Butch and Sundance: Who Knew? Five Great Factoids

 

Sundance, seated left, Butch, seated right

Sundance, seated left, Butch, seated right

It’s hard to believe, but 2009 marks the fortieth anniversary of the classic film, Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid. The picture, released on October 24, 1969, has indelibly etched stars Paul Newman and Robert Redford as the two outlaws, but the truth about Robert Leroy Parker (Butch) and Harry Longbaugh (Sundance) is actually more fascinating than any movie could be. Here are five things you probably never knew about Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

 . They really were western robin hoods. Butch, Sundance and the members of their gang, The Wild Bunch, were among the most efficient and effective bandits of their era. But while they often robbed trains and banks of enormous amounts, they seldom stole from ordinary people. In fact, they were known for giving money to individuals and families down on their luck. In one instance, Butch once rode a horse over three states to bring medicine to a woman he had never even met.

 . Etta Place may be the most mysterious figure in American history. The Kid’s girlfriend, Etta Place (played by Katharine Ross in the movie) probably has fewer facts known about her than any other famous person in the history of the United States. Although theories about Etta abound, nobody knows where she came from, what her real name was, who her parents were or what she did for a living. Historians aren’t even sure she was Sundance’s lover. Etta disappeared in 1909, aged somewhat less than thirty, and was never seen again.

 .The Sundance Kid wasn’t from the West. Harry Alonzo Longbaugh was born in 1867 near Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, a mere 27 miles from Philadelphia. His parents were Josiah and Annie Longbaugh (or Longabaugh) and were probably farmers. He emigrated to the west with his uncle and aunt, George and Mary Longenbaugh (yet another spelling!), and settled in Durango, Colorado. Harry got his name when he was arrested and thrown into the jail at Sundance, Wyoming for horse theft.

 .They could have gotten off scott free. In the spring of 1900, Judge Orlando W. Powers offered a general amnesty to Butch and Sundance if they’d promise to stop robbing Union Pacific Trains. At that point the pair and their companions had already relieved the train line of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Their answer to the offer was pure Old West outlaw: on August 29, 1900 they blew up the baggage car of a Union Pacific train in Table Rock, Wyoming and got away with $55,000.

. Butch and Sundance may have lived into the 1930’s. In the final shot of the film, the two outlaws are cut down by Bolivian fedrales in a hail of gunfire; for the past 100 years, this has pretty much been the accepted version of their fate. But in May of 2009, a forensic anthropologist named John M. McCullough unearthed the remains of a rancher named William Henry Long in Duchesne, Utah. McCullough, of the University of Utah, believes that those remains are actually those of Harry Longbaugh, the Sundance Kid. Long, whose headstone gives his birthdate as 1860, lived in the town with a widow with five children and was well known for telling tales of his outlaw days right up until his suicide in 1936.

 If Dr. McCullough is correct, we may soon discover many more things we never knew about the West’s most charming and charismatic owlhoots.

 

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One Comment on “Butch and Sundance: Who Knew? Five Great Factoids”

  • Is there a relationship between William Henry Long and John Luther Long & little
    Crysanthamum?

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