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Samuel Mason

Samuel Ross Mason, also spelled Meason (November 8, 1739 – 1803), was a Virginia militia captain, on the American western frontier, during the American Revolutionary War. After the war, he became the leader of the Mason Gang, a criminal gang of river pirates and highwaymen on the lower Ohio River and the Mississippi River in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He was associated with outlaws around Red Banks, Cave-in-Rock, Stack Island, and the Natchez Trace.

Samuel Mason
No known portrait of Samuel Mason exists from life. A likeness from his physical description mentioned in historical records.[1]
Born
Samuel Ross Mason

(1739-11-08)November 8, 1739
Died1803 (aged 63–64)
Cause of deathGunshot wound or murder by tomahawk
NationalityAmerican
Other namesSam Mason, Mason, Samuel Meason, Meason, Captain Mason, Ensign Mason, Squire Mason, Mason of the Woods, Wilson, Bully Wilson
Occupation(s)Horse thief, soldier, state militia officer, frontiersman, tavern keeper, burglar, bandit, justice of the peace, criminal gang leader, river pirate
Employer(s)Virginia state government, self-employed
SpouseRosanna or Rosannah Dorsey
Children6[2]
Military career
Allegiance
Service/branchVirginia State Forces
Years of service1777–1779
RankCaptain
UnitOhio County Militia
Commands heldCaptain Samuel Mason's Company
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War
Signature

Early life edit

Mason was born in Norfolk, Virginia, and raised in what is now Charles Town, West Virginia, formerly a part of Virginia. According to Lyman Draper, in the 1750s Mason got his earliest start in crime as a teenager, by stealing the horses of Colonel John L. Hite, in Frederick County, Virginia, being wounded and caught by his pursuers.[3] He moved from Charles Town to what is now Ohio County, West Virginia, also at that time a part of Virginia, in 1773.

American Revolutionary War service edit

During the American Revolution, Samuel Mason was a captain of the Ohio County Militia, Virginia State Forces. According to Ohio County court minutes, dated January 7, 1777, Mason was recommended to Patrick Henry, the Governor of Virginia, to serve as captain of the militia.[4] On January 28, he was present and cited as a captain from Ohio county at a "council of war" held at Catfish Camp.[5] Catfish Camp was located at or near present-day Washington, Pennsylvania.[6]

On June 8, 1777, Mason wrote a letter from Fort Henry, Virginia, now present-day Wheeling, West Virginia, to brigadier general Edward Hand, at Fort Pitt, now present-day Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The letter he wrote was signed Samuel Meason.[6] On September 1, 1777, Captain Mason was wounded but survived an ambush by Native Americans near Fort Henry. Most of the men in his Virginia Militia company perished during the attack.[7]

From August 11 to September 14, 1779, Mason, while at Fort Henry, accompanied Colonel Daniel Brodhead and his 8th Pennsylvania Regiment of the Continental Army combined with militia troops from Fort Pitt to destroy ten tribal villages of the pro-British Seneca tribe in northeastern Pennsylvania during the Sullivan Expedition in retaliation for the devastating Iroquois attacks in the Cobleskill, Wyoming Valley and Cherry Valley massacres of 1778.[8][9][10]

According to court martial records in Ohio County, Virginia, Captain Mason was still on duty as an officer in the Ohio County, Virginia Militia at Fort Henry until 1781. He appeared at the court martials and was present as a witness for military proceedings against other soldiers. Samuel Mason appeared twice at the Ohio County courthouse in Wheeling on November 7, 1780, and May 7, 1781.[11]

Honest pursuits edit

In his book, The Outlaws of Cave-In-Rock, Otto A. Rothert stated that Samuel Mason moved again, in 1779, to a part of Virginia, east of Wheeling that is now in present-day Washington County, Pennsylvania, where he was elected justice of the peace and later selected as an associate judge, leaving for an area that was then a part of Virginia and now the present-day State of Kentucky, in 1784. Mason's surname was spelled interchangeably as Meason in many of the early frontier records. This is explained in two family histories of the Mason/Meason family, Pioneer Period and Pioneer People of Fairfield County, Ohio by C. M. L. Wiseman, dated 1901, and Torrence and Allied Families by Robert M. Torrence, dated 1938.

