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November 15, 2019

Bonnie and Clyde’s Darkest Hour

Bonnie and Clyde’s days were slowly getting numbered. Their last few robberies occurred in Oklahoma, Texas, and Louisiana. They had to be extremely careful, realizing that they can get recognized, as had happened in Missouri and Iowa that left multiple casualties. The couple would sleep in their car during the night and drive during the day to avoid scrutiny. With bad luck, the couple were setup in Grand Prairie, Texas in November 1933 by the Dallas Texas Rangers and deputies. They escaped the officers’ bullets and reached an attorney on the freeway. They held him up at gunpoint and fled with his car, towards Louisiana. The couple were already accustomed to their situations, always too close for comfort.1

Bonnie and Clyde met in Texas in January, 1930. Before that time, Clyde was born into a family of a poor farmer. Clyde had a passion for music and at one point was considering to pursue a career in music. Influenced negatively by his older brother Buck, and a shady family friend, Clyde went from learning how to play instruments to stealing cars. Bonnie was very similar to Clyde when growing up, as she also had a love for music and acting. She always had a dream of performing on the silver screen. When Bonnie was nineteen, she was married to Roy Thornton, who was just another criminal. Clyde who was twenty-one and  unmarried, was already sent to prison a little while after the couple met. He was able to escape with the help of Bonnie, who had snuck him a gun, but he was later recaptured and sent back to prison. Clyde was paroled in February 1932, and rejoined Bonnie to resume their life of crime with each other.2

The Rangers responsible for the capture and killing of Bonnie and Clyde | Wikimedia

With the capture of the couple’s friend “Jones” (who rode with the couple for eight months) on November 16, 1933, law enforcement learned of the close ties Bonnie and Clyde had with their families. This resulted in another ambush attempt, which led to putting their mothers in danger. Clyde was furious and decided to retaliate by being focused on the East Ham Prison Farm.3 In January 1934, Clyde broke out an old friend, Raymond Hamilton, who had previously been a part of the Barrow gang. A guard was killed and multiple prisoners escaped. Among those prisoners was Henry Methvin, who had begun riding with Bonnie and Clyde. The crime spree began once again, to include the brutal murder of two motorcycle cops, who were parked and waiting for an Easter meeting with family members. Henry Methvin got spooked and shot at the first cop, then Clyde shot the second cop. By mid-afternoon they played dead by their motorcycle on what was then a country road off Texas 114. But the end was near.

Clyde’s bullet riddled Ford V8 sedan with Texas Rangers in the background, 1934 | Courtesy PDNB Gallery, Dallas, TX

Referring to the importance of values Bonnie and Clyde had with their families, the Rangers once again set up another ambush. This ambush would involve Methvin’s family this time. When police learned that Methvin had split up from the couple on the evening of May 19, 1934, they realized this was a huge opportunity. Police assumed they would search for Henry at his father’s farm, so they planned an ambush along the road that the outlaws were expected to take. The six rangers confiscated Iverson Methvin’s truck (Henry Methvin’s father) and removed one of its tires, then placed it alongside highway 164, which is between Sailes and Gibsland, LA. They figured if Clyde saw the truck, they would slow down and want to investigate. Sure enough, they were right. At 9:15 am on May 23, 1934, they saw Clyde’s stolen Ford v8 slow down while approaching the truck. The officers opened fire at the car, killing Bonnie and Clyde instantly. About 130 bullets were fired at the car, blowing a hole in the back of Clyde’s head and shooting off Bonnie’s right hand.4

The bodies of Bonnie & Clyde, 1934 | Courtesy PDNB Gallery, Dallas, TX

 Bonnie’s wish was to be buried next to Clyde, but their families had different wishes. Although they created a romantic image of two young lovers running from the big, bad cops, Clyde’s driving skills, Bonnie’s poetry, and her beauty, it was destroyed by the truth. Though they often captured police who caught up to them and let them off unharmed hours and hundreds of miles later, they killed thirteen people, some bystanders slain during bungled robberies.5 They really never got away with much money when they robbed banks. Bonnie and Clyde were desperate criminals, sleeping in their most recently stolen car and constantly fearing death in a hail of bullets from a police ambush. Still, they were the stuff of legends.

