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Bonnie and Clyde relatives want robbers buried together

Bonnie and Clyde's reckless love affair and the bloody crimes that plagued the American Southwest during the Great Depression made them virtual folk heroes, the Romeo and Juliets of the 20th century.th century, with a passion for murder.

Ninety years after the fatal ambush by Louisiana law enforcement officers, two of Bonnie Parker's relatives are suing to finally reunite her with Clyde Barrow in a vacant lot next to them. ing.

Bonnie was 23 years old when she died on May 23, 1934, and was originally buried in Fishtrap Cemetery in Dallas, just a mile away from Clyde's 25-year-old grave in Western Heights.

But 11 years later, she was moved to Crown Hill Memorial Park and buried next to her mother, Emma, ​​who died in 1945.

But that wasn't what Bonnie and Clyde wanted.

“Bonnie and Clyde's wish while on the run was to be buried together because they knew they would someday be captured and killed together,” a source close to two of the robbers' surviving descendants told the Post. Ta.

Bonnie Parker, who captured the attention and disgust of the American public during the height of the Great Depression with her lover Clyde Barrow, died 90 years ago, but her wishes to spend eternity with her partner in crime were ignored. . Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group (Getty Images)
The Oscar-winning Bonnie and Clyde, starring Faye Dunaway as Bonnie and Warren Beatty as her lover Clyde, secured the duo's place in the cultural canon. Some people who remain interested in their stories even visit their graves. Everett Collection / Everett Collection

“But Bonnie's mother decided she didn't want to bury her daughter next to Clyde. That's because, 'Clyde gave birth to her while he was alive, but he can't give birth to her when he's dead.' It was a statement and Mom won.”

Officials said two of the outlaw's relatives, Bonnie's niece Leah Leanne Linder, who turned 89 in October, and Clyde's nephew, Buddy Barrow Williams, who is in his mid-70s, were “fighting.'' “However, so far it has been unsuccessful.” To reunite Bonnie with Clyde.

Ms. Williams published her memoir “Growing Up Barrow'' last year.

Bonnie was first buried a mile away from her lover in a cemetery, then moved in 1945 to be buried next to her mother. Her previous attempts to move her from there failed due to her mother's wish to be buried with her. zumapress.com
Clyde was buried with his brother, but his grave is in a poorly maintained cemetery. People visited both and left a half-drunk bottle of Corona beer (top right), a bullet, and a marijuana joint as memorials. zumapress.com

Historian Brad Disson, who interviewed Linder and Barrow and is writing a book about the deadly ambush of Bonnie and Clyde and the sheriff who led their group, told the Post:

“They haven't given up yet, but I think they're skeptical that it's going to happen anytime soon. They want to honor Bonnie's wishes to be buried next to Clyde.”

Crown Hill Cemetery official Dwayne Hughes confirmed to the Post that Bonnie is still buried there.

Clyde was photographed in Dallas before it was full. A bloody spree began. He and Bonnie met in 1930 after this incident was filmed, and their mutual obsession turned into an interstate murder spree. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group (Getty Images)

Several years ago, Hughes had talked with Linder and his attorney about reburying Bonnie next to Clyde in Western Heights.

But Hughes apparently did not accept Linder's claim that he was Bonnie's closest living relative, nor did he comply with Bonnie's mother's request that her daughter not be buried next to Clyde. is.

Additionally, members of the Western Heights Restoration Group recently claimed that Crown Hill does not want to relocate Bonnie “for fear of the loss of tourism that Bonnie's grave would cause.”

The couple's posthumous fascination stems from a carefully posed photo of them discovered on undeveloped film left behind in their 1933 hideout in Joplin, Missouri. AFP/Getty Images

Tourists in Dallas continue to visit both cemeteries. When local officials visited last spring, Clyde's grave turned out to be a virtual shrine, littered with empty liquor bottles, marijuana joints, bullets and flowers left by tourists.

Ms. Linder was originally named Bonnie Ray Parker but changed her birth name when she was born to Bonnie's eldest brother, Hubert “Buster” Parker, five months after her infamous aunt's death. Changed to rare.

Leah Linder never claimed that Bonnie and Clyde were anything other than “outlaws.”

Emma Parker (left, with her daughter Billie Mace) insisted that her daughter Bonnie be removed from Clyde and then buried with him, so Bonnie's remains were reburied at the current site in 1945. Bettman Archive
Clyde's mother, Cumie Barrow (second from left), went to court in 1935 after Clyde's death, along with her stepdaughters Audrey (left) and Faye (second from right), and a fourth woman, Mary O'Dea. It was done. All were convicted of harboring outlaws. Related news organizations

She once claimed this in an interview she gave to historian Disson.

“It was their wish to be buried together. They fell together. They knew what the ending would be.”

Once described as “America's most ruthless'' and “murderous outlaws,'' their exploits have inspired numerous books, songs, and films, and stars Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway have won Academy Awards. He played an outlaw in the 1967 film Bonnie. And Clyde. ”

This 1932 photo of Bonnie and Clyde has become an important part of their folklore, but the photoshoot came to light in part when undeveloped film was dumped in their former hideout. It was a coincidence. Bettman Archive
Dunaway and Beatty painstakingly recreated the shoot, giving it more Hollywood glamor than the original. Thanks to this film, this criminal was able to establish a permanent place in pop culture.

The film glorified the violent duo and forever put them on the pop culture map.

When they met in January 1930, they both came from poor families and had little education. Bonnie was 19 years old and Clyde was 20 years old.

Bonnie was married to another criminal at the age of 15 and met Clyde when her husband was in prison. They were instantly infatuated with each other.

J. Edgar Hoover, the director of the Bureau of Investigation, the predecessor to the FBI, put his name on this detailed “wanted” poster, warning police officers to take “severe precautions” if they see the pair. warned that it was necessary. Getty Images
After tracking Bonnie and Clyde to Gibbsland, Louisiana, the group that ambushed them interpreted the extreme caution warning to mean overwhelming force. The couple's Ford V8 was loaded with bullets. They died instantly. Bettman Archive
After the ambush, where records say 167 bullet holes were found in the car, the suspects paraded Bonnie and Clyde's bloody bodies. A few days later, the two were buried separately in Dallas, Texas. Related news organizations

When her new lover is imprisoned, she smuggles a gun to help him escape. He was captured again, but by then the two had fallen in love with each other and were exchanging passionate letters.

He affectionately called her “little wife.” Although she was less than 5 feet tall and weighed more than 100 pounds, they never married.

Once released on parole, Clyde and Bonnie began a savage crime spree, and in April 1932 their gang first killed a store owner, then went on to rob nine law enforcement officers and at least three others in bank robberies and store robberies. He committed a series of killings, including four civilians. And a gas station.

In April 1934, the men and their gang, wanted all over the country, killed two patrolmen in Grapevine, Texas, and a few days later shot and killed a constable in Miami, Oklahoma, and abducted the police chief.

Bonnie and Clyde have one thing in common. That scene was at least where he ended his two-year brutal murder spree that claimed the lives of nine law enforcement officers in addition to four civilians. Universal Archive/Universal Images Group (Getty Images)

In May, former Texas Ranger Frank Hamer chased the suspect to Gibbsland, Louisiana, where he was ambushed by a group hiding on the side of a highway before dawn and opened fire as the couple's Ford V8 getaway car approached. They died instantly.

Despite widespread admiration for the pair, the court paraded their bodies and declared them “a pair of human rats with no more decent features than any other rat.”

But back in Dallas, thousands gathered for their own funerals, including private burials that may be canceled 90 years later.

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