Criminal career edit

In the early 1790s, Samuel Mason moved his family to the Red Banks on the Ohio River, now Henderson, Kentucky, where he began his full-time criminal activities. He later settled downriver on Diamond Island and engaged in river piracy. By 1797, Mason moved the base of his operations further downriver to Cave-in-Rock on the Illinois side of the river in the Northwest Territory. The Mason Gang of river pirates openly based themselves at the prominent Ohio River landmark known as Cave-in-Rock, a huge shelter cave. Samuel Mason had a brief association with the first known serial killers in America, Micajah and Wiley Harpe, as well as Peter Alston, and possibly John Duff, the counterfeiter. Mason and his gang stayed at Cave-In-Rock until the summer of 1799, when they were expelled by the "Exterminators", a group of regulators under the leadership of Captain Young of Mercer County, Kentucky.[12]

Samuel Mason moved his operations down the Mississippi River and settled his family in the territory of Spanish Louisiana, now the present-day state of Missouri, and became a highwayman along the Natchez Trace in Mississippi Territory, now the present-day state of Mississippi. It was on the Natchez Trace that Mason received his most infamous nickname. He would leave a message after each crime (often in the blood of his murdered victims) proudly stating, "Done by Mason of the Woods". In April 1802, Mississippi Territorial Governor William C. C. Claiborne was informed that Mason and Wiley Harpe had attempted to board the boat of a Colonel Joshua Baker between Yazoo, now Yazoo City, Mississippi, and Walnut Hills, now Vicksburg, Mississippi.[13]

Physical appearance edit

A man named Swaney, who saw Samuel Mason often, described his appearance: "He weighed about two hundred pounds, and was a fine looking man. He was rather modest and unassuming, and had nothing of the raw-head-and-bloody-bones appearance which his character would indicate".[1] Another man, Henry Howe described Mason as: "...a man of gigantic stature and of more than ordinary talents".[1] A William Darby also described him as follows: "Mason at any time of his life or in any situation, had something extremely ferocious in his look, which arose particularly from a tooth which projected forwards, and could only be covered with his lip by effort".[1]

Arrest, escape, and death edit

According to Spanish colonial court records, Spanish government officials arrested Samuel Mason and his men, early in 1803, at the Little Prairie settlement, now Caruthersville, in southeastern Missouri. Mason and his gang, including his family members, were taken to the Spanish colonial government in New Madrid, Spanish Upper Louisiana Territory, along the Mississippi River, where a three-day hearing was held to determine whether Mason was truly involved in river piracy, as he had been formally accused of this crime.

Although he claimed he was simply a farmer, who had been maligned by his enemies, the peculiar presence of $7,000 in currency and twenty human scalps found in his baggage was the damning evidence that convinced the Spanish he indeed was a river pirate. Mason and his family were taken, under armed guard, to New Orleans, the capital of Spanish Lower Louisiana Territory, where the Spanish colonial governor ordered them handed over to the American authorities in the Mississippi Territory, as all crimes they had been convicted of appeared to have taken place in American territory or against American river boats.

While being transported up the Mississippi River, Samuel Mason and gang members John Sutton or Setton, one of the many aliases used by Wiley Harpe, and James May, alias of Peter Alston, overpowered their guards and escaped, with Mason being shot in the head during the escape. One of the 1803 accounts {Rothert. p. 247} claimed Captain Robert McCoy, the commandant of New Madrid, was killed by Mason during their escape. McCoy actually died in 1840, and was neither crippled nor killed by Mason.[14]

