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TRUE CRIME

Elizabethan Rogues and Vagabonds

By Frank Aydelotte.

“The essay which follows has grown out of a study of a number of Elizabethan pamphlets dealing with rogues and vagabonds, the most important of which are the Conny-catching series of Robert Greene and the Caueat for Commen Cursetors of Thomas Harman. ' Conny-catching ' was an Elizabethan slang word for a particular method of cheating at cards, but it came to be used in a general sense for all kinds of tricks by which rogues and sharpers beguiled simple people of their money. Greene passed a large part of his life among the worst company to be found in London. During the two years before his death, moved, as he professed, by repentance, he published the series of Conny-catching pamphlets, exposing the tricks of this wicked crew of sharpers in order that innocent folk might read and take warning. The books are vivid and well written, and they picture an elaborately organized profession of roguery with a language of its own and a large number of well-defined methods and traditions. There was a live esprit de corps among the thieves, and a pride in clever and dexterous work which made their profession more of an art than a trade. All this Greene explains in detail. The first question that any reader would ask himself after finishing these very entertaining descriptions of the art.”

Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1913. 187p.

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The Buccaneers and Marooners of America

Edited by Howard Pyle.

Being an Account of the Famous Adventures and Daring Deeds of Certain Notorious Freebooters of the Spanish Main. 2nd ed. A genuine account of four notorious pirates [by Charles Johnson] of four notorious pirates: Captain Teach . Captain William Kidd. Captain Bartholomew Roberts and his crew. Captain Avery and his crew.

London: T.Fisher Unwin, 1892. 403p.

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From Boniface to Bank Burglar

By George M. White.

Or, the price of persecution, how a successful business man, through the miscarriage of justice, became a notorious bank looter. “How a Successful Businessman, Through the Miscarriage of Justice, Became a Notorious Bank Looter" was originally published in 1907. The author, George White, was also known as George Bliss. He and his gang robbed (or attempted to rob) banks along the East Coast (from New York to Philly). There are chapters on the Walpole bank burglary, Cadiz bank loot, police and sheriffs, the Pinkerton Detective Agency, corrupt bank clerks, Jim Irving, lock pickers, Columbus prison, Jim Burns, William Hatch, detectives, and much more.”

Bellows Falls, CT: Traux Printing, 1905. 495p.

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Rube Burrow, the Outlaw

By Harry Hawkeye [i.e. P. E. Lowe]

A Book Of Thrilling Adventure And Desperate Deeds, Narrating Actual Facts As Obtained From Principals And Eyewitnesses. . Rube Burrow was a prolific train robber during the 1880s and 1890s..

Baltimore: I. & M. Ottenheimer, 1908. 196p.

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Life and Adventures of Sam Bass

Anonymous.

Tthe Notorious Union Pacific and Texas Train Robber. Together with a graphic account of his capture, and death, sketch of the members of his band, with thrilling pen pictures of their many bold and desperate deeds, and the capture and death of Collins, Berry, Barnes, and Arkansas Johnson.

Dallas, TX: Dallas Commercial Steam Print, 1878. 89p

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Train and Bank Robbers of the West

By Augustus C. Appler.

A Romantic but faithful story of bloodshed and plunder, perpetrated by Missouri's Daring Outlaws. The life, character and daring exploits of the Younger brothers, ... also, the war record of Quantrell.

Chicago: Belford, Clarke & Co., 1889.

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The Adventures of Martin Cash

By Martin Cash.

Comprising a faithful account of his exploits, while a bushranger under arms in Tasmania, in company with Kavanagh and Jones, in the year 1843. “The subjoined sketches of buskranging life in Van Diemen’s Land were strung together in the form of a narrative, at the solicitation of a. number of respectable and influential colonists in Tasmania, Sydney, -and Melbourne, particularly the former territory, where the principal incidents described in the narrative occurred ; and where many are still living who can vouch for the fidelity of the pictures of Bush Life which are delineated in the following pages, illustrative of the evils arising from the misapplication and undue severity of prison discipline in the- early days of the Colony. It is not with a view of extolling his exploits, or those of lies companions when under arms in the Bush, nor yet of presenting himself in the character of a hero, that the Author has been induced to narrate his adventures, his chief object being to present a faithful portraiture of the modus operandi of that discipline so indiscriminately exercised without reference to individuals or the moral, or physical capabilities of that unfortunate class to which it was applied ; and at the same time endeavouring to show that the social and moral condition of the Colony was mainly affected by the exercise of that discipline, the rigours of which had driven numbers of the more deserving of that class to finish their wretched career on the scaffold ; but who under a. a more humane svstem of coercion might have been restored to freedom.”

Hobart Town: Printed at the "Mercury" Steam Press, 1870. 177p.

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Tricks and Traps of New York City

By Seymour B. Durst.