  1. Encyclopedia Brittanica, 2019, s.v. “Bonnie and Clyde,” by John Phillip Jenkins.
  2. Jeff Guinn, “The Irresistible Bonnie Parker,”  Smithsonian (website), April 2009.
  3. Pauline Kael, “ Bonnie and Clyde,” The New Yorker, October 1967.
  4. John Treherne, The Strange History of Bonnie and Clyde ( New York: Stein and Day, 1985) 143-151.
  5. Karen Blumenthal, Bonnie and Clyde: The making of a legend (New York: Vikings Children Books, 2018), 51-56.

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Bonnie and Clyde

Recent Comments

Kelsey Sanchez

I have never heard of this story before. I was amazed by the way Clyde and Bonnie had their ways of fleeing from the police. I was also surprised by the way Bonnie helped Clyde escape prison, but unfortunately, it did not work. Finally, when they were together they were able to enjoy doing what criminals are interested in doing such as robbing. I was also amazed by the way the cops would not catch them at the easy target when they were sleeping in the car that they had robbed.

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15/11/2019

6:41 am

Eliezer Leal

What interesting article. I had never heard much about Bonnie and Clyde before other than just their names. I never knew their back stories and their dreams in wanting to pursue music as a career. Although met with a tragic end I am sure they will still be remembered in the future as they are today.

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15/11/2019

6:41 am

Nelly Perez

I have always heard of the name Bonnie and Clyde, but never really knew much of their story. This was an interesting read. The duo did commit crimes, but they ran away from the cops. They both had aspiring dreams, but they fell down the wrong path of new love. Bonnie wanted to be an actress and she fell in love with the wrong guy. Clyde aspired to be a musician and he ended up being a criminal.

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15/11/2019

6:41 am

Sierra Salas

Reading about Bonnie and Clyde, I realized how current depictions of their story are glamorized, when in all reality it was far from glamorous. I think they may have had a thrill from robbing and killing, but they never robbed big. This article to me, shows how miserable it must have been to be them, I say this because they lived in fear. It was also interesting reading about how the police ambushed them. Their ambush was clever.

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15/11/2019

6:41 am

Cassie

Very intelligent writer and well written!

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15/11/2019

6:41 am

Maricarmen

Very well executed, really like the story and the chronological analysis. Really like the descriptive phrases as well as the sensual imagery.

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15/11/2019

6:41 am

Thalia Romo

This article is interesting in the sense that I never have heard of another criminal couple other than the notorious Bonnie and Clyde. It seems as though they lived short lives with small bursts of excitement coming from their robberies. However, they did cause fatalities to individuals and avoiding the police so in the end I’m not sure if they necessarily deserved to go out with a blown out head/hand.

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16/11/2019

6:41 am

Patricia Arechiga

There are people who always reference to be as close and a right hand as Bonnie and Clyde were to each other. However, the story behind both is something more than what one could imagine after hearing the reference. I find it crazy how close and basically inseparable Bonnie and Clyde were to one another. Their crimes brought thrill and a rush of excitement to the couple that forced them to run from the authorities. I wonder how their story would have ended if they had not gotten caught.

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16/11/2019

6:41 am

Charli Delmonico

I quite honestly wasn’t sure if the Bonnie and Clyde story was made-up or real before now since people make casual references to it all the time. I never knew their real story, so I’m very glad I read this article. I can’t believe that they ended up killing so many people, and they weren’t even receiving a large amount of rewards for all of their criminal activities; they were just living day-by-day. That kind of life doesn’t even seem worth the trouble they were putting themselves through along with the trouble they were causing everyone else.

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16/11/2019

6:41 am

Felipe Macias

Bonnie and Clyde show that all types of people experience love the same way. In this case, two criminals lost theirs lives together because of their affection for each other. Just like any other couple, the two were willing to be together even in the last moments. And their notorious run as criminals made it all even more impressive. Awesome article!

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17/11/2019

6:41 am

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