American territorial governor William C. C. Claiborne immediately issued a reward for their recapture, prompting Wiley Harpe and Peter Alston to bring Mason's head, in an attempt to claim the reward money. Whether they killed Mason or whether he died from his wound suffered in the escape attempt has never been established. "Setton" and "May" were recognized and identified as wanted criminals Wiley Harpe and Peter Alston. They were arrested, tried in U.S. federal court, found guilty of piracy, and hanged in Old Greenville, Jefferson County, Mississippi Territory in early 1804.[15]

Gallery edit

Similarities of Samuel Mason and the Mason Gang to other criminal gangs edit

From the 1790s-1833, James Ford led a double life while living in Ford's Ferry, Kentucky, as the justice of the peace and the gang leader of a group of highwaymen and river pirates on the Ohio River. From 1863 to 1864, Henry Plummer was the elected sheriff of the gold rush town, Bannack, Montana, in the Idaho Territory. He was later accused of being the leader of an outlaw gang, the Innocents, who stole gold shipments from Bannick, and was hanged by Bannick vigilantes.

In popular culture edit

 
Walter Brennan (on the right) as Samuel Mason-like river pirate gang leader, Colonel Jeb Hawkins, and Lee Van Cleef in the 1962 film, How the West Was Won

In the 1956 Walt Disney television series Davy Crockett and the River Pirates, a Hollywoodized version of Samuel Mason is portrayed by American actor Mort Mills, who appears alongside the Harpe brothers.

In the 1962 John Ford Western epic film How the West Was Won, a Samuel Mason-like frontier outlaw leader of a gang of river pirates is portrayed by Walter Brennan, as the fictional character of Colonel Jeb Hawkins, which alludes to the historical Cave-In-Rock.

See also edit

General:

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Rothert, Otto A. (1924). "The outlaws of Cave-in-Rock : historical accounts of the famous highwaymen and river pirates who operated in pioneer days upon the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers and over the old Natchez trace". Cleveland, OH: Arthur H. Clark. pp. 244–245.
  2. ^ "Bill-Dupire - User Trees - Genealogy.com". www.genealogy.com.
  3. ^ Rothert, Otto A. (February 27, 1996). The Outlaws of Cave-in-Rock. SIU Press. ISBN 9780809320349 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Boyd Crumrine, Virginia Court Records in Southwestern Pennsylvania, Records of the District of West Augusta and Ohio and Yahogania Counties, Virginia, 1775–1780, Consolidated Edition, p. 366, dated 1981.
  5. ^ History of the Upper Ohio Valley, Vol. 1., Brant & Fuller, p. 73, dated 1891.
  6. ^ a b Samuel Hazard, Pennsylvania Archives, Selected and Arranged from Original Documents in the Office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, Conformably to Acts of the General Assembly, February 15, 1851, & March 7, 1852, Vol. V., p. 445, dated 1853.
  7. ^ History of the Upper Ohio Valley, Vol. 1., Brant & Fuller, pps. 80–82, dated 1891.
  8. ^ Mann, Barbara Alice (2008). George Washington's War on Native America. Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press. ISBN 9780803216358.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ Rothert, Otto A. (1996). The Outlaws of Cave-in-Rock. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press. p. 163. ISBN 9780809320349.
