PART VI - HOAXES AND
MISINFORMATION
It would have been the perfect romantic ending to the saga of thrilling
stagecoach robberies if the “Last in the West” involved the only
gun-toting female road agent on record – Pearl Hart. Many have
misrepresented that event as the last in the west, but it was not, and
it was not even the last in Arizona. On January 2, 1901 the Castle Creek
coach was robbed near Hot Springs Junction, A. T . On August 25 1902
Hyram Whipple robbed the coach from Patagonia to Washington Camp and on
December 23, 1902 a stagecoach, when one mile from Fairbanks, was robbed
by two road agents. The Arizona robbery reported on October 27, 1903 is
controversial but still, with at least three other robberies occurring
between May 1899 and December 1902, Hart’s adventure was not the last in
the west. Even if you dismiss the Jarbidge, Nevada robbery, as some
have, it would be hard to dismiss the robbery of the Durkee, Oregon
stagecoach on April 5, 1915 and there were many other western
stagecoaches robbed between 1899 and 1916.
There have been a few stagecoach robbery hoaxes, and once you know what
to watch for they are not difficult to identify. First, look for some
event which is much bigger, or considerably earlier than a genuine
documented event. Take for example the instance of the robbery of a
stagecoach on its way to Portland, Oregon with $500,000 in gold aboard.
The largest amount ever shipped should be your first clue. Now the story
goes that the stage line owners wanted the Concord coach to remain
inconspicuous so that road agents would not know which coach carried the
immense treasure. First they reinforced the coach to carry the great
weight of the gold – an impossibility considering the way a Concord
coach is put together. Then they hooked up a ten horse team to pull the
heavy weight, and finally they put aboard several messengers but also
took aboard passengers, which was intended to show that this was a
typical stagecoach. Finally they had two guards on horseback meet the
coach on the road. The coach continued until within 60 miles of
Portland, and when in the most vulnerable part of the trip the two
guards on horseback turned back, content that the coach would be safe
for the remainder of the trip. A short distance further on the coach
came to a narrow part of the road with a hill on the right and a steep
precipice on the left. Here the road agents caused rock slides with
explosions which closed the road, front and rear, and a third explosion
knocked the coach from the road. However, coaches could be stopped by
the most meager effort - a rope tied across the road or simply by
placing a log, brush pile, or other obstruction in the road. Horses
might step over a small log, but the coach would be stopped until the
obstruction was removed. The more outlandish the details the more likely
it is a hoax. Here you have the biggest robbery ever, you have it
preceding the first robbery in the west, you have road agents using
explosives three times and wrecking the coach before making off with the
gold.
Another example is the only known female to rob a stagecoach by
wielding a pistol at the scene. In May 1899 Pearl Hart stopped a
stagecoach near Globe, Arizona. Afterward, Dutch Kate was conjured to
rob a coach in about 1860, but of course there are few details. Then
Lizzie Keith was created to rob a coach in about 1874. Keith was younger
than Hart, feistier, prettier, and she robbed two coaches before being
overpowered at the scene. Again, the details are few, but a check of the
newspapers reveals no record of a Lizzie Keith and California’s prison
records do not show a Lizzie Keith, or any name similar. Finally, the
Harvey girls were created in Salmon Valley, Idaho and the robberies
occurred in1891, eight years before Hart, but now it was five
exceedingly beautiful young sisters who were just trying to save the
family farm, while Pearl Hart was sending her plunder to her ailing
mother. The Girls were captured after robbing five stagecoaches. Their
father, who would allow no man to court his daughters, arrived at a
compromise by letting the two oldest marry the judge and the sheriff in
lieu of prosecution. However, there are no newspaper records of any
stagecoach robberies and a check of the census records for Idaho show no
Harvey family residing in Salmon Valley. While all these events have the
characteristics of hoaxes, Pearl Hart was not the only convicted female
stagecoach bandit, as Ol’ Mol Burgett participated in a stagecoach
robbery near Durkee, Oregon in 1915, but only as the planner and as a
lookout, not a gun-wielding robber.