Two Banks And Henry example essay topic
A little while later, a rival cowboy hid whiskey in Henrys wagon, and Henry was stopped with a whiskey warrant, which was a way for crooked lawmen and lawyers to make money off of each other. Once again, Henry's uncle bailed him out. Henry became angry at the world. He felt alone and felt that if people were going to treat him like a criminal, he was going to act like one.
He started robbing banks, and killed a deputy marshal in self defense. (Henry wasn't a murderer, but was a thief.) More and more bank robberies occurred, and Henry was gaining some recognition. Henry was finally arrested, and sentenced to hang. However, Henry got a good lawyer, who got the Supreme Court to bring the sentence down to 15 years. Henry only served nine because of a pardon by President Theodore Roosevelt. When he got out, he recruited a band of criminals, and they hit every bank in the west.
Eventually Henry was wealthy enough to take his girlfriend away from it all, which was his goal from the start. They went to Colorado, where Henry was recognized and arrested. Henry was sentenced, but once again, became a model prisoner, and got released on parole. When released, he met a new girl and decided to leave Colorado, violate is parole, and go back home to Oklahoma.
He got there, changed his name, and lived a good life until he ran low on money and decided to rob a bank. He and his group robbed two banks, and Henry was shot in the leg, arrested, and sentenced to 25 years at a prison in Oklahoma. But Henry was a pro at leaving early. He was out in a few years.
Overall Henry was sentenced to over 65 years in prison, but only served just over 15. In the end of his career, Henry Starr played a criminal in movies. He usually played himself as a bank robber, and did a movie about how he robbed two banks at once. Henry did rob one last bank, however. He pulled up to a bank in Arkansas, and was shot in the process. Starr died later in the hospital.
His last words were "I've robbed more banks than any man in history". This was an okay book. I liked how it covered his whole life, but some of the events seemed really exaggerated and almost impossible. Henry Starr was a real person, and I'd like to learn some more about him, and other outlaws in general. I would like to know if he was actually one of the most notorious bank robbers in history, because I had never heard of him before this book.