  10. ^ Boatner, Mark Mayo (1966), Encyclopedia of the American Revolution, Jefferson, NC: Stackpole Books, p. 116
  11. ^ Kellogg, Louise Phelps (1917). "Frontier Retreat on the Upper Ohio, 1779-1781, Collections, vol. XXIV, Draper series., vol. V". Madison, WI: State Historical Society of Wisconsin. pp. 427–429.
  12. ^ Starling, Edmund Lyne (1887). "History of Henderson County, Kentucky". Henderson, KY. pp. 31–34.
  13. ^ Rowland, Dunbar (October 8, 1907). "Mississippi: Comprising Sketches of Counties, Towns, Events, Institutions, and Persons, Arranged in Cyclopedic Form". Southern Historical Publishing Association – via Google Books.
  14. ^ Houck's "History of Missouri from the Earliest explorations..." 1908 Volume 2. p. 140. According to Conrad's "Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri" 1901. p. 557 a Creek named Tewanaye who killed a David Trotter in New Madrid in 1802 had been found guilty of murder in New Orleans and in a return trip near Natchez in a galley Tewanaye had tried to escape and crippled McCoy; Tewanaye was executed in New Madrid January 3, 1803.
  15. ^ Wagner, Mark and Mary R. McCorvie, "Going to See the Varmint: Piracy in Myth and Reality on the Ohio River, 1785–1830", In X Marks The Spot: The Archaeology of Piracy, edited by Russell K. Skowronek and Charles R. Ewen, pp. 219–247. University of Florida Press, Gainesville.
  • Asbury, Herbert. The French Quarter: The Informal of the New Orleans Underworld
  • Crumrine, Boyd. Virginia Court Records in Southwestern Pennsylvania: Records of the District of West Augusta and Ohio and Yohogania Counties, Virginia, 1775–1780. Publisher Genealogical Publishing Com, 1902. ISBN 0806306246, 9780806306247
  • Kellogg, Louise Phelps. Frontier Retreat on the Upper Ohio, 1779-1781, Collections, vol. XXIV, Draper series., vol. V. Madison, WI: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1917.
  • Magee, M. Juliette. Cavern of crime. Livingston Ledger, 1973.
  • McBee, May Wilson. The Natchez Court Records, 1767-1805. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2009.
  • Rothert, Otto A. The Outlaws of Cave-In-Rock. Cleveland: 1924; rpt. 1996 ISBN 0-8093-2034-7
  • Seineke, Kathrine Wagner. The George Rogers Clark adventure in the Illinois: and selected documents of the American Revolution at the frontier posts Polyanthos, 1981.
  • Smith, Carter F. Gangs and the Military: Gangsters, Bikers, and Terrorists with Military Training. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017.
  • Thrapp, Dan L. Encyclopedia of frontier biography, Volume 4, Arthur H. Clark Co., 1988
  • Wagner, Mark J. The Wreck of the '"America" in Southern Illinois: A Flatboat on the Ohio River. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 2015.
  • Wagner, Mark and Mary McCorvie. "Going to See the Varmint: Piracy in Myth and Reality on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, 1785–1830," X Marks the Spot: The Archaeology of Piracy. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2006.
  • Wellman, Paul I. Spawn of evil: the invisible empire of soulless men which for a generation held the Nation in a spell of terror. New York: Doubleday, 1964.

