TEXAS STATE LIBRARY & ARCHIVES
Bonnie and Clyde Not-So-Hidden in the State Archives
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awlessness was a major issue during the second administration of Texas Governor Ma Ferguson. Upon taking office for a second time in January 1933 (having previously served 19251927), she fired the Texas Rangers for their support of Governor Sterling in the 1932 election. The new governor replaced them with political appointees, some of whom used their status as law enforcement officers as a cover for gambling operations, theft, embezzlement, and even murder. Respect for law enforcement plummeted, and Texas became known as a sanctuary for gangsters and bank robbers. None were more famous than Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker of Dallas. Beginning in 1932, Bonnie and Clyde and several others formed a gang which perpetrated a series of violent holdups in the 60
AUTHENTIC TEXAS
Clyde Barrow Wanted Poster, 1933. Applications for pardons, Texas Secretary of State executive clemency records. Archives and Information Services Division, Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
by Susan Floyd
Southwest and Midwest, murdering a dozen people in the process. They were constantly on the run, committing one robbery after another while staying one step ahead of the law. As the manhunt intensified, Governor Ferguson’s mail bag was full of helpful suggestions from citizens on how to catch the notorious pair. Correspondence such as a 1934 letter from one W.D. Hawkins in our archives, provides an invaluable snapshot of public opinion in the past. Barrow had a previous history of running afoul of the law. A convict ledger in the State Archives documents individuals who entered the State prison system. Barrow is one of those documented, assigned convict number 63527. His entry details his appearance, drinking habits, the nature of his crime, and fate (up to that time). Convict ledgers