1911 – Reward poster for the capture of two men who “held up and robbed” the registered mail carried by a Missouri, Kansas, and Texas Railway train

  • Unbound
  • Austin, Texas: Missouri, Kansas, and Texas Railway, 1911
Austin, Texas: Missouri, Kansas, and Texas Railway, 1911. Unbound. Very good. This reward poster, titled “One Thousand Dollars Reward”, measures 7¾” x 11”. It was jointly issued by C. B. Anderson, the Post Office Inspector at Austin, Texas and M. J. Forman, the inspector at Houston. In nice shape with mailing folds and a little edge-wear.



It reads in part:



“The postal car in train six, M. K. & T. Ry., leaving Houston, Texas at 8:35 p.m., August 16, 1911, was held up and robbed of registered mail between Houston Heights and Eureka, Texas by two masked men, who assaulted and threatened the life of the clerk. . .. Descript of robbers as follows:



“No. 1. Height, about 5 feet 8 inches; weight about 170 pounds; age, about 40 years; . . . complexion, face and hands sunburned . . . carried a nickel-plated, 45 caliber revolver, with six-inch barrel: wore light blue clothes . . . of cheap material, showing much wear; and shabby, dark, soft hat with narrow brim and crown slightly crushed.



“No. 2. Height, about 5 feet 9 inches; weight about 165 pounds; age, about 40 years build not as heavy as No. 1; dress same as No. 1, but no revolver or pistol shown. .

..

“The United States offers a reward of One Thousand Dollars for the arrest and conviction of any person, in any United States Court, on the charge of robbing the mails while being attached to a railway train. . ..”

.

Details

Title

1911 – Reward poster for the capture of two men who “held up and robbed” the registered mail carried by a Missouri, Kansas, and Texas Railway train

Binding

Unbound

Condition

Very Good

Publisher

Missouri, Kansas, and Texas Railway: Austin, Texas

Date

1911


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Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

Specializing in Unique Americana, that is, we keep a selection of personal narratives such as diaries, work journals, correspondence collections, photograph albums, scrapbooks, and similar items that shed light on some aspect of North American life, culture, or society. Additionally, we always have a nice selection of philatelic material (primarily postal history) and other paper ephemera.