External links edit

  • Bell Anthology – Samuel Mason
  • Sam Mason survives Indian attack, This Day in History, History.Com
  • Mason and Harpe
  • Outlaws of Cave-In-Rock, Southern Illinois History Page
  • Samuel Mason, X Marks the Spot: The Archaeology of Piracy, by Mark Wagner, Book Review, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale 2011-08-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • Samuel Mason and Little Harpe, Mississippi Local History Network
  • Outlaws, Rascals & Ruffians,! Mississippi Local History Network

samuel, mason, american, electronics, engineer, samuel, jefferson, mason, samuel, ross, mason, also, spelled, meason, november, 1739, 1803, virginia, militia, captain, american, western, frontier, during, american, revolutionary, after, became, leader, mason, . For the American electronics engineer see Samuel Jefferson Mason Samuel Ross Mason also spelled Meason November 8 1739 1803 was a Virginia militia captain on the American western frontier during the American Revolutionary War After the war he became the leader of the Mason Gang a criminal gang of river pirates and highwaymen on the lower Ohio River and the Mississippi River in the late 18th and early 19th centuries He was associated with outlaws around Red Banks Cave in Rock Stack Island and the Natchez Trace Samuel MasonNo known portrait of Samuel Mason exists from life A likeness from his physical description mentioned in historical records 1 BornSamuel Ross Mason 1739 11 08 November 8 1739Norfolk Colony of Virginia British AmericaDied1803 aged 63 64 Jefferson County Mississippi Territory U S Cause of deathGunshot wound or murder by tomahawkNationalityAmericanOther namesSam Mason Mason Samuel Meason Meason Captain Mason Ensign Mason Squire Mason Mason of the Woods Wilson Bully WilsonOccupation s Horse thief soldier state militia officer frontiersman tavern keeper burglar bandit justice of the peace criminal gang leader river pirateEmployer s Virginia state government self employedSpouseRosanna or Rosannah DorseyChildren6 2 Military careerAllegiance Virginia United StatesService wbr branchVirginia State ForcesYears of service1777 1779RankCaptainUnitOhio County MilitiaCommands heldCaptain Samuel Mason s CompanyBattles warsAmerican Revolutionary War First Battle of Fort Henry 1777 Brodhead Expedition 1779 Signature Contents 1 Early life 2 American Revolutionary War service 3 Honest pursuits 4 Criminal career 5 Physical appearance 6 Arrest escape and death 7 Gallery 8 Similarities of Samuel Mason and the Mason Gang to other criminal gangs 9 In popular culture 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editMason was born in Norfolk Virginia and raised in what is now Charles Town West Virginia formerly a part of Virginia According to Lyman Draper in the 1750s Mason got his earliest start in crime as a teenager by stealing the horses of Colonel John L Hite in Frederick County Virginia being wounded and caught by his pursuers 3 He moved from Charles Town to what is now Ohio County West Virginia also at that time a part of Virginia in 1773 American Revolutionary War service editMain articles Siege of Fort Henry 1777 Western theater of the American Revolutionary War Sullivan Expedition and Northern theater of the American Revolutionary War after Saratoga During the American Revolution Samuel Mason was a captain of the Ohio County Militia Virginia State Forces According to Ohio County court minutes dated January 7 1777 Mason was recommended to Patrick Henry the Governor of Virginia to serve as captain of the militia 4 On January 28 he was present and cited as a captain from Ohio county at a council of war held at Catfish Camp 5 Catfish Camp was located at or near present day Washington Pennsylvania 6 On June 8 1777 Mason wrote a letter from Fort Henry Virginia now present day Wheeling West Virginia to brigadier general Edward Hand at Fort Pitt now present day Pittsburgh Pennsylvania The letter he wrote was signed Samuel Meason 6 On September 1 1777 Captain Mason was wounded but survived an ambush by Native Americans near Fort Henry Most of the men in his Virginia Militia company perished during the attack 7 From August 11 to September 14 1779 Mason while at Fort Henry accompanied Colonel Daniel Brodhead and his 8th Pennsylvania Regiment of the Continental Army combined with militia troops from Fort Pitt to destroy ten tribal villages of the pro British Seneca tribe in northeastern Pennsylvania during the Sullivan Expedition in retaliation for the devastating Iroquois attacks in the Cobleskill Wyoming Valley and Cherry Valley massacres of 1778 8 9 10 According to court martial records in Ohio County Virginia Captain Mason was still on duty as