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The
Bill Miner Story
The
Failed Robbery
On the bright, moonlit evening of May 8, 1906, three heavily armed
men boarded the westbound CPR mail train 17 miles east of Kamloops,
British Columbia. The bandits consisted of a sometimes prospector
named Shorty Dunn, the former teacher Louis Colquhoun and their
leader; the infamous train and stagecoach robber, Bill Miner.
Miner had been living quietly for the past couple of years years
in Merrit, B.C. under the name George Edwards and this was to be
his one last big haul. His big mistake was teaming up with these
two inexperienced criminals.
After a series of comedic errors, Miner
and his gang escaped on a single horse with about one hundred
dollars. This had been the second robbery of a CPR train in two
years; the first one had been committed by Miner single handedly.
Even though the take was small, the incident was taken seriously
enough for a reward of $12,000 to be offered and a province wide
manhunt launched.
The
British Columbia Provincial Police asked for the assistance of the
RNWMP in Calgary and a detail including Percy Thomas, Sgt.
Wilson and three other officers was dispatched. Upon arriving in
BC, Thomas and the other Mounties began searching the Douglas Lake
area. They had been searching for a couple of days when a
constable with the Provincial police caught up to them saying he
had seen three men who fit the description of the robbers camped
not far away.
The Capture
The six policemen approached the camp and found the three suspects
eating lunch. The oldest of the group said that they were
prospectors. When informed that they fit the descriptions of the
robbers, Shorty Dunn panicked and stared running and shooting. One
of the constables stopped him with a bullet in the leg. And so,
Percy Thomas and his fellow officers captured one of the most
notorious, enigmatic and romantic bandits in the history of both
the Canadian and American West.
Percy Thomas had come to Canada in 1889
to be a farmer but, like so many young Englishmen, was lured by
the adventures of the North West Mounted Police and joined the
force in 1897. He was also among the detail assigned to assist the
survivors of the Frank Slide in 1903. He was a policeman's
policeman and described by his fellow officers as, "Dapper, Suave,
an experienced and efficient police officer". He became a
magistrate in High River after leaving the force.
Bill Miner's Escape and Demise
Bill Miner escaped from the B.C. Pen, in broad daylight, a year
after his capture and was never seen in Canada again. He was later
captured in Georgia after committing the first train robbery in
that state's history. He died there in prison after two
unsuccessful escape attempts...or so the story goes.
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