Samuel "Sam" Bass

Samuel "Sam" Bass

Male 1851 - 1878  (27 years)

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  • Name Samuel "Sam" Bass 
    Born 21 Jul 1851  Mitchell, Lawrence, Indiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Occupation 1869  Rosedale, Bolivar, Mississippi, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Orphaned, he ran away and worked at a sawmill. 
    Occupation 1870  Denton, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Worked as a cowboy for the winter, but didn't like it. Handled horses in the stables of the Lacy House Hotel. 
    Occupation 1874  Denton, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Became interested in racing Horses, and won most of his races. 
    Occupation 1876  Ogallala, Keith, Nebraska, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Drove a herd of cattle, and stole $8,000 of the owners money. 
    Occupation 1877  South Dakota, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Formed gang and robbed 7 stage coaches. 
    Occupation 18 Sep 1877  Big Springs, Deuel, Nebraska, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Robbed Union Pacific Railroad of $60,000. 
    Occupation 19 Jul 1878  Round Rock, Williamson, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Wounded in shootout with Texas Rangers. 
    Reference Number 1991 
    Died 21 Jul 1878  Round Rock, Williamson, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    • Dies on his 27th birthday, in the custody of Texas rangers.
    Person ID I1991  Families

    Father Daniel Bass,   b. 3 May 1821, Ashe, North Carolina, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 20 Feb 1864, Bedford, Lawrence, Indiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 42 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Elizabeth Jane Sheeks,   b. 17 Dec 1821, French Lick, Orange, Indiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 3 Jun 1861, Marion, Lawrence, Indiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 39 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Married 22 Oct 1840  Marion, Lawrence, Indiana, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F389  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 21 Jul 1851 - Mitchell, Lawrence, Indiana, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Orphaned, he ran away and worked at a sawmill. - 1869 - Rosedale, Bolivar, Mississippi, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Worked as a cowboy for the winter, but didn't like it. Handled horses in the stables of the Lacy House Hotel. - 1870 - Denton, Texas, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Became interested in racing Horses, and won most of his races. - 1874 - Denton, Texas, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Drove a herd of cattle, and stole $8,000 of the owners money. - 1876 - Ogallala, Keith, Nebraska, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Formed gang and robbed 7 stage coaches. - 1877 - South Dakota, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Robbed Union Pacific Railroad of $60,000. - 18 Sep 1877 - Big Springs, Deuel, Nebraska, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsOccupation - Wounded in shootout with Texas Rangers. - 19 Jul 1878 - Round Rock, Williamson, Texas, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 21 Jul 1878 - Round Rock, Williamson, Texas, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Photos
    Bass, Samuel
    Bass, Samuel
    Photo of Sam Bass with his gang members Jim Murphy and Seaborn Barnes
    Bass, Sam
    Bass, Sam
    Sam "the Outlaw" Bass

    Headstones
    Bass, Sam 'The Outlaw'
    Bass, Sam "The Outlaw"
    Birth: Jul. 21, 1851
    Death: Jul. 21, 1878
    Plot: Plot: West Side, Near Fence
    Bass, Sam 'The Outlaw'
    Bass, Sam "The Outlaw"
    Included is monument for Seaborn Barnes.
    Cause of death: He was mortally wounded by a Texas Ranger named George Harrell on July 19, 1878, just moments after Bass and one of his gang, Seaborn Barnes, had shot and disabled Morris Moore, a one-time Texas Ranger

    Featured Articles
    Sam Bass - The Outlaw
    Sam Bass - The Outlaw
    Part of Len Kubiak's Texas History Series

  • Notes 

    • Sam Bass was a nineteenth-century American train robber and western icon. Handsome and charismatic, he is best known for his brief, yet extremely lucrative career as a train and bank robber.

      Born to a farming family in Mitchell, Indiana, Sam Bass was orphaned at the age of 13. He lived for the next five years with an uncle, but in 1869 set out on his own. He spent the next year in Mississippi, ut in 1870 headed for Texas. In 1871, he moved to Denton, Texas. He acquired a prized racing mare and made his living from racing horses from 1874 to 1876. He often traveled to San Antonio during this period. In 1876, he led a cattle drive north from south Texas. He completed the drive in Nebraska, but squandered the money gambling. He next tried gold mining in Deadwood, South Dakota, again without success.