an officer in the Ohio County Virginia Militia at Fort Henry until 1781 He appeared at the court martials and was present as a witness for military proceedings against other soldiers Samuel Mason appeared twice at the Ohio County courthouse in Wheeling on November 7 1780 and May 7 1781 11 Honest pursuits editIn his book The Outlaws of Cave In Rock Otto A Rothert stated that Samuel Mason moved again in 1779 to a part of Virginia east of Wheeling that is now in present day Washington County Pennsylvania where he was elected justice of the peace and later selected as an associate judge leaving for an area that was then a part of Virginia and now the present day State of Kentucky in 1784 Mason s surname was spelled interchangeably as Meason in many of the early frontier records This is explained in two family histories of the Mason Meason family Pioneer Period and Pioneer People of Fairfield County Ohio by C M L Wiseman dated 1901 and Torrence and Allied Families by Robert M Torrence dated 1938 Criminal career editIn the early 1790s Samuel Mason moved his family to the Red Banks on the Ohio River now Henderson Kentucky where he began his full time criminal activities He later settled downriver on Diamond Island and engaged in river piracy By 1797 Mason moved the base of his operations further downriver to Cave in Rock on the Illinois side of the river in the Northwest Territory The Mason Gang of river pirates openly based themselves at the prominent Ohio River landmark known as Cave in Rock a huge shelter cave Samuel Mason had a brief association with the first known serial killers in America Micajah and Wiley Harpe as well as Peter Alston and possibly John Duff the counterfeiter Mason and his gang stayed at Cave In Rock until the summer of 1799 when they were expelled by the Exterminators a group of regulators under the leadership of Captain Young of Mercer County Kentucky 12 Samuel Mason moved his operations down the Mississippi River and settled his family in the territory of Spanish Louisiana now the present day state of Missouri and became a highwayman along the Natchez Trace in Mississippi Territory now the present day state of Mississippi It was on the Natchez Trace that Mason received his most infamous nickname He would leave a message after each crime often in the blood of his murdered victims proudly stating Done by Mason of the Woods In April 1802 Mississippi Territorial Governor William C C Claiborne was informed that Mason and Wiley Harpe had attempted to board the boat of a Colonel Joshua Baker between Yazoo now Yazoo City Mississippi and Walnut Hills now Vicksburg Mississippi 13 Physical appearance editA man named Swaney who saw Samuel Mason often described his appearance He weighed about two hundred pounds and was a fine looking man He was rather modest and unassuming and had nothing of the raw head and bloody bones appearance which his character would indicate 1 Another man Henry Howe described Mason as a man of gigantic stature and of more than ordinary talents 1 A William Darby also described him as follows Mason at any time of his life or in any situation had something extremely ferocious in his look which arose particularly from a tooth which projected forwards and could only be covered with his lip by effort 1 Arrest escape and death editAccording to Spanish colonial court records Spanish government officials arrested Samuel Mason and his men early in 1803 at the Little Prairie settlement now Caruthersville in southeastern Missouri Mason and his gang including his family members were taken to the Spanish colonial government in New Madrid Spanish Upper Louisiana Territory along the Mississippi River where a three day hearing was held to determine whether Mason was truly involved in river piracy as he had been formally accused of this crime Although he claimed he was simply a farmer who had been maligned by his enemies the peculiar presence of 7 000 in currency and twenty human scalps found in his baggage was the damning evidence that convinced the Spanish he indeed was a river pirate Mason and his family were taken under armed guard to New Orleans the capital of Spanish Lower Louisiana Territory where the Spanish colonial governor ordered them handed over to the American authorities in the Mississippi Territory as all crimes they had been convicted of appeared to have taken place in American territory or against American river boats While being transported up the Mississippi River Samuel Mason and gang members John Sutton or Setton one of the many aliases used by Wiley Harpe and James May alias of Peter Alston overpowered their guards and escaped with Mason being shot in the head during the escape One of the 1803 accounts