Who Were the Baddest Bank Robbers You've Never Heard Of? - podcast episode cover

Who Were the Baddest Bank Robbers You've Never Heard Of?

Jan 10, 202410 min
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Episode description

The Newton Boys were a gang of brothers who made a business of robbing banks and trains in the 1920s. Learn how they largely got away with it in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://history.howstuffworks.com/historical-figures/newton-boys-bank-robbers.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio, Hey Brainstuff, Lauren Vogelbaum. Here. Willis Newton and his three brothers are not, for the most of us, as easily identifiable as Pretty Boy Floyd, Baby Face, Nelson, or al Capone. They certainly weren't as renowned as Bonnie and Clyde, but that may go a long way toward explaining why Willis Newton and his gang were just about infinitely more successful than any of those others. For much of their career, nobody, even the cops knew

who the Newtons were. In a blink of about five years, in the nineteen twenties, the Newtons and an occasional accomplice pulled off some seventy bank heists, give or take a dozen, and ripped off six trains, including a single haul of somewhere around three million dollars. It remains the largest train robbery ever. Accounting for inflation, that single three million dollar take in nineteen twenty four would be a fifty three

million dollar getaway today. As old men, after their thieving was mostly over, they surfaced in a nineteen seventy five documentary, but coming off is both proud and practical. Willis said, straight face to the camera, just like a doctor and lawyers and everybody else. It was our business to do that. The youngest of the Newton brothers, Joe, even made his way onto Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show in nineteen eighty

and was downright charming. When Carson asked him about his appeal to women as a bank robber, Joe said, well, if you've got a good car and a pot full of money and you're a young man, yeah. However, in nineteen seventy nine, Willis Newton, just a few months before his death at the age of ninety, sat down in his home in Uvalde, Texas, for a wide ranging and sometimes contentious interview about his life and crimes with historian

and author G. R. Williamson. Before the article this episode is based on How Stuffworks, spoke with Williamson, who walked away from that interview with an entirely different impression of Willis. He said, I truly believe he was a flat out evil person. The four Newton Boys, Willis, Wiley aka Doc, Jess, and Joe were the sons of poor Texas sharecroppers growing up at the turn of the twentieth century. They mostly left school early and fell into petty crimes and stints

in jail. Willis was about twenty five with a lengthy rap sheet already to his name when he first robbed a bank, making off with about four thousand, seven hundred dollars from a job in Kline, Texas. That's about one hundred and forty four thousand in today's dollars. And in nineteen sixteen, with some other outlaws, Willis took a share of around ten thousand dollars from a robbery the about

two hundred and ninety five thousand dollars today. Willis was hooked, and he eventually brought his brothers into the new family business. Early on, as the brothers and occasional accomplices lined up jobs, Willis laid down some ground rules. Williamson said, they were full blown criminals. But here's the thing. Willis had the wisdom to know that if they killed somebody, that would change everything about how the police came after them. So it was his mandate to his brothers that they never

kill anybody. It's a rule that may have been broken. They were involved in a few messy gunfights in Canada in a rare daytime heist, they were involved in a shootout during morning rush hour that sullied their reputation for clean hits and easy getaways. But normally, with a little preparation, plus some nitroglycerin, perhaps to blow the door off of a safe, the Newtons would be on their way quick

and quiet, loot in hand. At its height, the gang was the four brothers and an explosives expert by the name of Brent Blascock, and they robbed banks and trains across Tech, Oklahoma, through the Midwest, and even into Toronto, Canada. On at least one occasion, they robbed two banks in one day. Williamson said, compared to the Newtons, Jesse and Frank James were mere amateurs, but Cassidy was a small fry. The Newtons made blowing safes and robbing trains a big business.

They wanted to fly under the radar. They didn't want notoriety. Bonnie and Clyde they had actual photographs of them, and they did all sorts of stuff that kept taunting the police. So did pretty Boy Floyd. Because the public did not know what the robbers that were doing these bank jobs and train robberies looked like. The Newtons weren't having to run from the law. At one point, Willis said, we wasn't mugs like Bonnie and Clyde. We was just quiet businessmen.

