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Wicked Shreveport
Wicked Shreveport
Wicked Shreveport
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Wicked Shreveport

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In the rough-and-tumble days of the nineteenth century, Shreveport was on the very edge of the country s western frontier. It was a city struggling to tame lawlessness, and its streets were rocked by duels, lynchings and shootouts. A new century and Prohibition only brought a fresh wave of crime and scandal. The port city became a haunt for the likes of notorious bank robbers Bonnie and Clyde and home to the influential socialite and Madam Annie McCune. From Fred Lockhart, aka the Butterfly Man, to serial killers Nathanial Code and Danny Rolling, Shreveport played reluctant host to an even deadlier cast of characters. Their tales and more make up the devilish history of the Deep South in Wicked Shreveport.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 4, 2012
ISBN9781614233664
Wicked Shreveport
Author

Bernadette J. Palombo

Bernadette J. Palombo is a professor of criminal justice and chair of the Department of History and Social Sciences at Louisiana State University in Shreveport. She holds a doctorate in political science and a master�s degree in criminal justice from the Center for Politics and Economics at the Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California. She is a member of Alpha Phi Sigma National Criminal Justice Honor Society, the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and the American Society of Criminology. Gary D. Joiner is the Mary Anne and Leonard Selber Professor of History at Louisiana State University in Shreveport, where he teaches both history and geography and serves as director of the Red River Regional Studies Center. He holds a bachelor�s degree in history and geography and a master�s degree in history from Louisiana Tech University and earned his PhD in history from St. Martin�s College, Lancaster University, in the United Kingdom. Dr. Joiner is past president of the North Louisiana Civil War Round Table and the DeSoto Historical Society and is president and founder of the Friends of the Mansfield Battlefield. History is both his profession and his hobby. In 2010, he was named Preservationist of the Year by the Louisiana Trust for Historic Preservation. He is series editor for Western Theater in the Civil War with the University of Tennessee Press. He writes the �History Doctor� column for Forum News and presents a weekly �History Matters� commentary on Red River Radio, public radio. W. Chris Hale is an assistant professor of criminal justice at Louisiana State University in Shreveport. He has published and presented research in the areas of cybercrime, terrorism and intelligence analysis. Most recently, he has had his work published in the Proteus Futures Digest and the International Journal of Emergency Management. He is a member of several professional organizations, including the American Society of Criminology and the Academy of Criminal Justice Scie

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    Book preview

    Wicked Shreveport - Bernadette J. Palombo

    Published by The History Press

    Charleston, SC 29403

    www.historypress.net

    Copyright © 2012 by Bernadette J. Palombo, Gary D. Joiner,

    W. Chris Hale and Cheryl H. White

    All rights reserved

    First published 2012

    e-book edition 2012

    ISBN 978.1.61423.366.4

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Wicked Shreveport / Bernadette J. Palombo … [et al.].

    p. cm.

    Includes bibliographical references.

    print edition ISBN 978-1-59629-818-7

    1. Crime--Louisiana--Shreveport--History. 2. Crime--Louisiana--Shreveport Region--History. 3. Corruption--Louisiana--Shreveport--History. 4. Scandals--Louisiana--Shreveport--History. 5. Criminals--Louisiana--Shreveport--Biography. 6. Shreveport (La.)--Social conditions. 7. Shreveport (La.)--History. 8. Shreveport (La.)--Biography. I.

    Palombo, Bernadette Jones.

    HV6795.S527W53 2012

    364.109763’99--dc23

    2011052414

    Notice: The information in this book is true and complete to the best of our knowledge. It is offered without guarantee on the part of the author or The History Press. The author and The History Press disclaim all liability in connection with the use of this book.