Rothert p 247 claimed Captain Robert McCoy the commandant of New Madrid was killed by Mason during their escape McCoy actually died in 1840 and was neither crippled nor killed by Mason 14 American territorial governor William C C Claiborne immediately issued a reward for their recapture prompting Wiley Harpe and Peter Alston to bring Mason s head in an attempt to claim the reward money Whether they killed Mason or whether he died from his wound suffered in the escape attempt has never been established Setton and May were recognized and identified as wanted criminals Wiley Harpe and Peter Alston They were arrested tried in U S federal court found guilty of piracy and hanged in Old Greenville Jefferson County Mississippi Territory in early 1804 15 Gallery edit nbsp Springdale in Frederick County Virginia was built in 1753 and was the home of Colonel John L Hite A teenage Samuel Mason stole the horses of Colonel Hite and was later pursued wounded and captured but because of his young age he was not punished any further nbsp Fort Henry formerly in Pennsylvania now West Virginia in 1777 at the time Captain Samuel Mason was wounded and survived an ambush by Native Americans Most of the men in Captain Samuel Mason s Company perished during the attack nbsp Colonel Daniel Brodhead in a portrait who led an expedition in 1779 in which Captain Samuel Mason while at Fort Henry joined along with 8th Pennsylvania Regiment of the Continental Army combined with militia troops from Fort Pitt to destroy the pro British Seneca tribal villages in northeastern Pennsylvania nbsp Fort Pitt Pennsylvania where in 1779 Captain Samuel Mason joined the expedition of Colonel Daniel Brodhead against the pro British Seneca tribe nbsp While on the Ohio River and later the Mississippi Samuel Mason and his gang of river pirates chose flatboats keelboats and rafts as profitable targets to attack because of the valuable and plentiful cargo on board nbsp Following his military service in the American Revolutionary War Samuel Mason led a gang of river pirates from 1797 to 1799 on the Ohio River at the infamous outlaw haunt of Cave in Rock nbsp The Samuel Mason Gang was captured in 1803 and brought before the Spanish Territorial commandant Colonel Robert McCoy in New Madrid Spanish Upper Louisiana Territory New Spain The courtroom would have been a small simple structure similar to the Old Cahokia Courthouse in Cahokia Illinois Country Northwest Territory nbsp When the members of the Samuel Mason Gang received their hearing in the Spanish colonial court of New Madrid the frontier courtroom may not have been much bigger than a typical courtroom interior as was found in the Old Cahokia Courthouse nbsp The old path of the Natchez Trace where between 1799 and 1803 Samuel Mason and the Mason Gang committed highway robbery and murder against helpless and unsuspecting travelers and were reported as crimes done by Mason of the Woods nbsp In 1803 Mississippi Territorial governor William C C Claiborne offered a 2 000 reward a very large sum of money at the time for the capture or severed head of Samuel Mason Wiley Harpe and Peter Alston brought in the head of Mason to collect the reward and were identified and hanged Similarities of Samuel Mason and the Mason Gang to other criminal gangs editFrom the 1790s 1833 James Ford led a double life while living in Ford s Ferry Kentucky as the justice of the peace and the gang leader of a group of highwaymen and river pirates on the Ohio River From 1863 to 1864 Henry Plummer was the elected sheriff of the gold rush town Bannack Montana in the Idaho Territory He was later accused of being the leader of an outlaw gang the Innocents who stole gold shipments from Bannick and was hanged by Bannick vigilantes In popular culture edit nbsp Walter Brennan on the right as Samuel Mason like river pirate gang leader Colonel Jeb Hawkins and Lee Van Cleef in the 1962 film How the West Was WonIn the 1956 Walt Disney television series Davy Crockett and the River Pirates a Hollywoodized version of Samuel Mason is portrayed by American actor Mort Mills who appears alongside the Harpe brothers In the 1962 John Ford Western epic film How the West Was Won a Samuel Mason like frontier outlaw leader of a gang of river pirates is portrayed by Walter Brennan as the fictional character of Colonel Jeb Hawkins which alludes to the historical Cave In Rock See also editPeter Alston James Ford pirate John Murrell bandit Stack Island Mississippi River Tower RockGeneral List of serial killers in the United StatesReferences edit a b c d Rothert Otto A 1924 The outlaws of Cave in Rock historical accounts of the famous highwaymen and river pirates who operated in pioneer days upon