldetecting at night hoping to find something.
 
Messages
17,583
The original acreage was the site of new construction a few yrs ago in prep for a new bldg. It belongs to Farmland Industries now, their corporate headquarters. During the excavation people in the know were metaldetecting at night hoping to find somethin
Was headed that way earlier so thought I would pull off for a couple pics of the marker with my Stetson 7X Fifty.

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Ya'll come back now ya hear?
 
Messages
17,901
Location
Nederland
Cinema pioneer George Méliès sporting a mean homburg.

georges-melies_gare-montparnasse-paris_1927.jpg


A colorized picture of him.
georg melies.jpg


Being unable to keep up with the rapid development of the film industry, he went bankrupt and worked in a toy shop on Montparnasse, Paris (picture below). Recognition for his work did follow in the late twenties and early thirties though and he received the French Légion d'honneur.
georg melies-la-montparnasse-2.jpg
 

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