|
|
|
Pearl Hart, the only Gun-Wielding Female Road Agent
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4 Part 5
PART V - Pearl goes free
On December 15, 1902 the Arizona Citizen announced the parole of Pearl
Hart. She was pardoned by Governor Alexander O. Brodie on the
recommendation of the Board of Control and Prison Superintendent
Griffith. The Citizen commented, “the sudden release came as a surprise
to every one familiar with the case. In fact, it must have been an
agreeable surprise to the prisoner, because she confidently expected to
have to serve her full sentence.” The pardon was granted on condition
that Pearl remain outside the Territorial boundary until the expiration
of her sentence. Yuma’s Sentinel reported:
PEARL HART FREE – The
Notorious Woman Bandit will Tackle the Stage Again, This Time as an
“Actress” and Not As a Highway Robber
Pearl Hart, the notorious, once more breathes free air, having been
paroled by Governor Brodie last Saturday, and she left on Monday night’s
train for Kansas City. Quite a large number of people were at the depot
to get a glimpse of Arizona’s famous female ex-bandit and they were not
disappointed for she was there, and if there is one thing more than
another that Pearl is not “shy on” it is a fondness for notoriety.
Her ticket was bought straight through to Kansas City, where her
mother and sister live, and the latter has written a drama in which
Pearl will assume the leading role, arrangements having been made to
play the Orpheum circuit, the initial performance to be given in Kansas
City. It is understood that the drama will embody Pearl’s own
experience as a stage robber, with all the blood and thunder
accompaniments, and the famous Pearl will once again, with her trusty
Winchester, hold up the driver of a western stage, line up the
passengers and relieve them of their valuables while her partner,
“Boots,” covers the victims with his gun and takes no chances ... She
leaves the prison in good health, and free from the opium habit, to
which she was an abject slave on entering the prison. Pearl is a little
woman weighing 105 pounds, but she has the slangy, tough demeanor, and
when one contemplates her part in the stage robbery, it must be admitted
that she has the nerve ... .
A later disclosure suggested
that Pearl had become pregnant while in custody, and the suddenness of
her pardon was the result. There is no record of a third child being
born to Pearl, so the claim may have been a ruse to gain her early
release or merely a misunderstanding on the part of the prison official. After a brief career on the stage Pearl managed a cigar store in Kansas
City but, it seems, got into a bit of trouble again and moved to New
York City. It was rumored that she worked under an alias in Buffalo
Bill’s Wild West Show for a time before returning to Arizona, shortly
before the start of World War I. There she met and married a rancher
named Calvin Bywater and they settled near Globe. Pearl Hart Bywater
died on December 30, 1955 at the age of 85.
|