Emmett Dalton(1871-1937)
- Writer
- Actor
- Additional Crew
Emmett Dalton was the youngest of the three Dalton brothers, part of a
bandit gang notorious for robbing trains and banks in the Midwest
during the late 1890s (interestingly, the brothers started their life
of crime with a failed attempt at breaking into the safe on a Southern
Pacific Railroad train in 1891 near San Luis Obispo, California).
Emmett was shot several times and nearly died in the gang's
infamous--and, as it turned out, futile--attempt to rob two banks
simultaneously on October 5, 1892, in his hometown of Coffeyville,
Kansas. Sentenced to life in prison, he served almost 15 years before
being pardoned in 1907, in part because while in prison he found
religion and rehabilitated himself to the satisfaction of prison
authorities. Upon his release he married his childhood sweetheart and
set out to rehabilitate the world--at least what he perceived as the
world's proclivity to elevate outlaws to the status of heroes.
Eventually his message came to Hollywood, where he acted in and
consulted on several films about the "Wild West", at least two of them
about his own folly as an outlaw. He also wrote the book "When the
Daltons Rode," which was the basis of the western film
When the Daltons Rode (1940).
His exploits in life also include adventures in selling real estate and
in advocating and campaigning for prison reform. He died in 1937 in Los
Angeles, not too far from where
Wyatt Earp (who had also found a
place for himself in Hollywood) had also lived and died.