The Story of Bonnie and Clyde
Essay by review • November 27, 2010 • Research Paper • 1,415 Words (6 Pages) • 1,518 Views
Bonnie Parker was born on the first day of October in 1910, in Rowena, Texas. Bonnie was an excellent student and the second of three children. An avid fan of Romance and Confession magazines, she wasn't the typical stereotype of a killer, much less a serial murderer. Standing at four foot ten inches, she married Roy Thornton. She got a tattoo on the inside of her thigh of two hearts with their names intertwined. But a year later they split up. She then went to visit a friend in West Dallas, were she came to meet Clyde Barrow.
Clyde Barrow was born in Telico, Texas, on March 21, 1909. Clyde was the youngest of eight children and little over a year older than his future spouse. Clyde never made it past the eighth grade. Clyde stood lower than average height at five foot six and three quarters of an inch. His father was a share cropper and hers was a bricklayer. His father soon opens a grocery store, and he quits school to sell stolen turkeys with his brother Buck.
Bonnie soon learns of Clyde's criminal endeavors as the law comes looking for him and he is sent him to Denton, Texas for charges of stolen merchandise. They law didn't have enough proof and transferred him to Waco Texas where he confessed to several car thefts. He was sentenced two years on each count, but then he was allowed to serve them concurrently.
Bonnie still visited him daily, and on one of these trips she smuggled in a colt to Clyde and his cell mate. That night they escaped, although freedom was short lived. They were captured in Ohio and Clyde was sentenced to 14 years. He was pardoned in 1932, after the intervention of his mother. He soon returned to Bonnie and they left in none other than a stolen car. He kept himself busy with Robberies, and Bonnie was soon drawn into the plots.
In Wellington, Texas, their stolen Ford plunged off a bridge and Bonnie was pinned underneath. Some local farmers saved her as the machine caught fire. Although her leg would never be the same, it leg soon became deformed, and needed medical attention. As they were trying to reach her parents, the sheriff got wind of it and created an ambush, riddling their stolen car with bullets and hitting both Bonnie and Clyde in their legs. Nevertheless they still escaped.
On Easter Sunday, Clyde and his current accomplice killed two highway patrolmen who thought that they needed help. Five days later they killed an Officer in Commerce, Oklahoma and kidnap another. Bonnie soon had her priorities a little messed up. They let the officer go, but not until Bonnie requested that he tell the public that she doesn't smoke cigars. Less than a month later, these fugitives will be laid to rest.
"Her decision to share her life with Clyde Barrow seems to have arisen from two primary and possibly linked causes: her genuine love for him and her fascination with criminals and criminality." (Treherne 91)
Bonnie was more than likely dominated by Clyde. Known by many criminal psychologists, there ability of violent antisocial men to elicit strong love and dominate women who offer it. Bonnie once said that she despised Clyde, because he was a cheap and viscous thug. It is difficult to understand how she could first say this and the love him so deeply.
"The three of them went to rob a grocery store. Buck told me what to do if he should be shot and killed, or shot. But if something ever happened to him, I would not have left him to go home until I was able to see him and do all I could for him. I was always afraid Clyde would just run away and leave him if there was trouble." (Barrow 66-67)
In their endeavors, Bonnie and Clyde weren't always alone. In 1933, they were joined by Clyde's Brother and his wife Blanche. Out of all of the accomplices, only one survived past early adulthood and was the only one to publish a written account. As she was blinded by love, she joined her husband and brother in law in a nation wide crime city. Being partially blinded in Platte City, she evaded capture with Buck while another posse a few months later captures the foursome, killing Buck. Bonnie and Clyde escaped, leaving Blanche as the grief stricken survivor.
May 23, 1934, came to be known as the final day of Bonnie and Clyde. They were atop a hill hidden with a few other vigilantes, waiting for an ambush. Before they knew what had them, there car was riddled with more than 167 rounds, with more than 50 of them passing through both Clyde and Bonnie, and then out the passenger side door. They had been fired upon with high velocity, steel jacketed bullets. Bonnie was only 23 years old, with Clyde being a mere 24.
All the fingers on Bonnie's right hand had been shot off, as they laid on a pack of bloody cigarettes. Inside the car numerous arsenal items were found, including a saxophone, Browning automatic rifles, shot guns, pistols, and more than 3,000 rounds of ammunition. Also were
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