      In 1877, Bass and his friend Joel Collins set up a freighting business. When it failed, they turned to robbing stagecoaches. On the evening of September 18, 1877, they robbed the Union Pacific gold train from San Francisco. Their take was $60,000, shared amongst the 6 gang members. To this day it is the single largest robbery of the Union Pacific, and the one single event that launched Bass to Old West fame. With the Pinkertons and other law enfocement officers on his tail, including lawman Charlie Bassett, he headed to Denton, Texas.

      Bass and the others now began a string of train and stage coach robberies, including the first such robbery in Texas history in Allen, Texas, never netting over $500 at any one time. In 1878, they held up two stagecoaches and four trains within twenty-five miles of Dallas. The gang quickly found themselves as the object of a pursuit in the Denton area by Pinkerton Agents and by a special compay of Texas Rangers headed by Captain Junius Peak. Bass was able to elude the Rangers until a member of his gang, Jim Murphy, turned infomant when his father was imprisoned in Tyler, Texas. He cut a deal to save his father, and informed the lawmen about the gang's plans and movements. As Bass's band rode south, Murphy telegraphed Major John B. Jones, commander of the Frontier Battalion of Texas Rangers.

      Jones set up an ambush at Round Rock, where Bass planned to rob the Williamson County Bank. On July 19, 1878, Bass and his gang scouted the area before the actual robbery. When they bought some tobacco at a store, they were notice by Williamson County Sheriff A.W. (Caige) Grimes. When Grimes approached the gang, he was shot and killed, firing one round before he died, and a heavy gunfight ensued between the outlaws, the Rangers and the local lawmen. A deputy named Moore was mortally wounded, as was Sam Bass. The gang quickly mounted their horses and tried to escape, while continuing to fire. As they galloped away, Bass was shot again in the back by Ranger George Herold. Bass was later found lying helpless in a pasture north of town by the authorities. They took him into custody, and he died from his wounds the next day, July 21, 1878 -- his 27th birthday. Coincidentally, Sheriff Grimes was also 27 years of age.

      One member of the gang, named Jackson, escaped capture and later settled in New Mexico. For many years his family petitioned, without success, for a pardon so that he could return to Texas. The informant Murphy returned to Denton, where he became an outcast, frequently sleeping in the county jail for his own protection. He died within a year when he swallowed some eye drops; whether the ingestion was an accident is unclear, but the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame states it was suicide. "Rowdy Joe" Lowe, a former saloon keeper, gambler, and a man with somewhat of a reputation as a gunman, also was accused of having ridden with the gang. However, if he did, he was never charged with any crime. He was shot and killed in 1899 after an argument unrelated to his alleged involvement with the gang.

      Sam Bass was buried in Round Rock, not far from where he died. A few years after his death, his sister provided a tombstone which read "A brave man reposes in death here. Why was he not true?" Damaged beyond repair by souvenir hunters, the stone was replaced by a large granite replica provided by the "Sam Bass Centennial Commission."

      As with many contemporary figures of the American Old West, Bass captured the public imagination in contemporary stories and songs, being portrayed as was common at the time by some as a ruthless desperado, but by others as a sort of Robin Hood figure whose misdeeds were not visited on the poor, but only upon the monied classes. The infamous confidence man, Soapy Smith, who with his cousin, Edwin B. Smith witnessed the shooting of Bass. The event changed Edwin's mind about taking the criminal path that the two boys were planning.

      Despite his short career, Sam Bass was nonetheless colorful, and saw extreme financial success in his robberies from 1877 until his death in 1878. The well publicized and unsuccessful law enforcement pursuit of Bass and his gang following their $60,000 take on the Union Pacific train robbery was the event that brought him to the attention of the public and what captured their imagination. The single event, and his evading caputre afterwards, led to Bass reaching the status of legend.