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Outlaw Reward Card: Three Murderers c1871 [182524]

Currency:USD Category:Western Americana Start Price:150.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 600.00 USD
Outlaw Reward Card: Three Murderers c1871  [182524]
SOLD
250.00USD+ (62.50) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2024 Jun 08 @ 08:54UTC-7 : PDT/MST
UNCLAIMED MERCHANDISE: In the event that a successful bidder has paid in full for their merchandise but fails to settle outstanding shipping invoices or make arrangements for merchandise pickup within 60 days, HWAC reserves the right to declare the merchandise forfeited. This forfeiture will result in the merchandise becoming the property of HWAC and the successful bidder shall have no claim to or rights over the forfeited merchandise.
A Reward Card for the capture of three men accused of murder in Los Angeles, Calif., in 1871. Measuring about 4" x 2.5", printed in black ink on thick white card stock, this card offers a $500 reward "For the arrest and delivery of David Stevenson, alias 'Long Dave,' Frank, the hunter and 'Buckskin,' and Alfred Henry, the Bilderbeck murderers." An additional $500 reward listed below was for the arrest and delivery of Richard See, who was charged with the murder of William Duncan on Feb. 27, 1871. Descriptions of Stevenson, Henry and See are on the card, which was issued by Los Angeles County Sheriff J. F. Burns. The Reward Card is lightly soiled with a few words of the lower right print rubbed off. According to the Aug. 30, 1871 Daily Los Angeles Star, during a report on the trial of Allanson Gardner, another of the accused, the murder of the Bilderbeck brothers in Tejunga Cañon, took place on or about Jan. 16, 1871. The brothers worked in a wood ranch and their bodies were found buried in a road. "Allanson Gardner, Alfred Henry, and David Stephenson, alias Frank the hunter, were indicted for the murder. Gardner was arrested and lodged in jail, Henry and Stephenson escaped, Stephenson was afterward killed in Lower California and there is some reason to believe that before his death he murdered Henry, who had accompanied him in flight." According to a Los Angeles Herald article, dated Aug. 14, 1889, Richard See was captured and his trial took place in August 1889, where witnesses revealed an "Uncle John See," had owed Duncan money and he had carried the body of Duncan to the witness' hotel and said his "son" had killed his best friend. Another witness said Richard (Dick) See couldn't have committed the crime because he couldn't have retrieved his gun which was at his home 1.5 miles away. No further info could be found immediately on either trials.