the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers and over the old Natchez trace Cleveland OH Arthur H Clark pp 244 245 Bill Dupire User Trees Genealogy com www genealogy com Rothert Otto A February 27 1996 The Outlaws of Cave in Rock SIU Press ISBN 9780809320349 via Google Books Boyd Crumrine Virginia Court Records in Southwestern Pennsylvania Records of the District of West Augusta and Ohio and Yahogania Counties Virginia 1775 1780 Consolidated Edition p 366 dated 1981 History of the Upper Ohio Valley Vol 1 Brant amp Fuller p 73 dated 1891 a b Samuel Hazard Pennsylvania Archives Selected and Arranged from Original Documents in the Office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth Conformably to Acts of the General Assembly February 15 1851 amp March 7 1852 Vol V p 445 dated 1853 History of the Upper Ohio Valley Vol 1 Brant amp Fuller pps 80 82 dated 1891 Mann Barbara Alice 2008 George Washington s War on Native America Reno NV University of Nevada Press ISBN 9780803216358 permanent dead link Rothert Otto A 1996 The Outlaws of Cave in Rock Carbondale IL Southern Illinois University Press p 163 ISBN 9780809320349 Boatner Mark Mayo 1966 Encyclopedia of the American Revolution Jefferson NC Stackpole Books p 116 Kellogg Louise Phelps 1917 Frontier Retreat on the Upper Ohio 1779 1781 Collections vol XXIV Draper series vol V Madison WI State Historical Society of Wisconsin pp 427 429 Starling Edmund Lyne 1887 History of Henderson County Kentucky Henderson KY pp 31 34 Rowland Dunbar October 8 1907 Mississippi Comprising Sketches of Counties Towns Events Institutions and Persons Arranged in Cyclopedic Form Southern Historical Publishing Association via Google Books Houck s History of Missouri from the Earliest explorations 1908 Volume 2 p 140 According to Conrad s Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri 1901 p 557 a Creek named Tewanaye who killed a David Trotter in New Madrid in 1802 had been found guilty of murder in New Orleans and in a return trip near Natchez in a galley Tewanaye had tried to escape and crippled McCoy Tewanaye was executed in New Madrid January 3 1803 Wagner Mark and Mary R McCorvie Going to See the Varmint Piracy in Myth and Reality on the Ohio River 1785 1830 In X Marks The Spot The Archaeology of Piracy edited by Russell K Skowronek and Charles R Ewen pp 219 247 University of Florida Press Gainesville Asbury Herbert The French Quarter The Informal of the New Orleans Underworld Crumrine Boyd Virginia Court Records in Southwestern Pennsylvania Records of the District of West Augusta and Ohio and Yohogania Counties Virginia 1775 1780 Publisher Genealogical Publishing Com 1902 ISBN 0806306246 9780806306247 Kellogg Louise Phelps Frontier Retreat on the Upper Ohio 1779 1781 Collections vol XXIV Draper series vol V Madison WI State Historical Society of Wisconsin 1917 Magee M Juliette Cavern of crime Livingston Ledger 1973 McBee May Wilson The Natchez Court Records 1767 1805 Baltimore MD Genealogical Publishing Company 2009 Rothert Otto A The Outlaws of Cave In Rock Cleveland 1924 rpt 1996 ISBN 0 8093 2034 7 Seineke Kathrine Wagner The George Rogers Clark adventure in the Illinois and selected documents of the American Revolution at the frontier posts Polyanthos 1981 Smith Carter F Gangs and the Military Gangsters Bikers and Terrorists with Military Training Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield 2017 Thrapp Dan L Encyclopedia of frontier biography Volume 4 Arthur H Clark Co 1988 Wagner Mark J The Wreck of the America in Southern Illinois A Flatboat on the Ohio River Carbondale IL Southern Illinois University Press 2015 Wagner Mark and Mary McCorvie Going to See the Varmint Piracy in Myth and Reality on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers 1785 1830 X Marks the Spot The Archaeology of Piracy Gainesville FL University Press of Florida 2006 Wellman Paul I Spawn of evil the invisible empire of soulless men which for a generation held the Nation in a spell of terror New York Doubleday 1964 External links editBell Anthology Samuel Mason Sam Mason survives Indian attack This Day in History History Com Mason and Harpe Outlaws of Cave In Rock Southern Illinois History Page Samuel Mason X Marks the Spot The Archaeology of Piracy by Mark Wagner Book Review Southern Illinois University Carbondale Archived 2011 08 09 at the Wayback Machine Samuel Mason and Little Harpe Mississippi Local History Network Outlaws Rascals amp Ruffians Mississippi Local History Network Samuel Mason at Cave in Rock Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel Mason amp oldid 1195931502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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