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form whatsoever without prior written permission from the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

    Contents

    Acknowledgements

    1. Frontier Violence: Vengeance Is Mine

    2. Lynching: The Hard Hand of Swift Justice

    3. The Ku Klux Klan in Northwest Louisiana

    4. Blind Tigers and Bootlegging in Caddo Parish During Prohibition

    5. The Red-Light District in Shreveport

    6. The Butterfly Man: The Last Murderer Hanged in Shreveport, Louisiana

    7. Crime of the Great Depression: The Era of Bonnie and Clyde

    8. Serial Killers: Rolling and Code

    Notes

    Bibliography

    About the Authors

    Acknowledgements

    We wish to acknowledge the assistance of Dominica Carriere and Shawn Bohannon, curators at the Louisiana State University in Shreveport, Archives and Special Collections. Their expertise is unequalled. Joe Slattery, research librarian at Shreve Memorial Library, Broadmoor Branch provided valuable insight.

    We also want to thank local historians Eric Brock, Clifton Cardin, John Andrew Prime and Mary Margaret Richard. They have been good friends and possess a vast array of knowledge on the history of our region.

    Finally, during the course of writing this book, some of our students helped share the burdens of research. They made our tasks much easier. We will always be grateful to Sara Carpenter, Blake Lee, Laulie Pasquier, Elisha Scott and Laura Beeman.

    1

    Frontier Violence: Vengeance Is Mine

    Gary D. Joiner, PhD

    In those days a man who shot to kill was not necessarily a bad man.

    —Albert Harris Leonard

    The history of the western frontier is the story of the civilization of a great untamed wilderness. The rules of law and order, with their intricacies of due process, were often nonexistent, ignored or loosely followed. Particularly in the Deep South and the rapidly expanding West, the majority of townsmen and rural landowners approved of and encouraged swift social justice for heinous crimes. Most people believed that due process was an inexact science at best and sometimes a travesty. The concept of social justice in these regions began with the English colonies and can be traced to older European roots. If the public believed someone was guilty, it wanted punishment immediately because it did not trust courts to deliver swift or fair justice.¹

    Shreveport, Louisiana, is typical of frontier towns. Although it may be difficult today to identify Louisiana’s third-largest city with the great westward migration, it was once on the edge of the West. Located on the Red River near the northwestern corner of the state, Shreveport’s strategic location prepared it for growth. Rising above the river on a one-square-mile plateau, the original town site was not prone to flooding. Some twenty miles to the west lay Texas and thirty miles to the north, Arkansas. When incorporated in 1839, Shreveport was, for a short period, the westernmost municipality in the United States. Four years prior to this, the settlement began as Shreve Town. The prospects for the young village appeared bright, except for one enormous problem. For over one hundred miles above and for a short distance below the site, the river was clogged with a massive logjam. Some settlers lived along the banks of the river, but commerce by riverboat was impossible.

    Captain Henry Miller Shreve was awarded a contract by the U.S. Army to clear the Great Raft, as it was known. He began working on the river in the early 1830s and continued throughout the decade. Shreve accomplished this task by bringing in Irish immigrants and slave labor, who used specialized vessels called snagboats. He plugged up side streams, made shortcuts called cutoffs and generally rerouted the river whenever it suited him. While working on the raft, Shreve and his business partners engineered a treaty with the Caddo Indians in 1835, effectively removing them from the region. He also laid out the streets of the new town, which formed the grid for downtown Shreveport. The massacres at Goliad and the Alamo were still hot topics, and Shreve paid homage to the fallen heroes, naming Crockett, Fannin, Milam and Travis Streets for their leaders. Caddo Street, Louisiana Avenue and Texas Street all reflected the region as well.

    With the river open, steamboats began their passages up the still dangerous river. Unseen snags often ripped open the hulls of the boats. Boiler explosions were a frequent source of steamboat losses as well. The steamboat captains on the sketchily charted western rivers often manned their vessels with immigrants and others who learned their jobs while aboard the boats. Sometimes these men would settle in or near one of the new ports of call, wishing to adopt a calmer lifestyle. The original Indian paths to the west became the Texas Trail, along which cattle herds moved east for transport on the river to market. Even during and after the Civil War, Shreveport was a major port for the cattle trade.² Settlers arrived by steamboat or, less frequently, overland from eastern Louisiana via the Monroe Road. Shreveport readily accepted these new settlers. Many of the town’s early citizens came from faraway places like Pomerania, Lithuania, Russian Poland, Alsace and Prussia.³ Jews, Catholics and Protestants all made their way to the new town, seeking a better life. Some came as merchants and others as laborers. Together with the existing Anglo community, they forged the new community into a budding commercial center.

