Salt
Lake City's Colorful History
Mike
O'Sullivan
Salt
Lake City
12
Feb 2002 09:55 UTC

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When not watching the athletes,
some visitors to the Salt Lake City Olympics are learning about the colorful
history of the region. It includes tales of larger-than-life bandits, such
as the 19th century outlaws Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Traditional
story-tellers are keeping their memory alive, while sometimes blurring
the line between fact and legend.
Everyone is understandably
paying attention to Salt Lake City as a winter sports capital. Overlooked,
at least for the time being, is the fact that the Olympics are taking place
in what was once the American frontier, wild and sometimes lawless. But,
if they want to turn their attention from the Games for a short time, visitors
can capture some of the area's frontier flavor.
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Paul
Turner
(VOA photo - M. O'Sullivan) |
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In the town of Richfield, Utah,
they may encounter story-teller Paul Turner. The 70-year-old resident calls
himself a legend spinner. "Washington has given spinning a bad name, but
we connect the dots between historians and other events. Historians have
names, dates, places, and they can be checked upon. We legend spinners
have to connect the dots, and if your legend is better than ours, we'll
change ours. We don't mind shifting gears at any time, with historians,
with spinners, with others," Mr. Turner said.
One of Mr. Turner's
stories concerns the widow Lizzie Jones, a Utah resident who needed $400
to pay the mortgage on her home. Butch Cassidy and his partner, the Sundance
Kid, gave the widow the money, then hid nearby as the banker came to collect
it. As the banker rode off, they stole back the $400, and robbed him of
his gold watch, as well.
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| A
$4,000 reward was offered for Butch Cassidy "dead or alive" in a century-old
wanted poster that included this picture |
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Mr. Turner also tells of the
time when Butch was serving a two-year prison term in the state of Wyoming.
The state governor came to visit, and Butch asked for an early release,
saying he had been a model prisoner. Mr. Turner completes the story. "The
governor said, 'I would, but you'll steal cattle and horses in Wyoming.'
Butch said, 'no, I'm not going to do that any more because that's not where
the money is.' And the quick-thinking governor said, 'well, that has to
include banks too.' And Butch scratched his chin and said, 'OK, I'll give
you that. If you'll let me out, I'll not steal cattle, horses, or rob banks
in Wyoming.' So the governor pardoned him six months early. Butch later
said, 'I'm surely glad he didn't include railway express cars, or I'd have
to serve my last six months,'" Mr. Turner said.
Butch and Sundance
went on to form a gang of bandits called the Wild Bunch.
Later fleeing to South
America, the two resumed their career of crime. Historians say Butch and
his partner died in a shootout in Bolivia in 1908. Story teller Paul Turner
doesn't believe it. "We think he returned, and in fact, Butch is like Elvis.
I think he's still out there somewhere. He'd be 133 years old, but he was
a pretty good old stalwart," Mr. Turner said.
Mr. Turner speaks of
many alleged sightings of Butch Cassidy over the years here in Utah. None
has been verified, but Mr. Turner says that doesn't matter. It makes a
better story to think he returned to finish his days peacefully. And for
a legend-spinner, Mr. Turner says the story is what matters.
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