“If the production of highly finished scoundrels ever becomes a matter of emulation among the nations of the earth, patriotism, a national pride in our country, and the undeniable facts in the case lead us to assert, that America need yield the palm to none and should there ever be a great World Exhibition of Rogues, in which all nations shall vie with each other in producing fine assortments of scamps, we modestly claim in behalf of our beloved city of New York the very first place for its fine corps of swindlers.”

Boston: C.H. Brainard, 1857. 64p.

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A Book of Scoundrels

By Charles Whibley.

A volume of essays. “ While murder is well-nigh as old as life, property and the pocket invented theft, late-born among the arts. It was not until avarice had devised many a cunning trick for the protection of wealth, until civilisation had multiplied the forms of portable property, that thieving became a liberal and an elegant profession.”

Macmillan (1897) 284 pages.

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Ups and Downs of a Crook's Life

By Samuel L. Bailey

By an Ex-Convict.. “It was while serving the last days of my five years' sentence in Clinton Prison, that I began to think of what I could do to earn an honest living after I should once more be a free man….”

Goddard NY. 1889. 150 pages.

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The Confessions of a Con Man

By Will Irwin.

As Told to Will Irwin. “When these confessions appeared serially, friends and distant enquirers took it for granted that they were fiction; that I had stitched together, from the experiences of many grafters, the biography of a typical one. I hasten to assure the reader that this is a genuine confession; that I figure in it but as the transcriber of a life story told me I believe with every conscientious effort at truth during a month of pleasant association in New York. As a reporter, a little skilled in distinguishing the truth from the lie, I believed, when I wrote, in the sincerity of this story. Since then letters from his old companions of the road, who wished to be put into communication with him again, have confirmed detail after detail. I have disguised a name or a locality here and there ; otherwise I have set down only what he told me, trying through it all to give some flavor of the man and his vocabulary.”

New York: B.W. Huebsch, 1909. 182p.

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Newgate Calendar

By Andrew Knapp and William Baldwin.

Comprising interesting memoirs of the most notorious characters who have been convicted of outrages on the laws of England since the commencement of the eighteenth century; with occasional anecdotes and observations, speeches, confessions, and last exclamations of sufferers.

London: J. Robins and Co., 1824. 416p.

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Half-Hours With The Highwaymen Vol.2.

By Charles G. Harper.

Picturesque biographies and traditions of the " knights of the road" “When Harrison Ainsworth wrote Rookwood family,that fantastic romance of highway robbery and the impossible exploits of the Rookwood family, he did a singular injustice to a most distinguished seventeenth-century highwayman, John Nevison by name, and transferred the glory of his wonderful ride to York to Dick Turpin, who never owned a " Black Bess," and who never did anything of the kind.”

London. Chapmen and Hall (1908) 372p.

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English Travellers and Italian Brigands

By W.J.C. Moens and Anne Wariters Moens.

English Travellers and Italian Brigands. A Narrative of Capture and Captivity. “The book which I venture to offer to the public has no pretensions whatever to literary merit of any sort. I have endeavored to describe, as simply as possible, what took place from day to day during my captivity…”

London: Hurst and Blackett, 1866. 376p.

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Brigand Life in Italy: A History of Bourbonist Reaction

By Marc Monnier.

“"The enemies of Italian unity have done so much at all times to mislead public opinion on the reactionist movements which have agitated the Southern provinces of Italy ... that I thought a work containing a truthful history of brigandage in the ex-kingdom of Naples would be at the same time useful and interesting ... I thought I could not do better than begin my work by acquainting English readers with the narrative of M. Monnier, who, an eye-witness for the most part of the time, related the history of the first period of the Neapolitan troubles ... I have then continued the history of these sad annals from the point left by M. Monnier up to the present day, availing myself of every investigation that has been made on this subject--of every official document published, and chiefly of the admirable report made by .. Commendatore Massari ... presented to our House of Deputies ... In the second volume I have also been able to introduce a report kindly sent to me by General Pallavicini, on his last brilliant expeditions into the most infested parts of the Southern provinces, and have concluded by some remarks on recent political events, and the progress that has been made by the young kingdom of Italy ..."--Preface.

London: Hurst and Blackett, 1865. 344p.

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Brigandage in South Italy

By David Hilton Wheeler.

Volume 1. “I have attempted to describe that ‘vast conspiracy of things and men, of passions and prejudices, of history and politics, which impair the security of the Neapolitan provinces and the forces of Italy.”

London: S. Low, Son, and Marston, 1864. ...353p.

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Under the Black Flag

By Kit Dalton.

Originally published in 1914, this is Kit Dalton's memoirs of his time serving under William Quantrell during the American Civil War and his time as a border outlaw following the surrender of the Confederate States.

Memphis, TN: Lockard Publishing Co., (1914). 265p.

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