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Banditti of the Prairie information


Banditti of the Prairie
An illustration of Edward Bonney, the bounty hunter and amateur detective who in 1845 posed as a counterfeiter (who ironically had been arrested for counterfeiting himself a few years earlier) to infiltrate a faction of the "Banditti of the Prairie" and track down the infamous murderers of Colonel George Davenport: Bonney wrote the 1850 book The Banditti of the Prairies: or, The murderer's doom, a tale of Mississippi Valley and the Far West
Years active1830s-1850
TerritoryPrimarily, Lee, DeKalb, Ogle, Winnebago, Rock Island, Jo Daviess, and Hancock counties, in Illinois as well as the states of Iowa, Indiana, and Ohio
EthnicityEuropean-American
Membership (est.)?
Criminal activitieshouse burglary, fencing stolen property, horse and cattle theft, stagecoach and highway robbery, counterfeiting, murder
Title page of the 1850 first-edition publishing of the Banditti Of The Prairies by Edward Bonney

The Banditti of the Prairie, also known as The Banditti, Prairie Pirates, Prairie Bandits, and Pirates of the Prairie, in the U.S. states of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio and the Territory of Iowa, were a group of loose-knit outlaw gangs, during the early to mid-19th century. Though bands of roving criminals were common in many parts of Illinois, the counties of Lee, DeKalb, Ogle, and Winnebago were especially plagued by them.[1] The new crime wave in the region of the frontier Midwest may have occurred following the crackdown on Southern outlaws by the rising vigilante-regulator movement and the breakup of the criminal syndicate of John A. Murrell and his gang, the "Mystic Clan", in the Southern United States. In 1841, the escalating pattern of house burglary, horse and cattle theft, stagecoach and highway robbery, counterfeiting and murder associated with the Banditti had come to a head in Ogle County. As the crimes continued, local citizens formed bands of vigilantes known as Regulators. A clash between the Banditti and the Regulators in Ogle County near Oregon, Illinois resulted in the outlaws' demise and decreased Banditti activity and violent crime within the county.

Banditti and Regulator activity continued well after the lynching that took place in 1841. Crimes continued, committed by both sides, across northern and central Illinois. The Banditti were involved in other notable events, as well, including the 1845 torture-murder of merchant Colonel George Davenport, the namesake of Davenport, Iowa. Edward Bonney, an amateur detective who hunted down and brought to justice the killers, wrote of his exploits and alibi, which were recounted in his book Banditti of the Prairies, or the Murderer's Doom!!: A Tale of the Mississippi Valley, published in Chicago in 1850. The outlaw gangs also continued to be active in Lee and Winnebago Counties following the events in Oregon.

Illinois Governor Thomas Ford as a younger man was instrumental in helping to destroy the dominating influence of the Banditti of the Prairie in Ogle County, Illinois
The Regulators and the Banditti, an Illinois state historical marker documenting Regulator vigilante activities in driving out an Ogle County, Illinois, faction of the Banditti of the Prairie, along the Rock River, near Byron, Illinois, on state highway, Route 2
Mob Trial and Execution, an Illinois historical marker near the mob lynching site where the Banditti "prairie pirates", father and son John and William Driscoll of the Driscoll gang, were tried by an illegal Regulator court of 500 concerned citizens for murder and shot to death by a firing squad of 111 men
A rock slab marker of the approximate location of the Regulator firing-squad execution site, in Ogle County, Illinois, of two members of "The Banditti" belonging to the local Driscoll gang. It reads "John & William Driscoll Executed Here June 29, 1841"
  1. ^ Channick, Herbert S. The Regulators and the Prairie Bandits Archived 2006-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Illinois Heritage, 2002, Illinois Periodicals Online, Northern Illinois University Libraries. Retrieved March 5, 2007.

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Banditti of the Prairie

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Edward Bonney

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operating out of northern Illinois, known as the "Banditti of the Prairie". Detective and bounty hunter Edward Bonney volunteered to infiltrate the gang and...

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inspired by the Banditti of the Prairie. The plotline is strikingly similar to the 1940 film Legion of the Lawless. Doris Schroeder is credited with the screenplay...

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lawlessness and vigilante activity were rampant because of the influence of the "Banditti of the Prairie". Drawn to this criminal lifestyle, he headed west...

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Detective

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In police departments of the United States, a regular detective typically holds the rank of "Detective". The rank structure of the officers who supervise...

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Regulator

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vigilante organized in response to the Banditti of the Prairie (1835–1848) Lincoln County Regulators, a deputized posse during the Lincoln County War (1878) Regulatory...

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Allan Pinkerton

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have been affiliated with the notorious Banditti of the Prairie. After observing their movements for some time he informed the local sheriff, who arrested...

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Counterfeit United States currency

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counterfeiter, to apprehend the murderers of Colonel George Davenport and infiltrate the Midwestern Banditti of the Prairie. Abel Buell, American colonialist...

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list of homicides in Illinois. This list includes notable homicides committed in the U.S. state of Illinois that have a Wikipedia article on the killing...

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Sile Doty

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Midwest. Sile Doty, most likely, knew of and had connections with the Banditti of the Prairie in Illinois. The following winter Doty was arrested in Michigan...

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down the Mississippi River on a board. They were commanded to never enter the county again. One member, William Fox, later joined the Banditti of the Prairie...

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pieces of brass canon, four pounders, with some swivels, which were brought from Hudson's Bay, and, accompanied by his military banditti, and a number of the...

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Manuel Armijo

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republished by the University of Oklahoma Press, 1954. Myers, Harry C. "Banditti on the Santa Fe Trail" (PDF). National Park Service. p. 291. Retrieved 5 February...

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