When the Daltons Rode.

"Forty years ago I rode the first forbidden trail which was to carry me into the broad highway of outlawry": First Edition of When Daltons Rode; Signed by Emmett Dalton

When the Daltons Rode.

DALTON, Emmett. In collaboration with Jack Jungemeyer.

Item Number: 112417

Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc, 1931.

First edition of Emmett Dalton’s autobiography. Octavo, original cloth with smoking gun vignette to the front panel, pictorial endpapers, frontispiece portrait of Emmett Dalton after a photograph taken in 1892. Signed by the author on the half-title page, “Sincerely yours Emmett Dalton.” Near fine in the rare original dust jacket with light rubbing.

The Dalton brothers led one of the last gangs of horseback outlaws. Ironically, three of them - Bob, Grant, and Emmett - started their careers as deputy marshals. They soon decided that more money could be made from horse rustling and in 1888 they organized a band that carried on a thriving trade. When they came under suspicion toward the end of 1890, the brothers went to California, where on February 6, 1891, at the small station of Aila, they held up a Los Angeles-bound passenger train. The robbery failed when the baggage clerk excaped and the Daltons were unable to break into the safe. Grat was captured and sentenced to twenty years in prison, but escaped from the train carrying him to Folsom. The gang resumed operations in Oklahoma where, during the next two years, they robbed three trains before turning to the more lucrative trade of bank robbery. Modeling their plans on the James brothers, the Daltons struck the two banks at Coffeyville, Kansas on October 5, 1892, hoping, as Bob said, "to beat anything Jesse James ever did - rob two banks at once in broad daylight." However, the identical fate that befell the James gang at Northfield, Minnesota awaited the Daltons. Confronted with a large crowd of armed townsfolk, the gang attempted to shoot its way to safety; in the battle, Bob, Gat and two other gang members were killed, and Emmett was severely wounded and captured. It is the basis for the 1940 film directed by George Marshall and starring Randolph Scott, Kay Francis and Brian Donlevy.

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