Williamson County contact Wayne Ware (512)
863-2202
Sam Bass The Infamous Outlaw
This is one of only few known photographs of Sam Bass, who is standing at left, was taken in Dallas when he was helping to drive a cattle herd to Kansas in the summer of 1876. Standing next to him is John E. Gardner. Seated are Joe! Gollins (right), who would become Bass' partner in crime up north, and Joel's brother Joe Collins.

BASS. SAM
(1851-1878 ). Sam Bass "the outlaw", was born on a farm near Mitchell,
Indiana, on July 21, 1851. A son of Daniel and Elizabeth Jane (Sheeks)
Bass. He was orphaned before he was thirteen and spent five years at the
home of an uncle. He ran away in 1869 and worked most of a year in a
sawmill at Rosedale, Mississippi. Bass left Rosedale on horseback for
the cattle country in the late summer of 1870 and arrived in Denton
Texas, in early fall. For the winter he worked on Bob Carruth's ranch
southwest of town. But, finding cowboy life not up to his boyhood
dreams, he went back to Demon and handled horses in the stables of the
Lacy House, a hotel. Later he worked for Sheriff William F. Egan, caring
for livestock, cutting firewood, building fences, and spending much of
his time as a freighter between Denton and the railroad towns of Dallas
and Sherman.
Before long Bass became interested in horse racing, and in 1874, after
acquiring a fleet mount that became known as the Denton Mare, he left
Egan's employ to exploit this horse. He won most of his races in North
Texas and later took his mare to the San Antonio area. When his racing
played out in 1876, he and Joel Collins gathered a small herd of
longhorn cattle to take up the trail for their several owners. When the
drovers reached Dodge City they decided to trail the cattle farther
north, where prices were higher. After selling the herd and paying the
hands, they had $8,000 in their pockets. but instead of returning to
"Texas, where they owed for the cattle, they squandered the money in
gambling in Ogallala, Nebraska, and in the Black Hills town of Deadwood,
South Dakota, which was then enjoying a boom in gold mining.
In 1877 Bass and Collins tried freighting, without success, then
recruited several hard characters to rob stagecoaches. On stolen horses
they held up seven coaches without recouping their fortunes. Next, in
search of bigger loot, a band of six, led by Collins and including Bass.
rode south to Big Springs, Nebraska, where, in the evening of September
18, they held up an eastbound Union Pacific passenger train. They took
$60,000 in newly minted twenty-dollar gold pieces from the express car
and $1,300 plus four gold watches from the passengers. After dividing
the loot the bandits decided to go in pairs in different directions.
Within a few weeks Collins and two others were killed while resisting
arrest. But Bass, disguised as a farmer, made it back to Texas, where he
formed a new outlaw band.
He and his brigands held up two stagecoaches and, in the spring of 1878,
robbed four trains within twenty-five miles of Dallas. They did not get
much money, but the robberies aroused citizens, and the bandits were the
object of a spirited chase across North Texas by posses and a special
company of Texas Rangers headed by Junius Peak. Bass eluded his pursuers
until one of his party, Jim Murphy, turned informer. As Bass's band rode
south intending to rob a small bank in Round Rock, Murphy wrote to Maj.
John B. Jones, commander of the Frontier Battalion of "Texas Rangers. In
Round Rock on July 19 Bass and his men became engaged in a gun battle,
in which he was wounded. The next morning he was found lying helpless in
a pasture north of town and was brought back to Round Rock. He died
there on July 21, his twenty-seventh birthday. He was buried in Round
Rock and soon became the subject of cowboy song and story.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Wayne Gard, Sam Bass (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1936).
also view
The Story of Sam Bass - Sam meet his fate in Round
Rock
Sam
Bass Bibliography of Library Materials
link to
Fort
Tumble Weed history on Sam Bass
link to
Sam Bass
by Highwaymen of the Railroad
link to Sam Bass outlaw (1851–1878)
by The Handbook of Texas Online
link to The Life and Adventures of Sam Bass
on line book
link to
Life and adventures of Sam Bass
link to
The Not So Merry Bandit
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located in the Round Rock Library