Cyrus Skinner was typical of the thieves and murderers who terrorized the gold fields of Montana in the early 1860s. Skinner was born in Ohio in 1829 and began his robbing as a teenager. Immigrating to California in 1850 was arrested for burglary soon after, and served 2 years in San Quentin. Six months after his release, he was again arrested for burglary in Yuba County, California, being sentenced to 3 years in San Quentin again but escaped and committed 5 more robberies before his recapture and sentencing to San Quentin for 15 years this time.
In early 1859, Henry Plummer, an old friend of Skinner, joined him in San Quentin, and together they escaped for the final time in 1860 and fled to gold camps in northern Idaho where he became of a part of Plummer's gang of criminals.
Skinner moved east over the mountains to Montana gold fields, establishing saloons at Bannock and Virginia City. Skinner was one of the most brutal of Plummer's gang and occasionally killed his victims just for the fun of it. By early 1864, he and the gang had taken over 100 lives.
After Plummer was caught and hanged by the Vigilante's, Skinner left town but was tracked down to Hellgate, Montana in January of 1864. He had a morbid fear of being hanged, so he ran, thinking the Vigilantes would shoot him instead. Then denied him that privilege and recaptured him and hung him, the last of the 24 bandits that were executed by the Montana Vigilantes.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
As of May 2011, any "anonymous" comment will not be published. Comments made to this blog are moderated.