    Regional commerce began almost immediately. The river trade fed immigration. Huge areas of flat fertile land along the river were opened for cotton planting. Prior to the Civil War, the plantations required slave labor to clear the land and plant and harvest the white gold (cotton). After the war, sharecroppers performed the work. Usually, these were the same people.

    Cattlemen, planters, riverboat men, farm workers, residents of the town, soldiers and, later, railroad workers all sought entertainment, which included prostitution and gambling, as well as more genteel pursuits. Often, competing interests and desires led to disputes, making violence common. Shootings and stabbings were frequently the result. A band of about one hundred heavily armed Texans briefly seized Shreveport in 1839 before the villagers gathered their allies from the surrounding area and drove them out. The apparent intent of the raid was to annex the river port into the Republic of Texas.

    The earliest chronicler of life in Shreveport was Albert Harris Leonard. Born in Columbus, Georgia, in 1839, Leonard’s father moved the family to Shreveport in October 1849.⁵ At that time, Shreveport’s stores and homes hugged the Red River and Cross Bayou, which flowed into the river on the north side of the plateau. The following year, the 1850 census reported that the population of Caddo Parish was 8,884, with 2,130 being free and 5,208 slaves. The census also reported a total of 747 families in the parish. Shreveport’s population was 1,163.⁶

    Leonard recounts several violent incidents, beginning soon after his arrival in Shreveport. He reported that a man walked into a doctor’s office and started a gunfight in which both men were killed. The doctor was William Mercer Green, and the instigator was an acting state legislator named David Hester.⁷ Three months later, the ten-year-old boy watched from his room as a man ran out of the Catfish Hotel closely pursued by a second man wielding a Bowie knife. The second man killed the first before Leonard’s eyes.⁸ Among young Albert’s new friends was Rufus Rufe Sewall. Rufe’s father, Rufus Sewall Sr., was gunned down in a duel with Dr. Joel Hardwick. The duel was fought at the intersection of Texas Street and Spring Street. Hardwick was acquitted in the death.⁹ The elder Sewall’s brother, John Octavius Sewall, was Shreveport’s first mayor. While in office, he was killed in a duel by John Willson. The encounter took place on January 6, 1840, across the line in Elysian Fields, Texas, supposedly over a liquor ordinance but probably over an affair with Willson’s wife.¹⁰ Sometimes, a man confronted his enemy in an unorthodox manner and got away with it. Leonard recounts being an eyewitness to a killing in which Dr. William Head dispatched a bully named Bill Oliver. He walked across Texas Street into a saloon, immediately firing at the unsuspecting man and killing him instantly. Dr. Head was brought before a magistrate, who discharged him because Oliver had bullied him.¹¹

    James Patteson Flournoy Sr. From History of Shreveport and Shreveport Builders, 292.

    James Patteson Flournoy Sr., widely known as J. Pat, was born in Pulaski, Tennessee, in 1853. His family moved to Caddo Parish shortly afterward. They settled one mile east of the town of Greenwood to be with other family members, including J. Pat’s grandfather Alfred Flournoy. The families were wealthy planters and influential politically. J. Pat later became one of the most important sheriffs in Caddo Parish.¹²

    In his memoirs, Flournoy observed that in those days if a man spoke ill of any lady, it cost him his life.¹³ He remembered this in 1860, as the Vicksburg, Shreveport & Texas Railroad was under construction in Caddo Parish.¹⁴ The chief engineer was a Colonel Word. The second senior man was Captain Orr. Word roomed at the Garrett Hotel in Greenwood, owned by Flournoy’s father, Alonzo Flournoy. Word

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