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Bonnie Parker's grave, inscribed: "As the flowers are all made sweeter by the sunshine and the dew, so this old world is made brighter by the lives of folks like you." 32°52′03″N 96°51′50″W / 32.867416°N 96.863915°W / 32.867416; -96.863915 ( Burial site of Bonnie Elizabeth
On June 10, a one-car wreck at Wellington, Texas had left Bonnie Parker critically burned and near death. While the gang hid and tried to nurse Parker in a Ft. Smith, Arkansas tourist court, Buck Barrow and W.D. Jones were sent to raise funds. They bungled the robbery and killed the town marshal of Alma, Arkansas.
Displayed on another page are graphic photos by Times photographer John B. Gasquet of the bullet ridden car, the bodies of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, and last, a photo of the Texas and ...
The Bonnie & Clyde Ambush Museum is a museum located in Gibsland, Louisiana at 2419 Main Street, the former site of Ma Canfield's Cafe where Bonnie and Clyde stopped at to purchase sandwiches before dying in an ambush led by Texas Ranger Frank Hamer 7 miles away on May 23, 1934. The museum has been open since 2005 and features a "Death Car ...
It was May 1934, when the notorious couple Bonnie and Clyde were killed in Louisiana. Today a museum in Louisiana provides a replication of the ambush.
Topekan Ken Cowan, 97, recalls playing nearby as outlaws Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow stole their "death car" 90 years ago Monday in Topeka.
Henry Methvin (April 8, 1912 – April 19, 1948) was an American criminal, a bank robber, and a Depression-era outlaw. He is best remembered as the final member of Bonnie and Clyde's gang.
Sowers gained notoriety on November 21, 1933, when renowned criminals Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow met family members at dusk near what is now Texas Highway 183 approximately one and a quarter miles northwest of the community, where Barrow had arranged a clandestine picnic to celebrate his mother's fifty-ninth birthday.