What we wanted was the money. It helped too that the Newtons mostly did their work at night. They didn't generally barge into banks branching shotguns, and banks compared to today, were much easier to rob. Many of the banks of the Newtons knocked over were in small towns with little security.

Williamson said, Remember, the only communications in the nineteen twenties was telegraph and telephone, no Internet, no national database of fingerprints, no national database of mug shots or anything like that. So they could pull these things off and nobody knew it was the Newtons. In between jobs, when it was convenient, they'd go back to the family home in Uvalde and lay low until they needed more money. Williamson said the general opinion of the people in Uvalde at the time

was that all the Newton boys were near Dowells. They were probably up to criminal activity, but nobody knew that they were the robbers. When they were on business trips outside of Texas, they'd stay in the nicest hotels and eat at the best restaurants. At least two of the brothers regularly attended sporting events like the Kentucky Derby and Indianapolis five hundred. They spent lavishly until their money ran low,

then planned the next job. The Newton Gang's biggest heist, that three million dollar one, was also the one that brought them down. It was a train robbery outside of Chicago, Illinois, on June twelfth of nineteen twenty four. The Newtons, along with Glascock and a few newcomers, stopped a train on its way to dropping off cash to several banks along

its route. The gang quickly loaded sixty three bags of loot into four stolen cars, but in the confusion of the nighttime raid and after a train brakeman escaped and alerted authorities, Glasscock mistook Doc Newton for a guard and accidentally shot Doc several times. The men all got away, placing the wounded dock atop bags of cash, but authorities

quickly found the men. A corrupt postal inspector who was in on the job gave himself away under wire tap, a tip that led authorities to the doctor who had treated the wounded. Doc Willis made it across the border into Mexico, and Jesse escaped for a while to Texas with about thirty five thousand dollars that's six hundred and twenty one thousand dollars today, money that was never officially found and is the source of some local legends about

buried treasure. But at the time, within months everyone involved was arrested and headed to trial, including the convalescing Doc, who was taken into the proceedings on a stretcher. However, although eight men were convicted in the end, and the amount of money that they stole was enormous, most of their sentences were light and all were eventually released on

good behavior. Later in life, Doc and Willis tried to rob a bank in Rowena, Texas, when Doc was well into his seventies and Willis was eighty, But the Newton brothers spent the rest of their lives mostly on the right side of the law. Their exploits are now often considered when the Newtons are acknowledged at all, as brothers simply trying to make a living. Willis told his documentarians, I knew all them bankers was rich, and they didn't care about hurting us poor farmers. So why should I

care about hurting them? Why shouldn't I steal from them? It's just one thief stealing from another. But the romanticized story as told by Willis, his brothers, and many historians, isn't necessarily the true one. Williamson points out that in at least a few of their robberies a lot of gunplay was involved, and the lack of planning could have

been disastrous. He said, a majority of the times when they got into these robberies where they actually had guns out and so forth, they screwed up so bad they should have been killed. Willis was good at planning, but the execution sometimes was completely out the window. In his research, Williamson uncovered damning newspaper accounts of a shootout during one of their train robberies in Illinois, in which he claims a black porter by the name of Moon died three

days after the robbery from gunshot wounds. Though the Newtons swore they never killed anyone, that may not have been the case. The last living member of the gang, Joe, died in nineteen eighty nine. Today, the Newtons retain their status as folk heroes to many. There was even a dramatized film made about them in nineteen ninety eight, and they remain unquestionably the most successful bank robbers the country has ever seen. Joe told Carson in nineteen eighty we

was crazy for doing it, but you're young then. Today's episode is based on the article the Newton Boys were the Baddest bank robbers You've Never heard of on how Stuffworks dot Com, written by John Donovan. Brain Stuff is production of iHeartRadio in partnership with how stuffworks dot Com and is produced by Tyler Klang. Four more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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