MA BARKER
G'day folks,
Now, here is a wild mob. Ma Barker was the matriarch of the Barker-Karpis Gang,
whose spree of kidnappings, murders and bank robberies led to her and its
members' violent deaths.
Synopsis
Ma Barker
was born on October 8, 1873, in Ash Grove, Missouri. She had four sons: Herman,
Lloyd, Arthur and Fred, who, with Alvin Karpis, formed the Barker-Karpis Gang
in 1931. That year, Fred and Alvin shot a sheriff to death. The murder started
a pattern of thoughtless killing by the gang. Ma Barker became a wanted woman.
On January 16, 1935, Ma and Fred where shot and killed by FBI agents in
Oklawaha, Florida.
Ma Barker
was born Arizona Donnie Clark on October 8, 1873, to a poor family in Ash
Grove, Missouri. Her parents were of Irish and Scottish descent. Clark was a
headstrong girl with dark penetrating eyes and a nasty temper. Along with her
siblings, she attended church regularly and spent her free time singing and
playing the fiddle.
As a
child, Clark witnessed local outlaw Jesse James and his gang ride through her
hometown. The sight triggered her thirst for adventure and was a catalyst for
her life to come.
In 1892,
Clark married a man who would fail to quench that thirst—a poor, soft-spoken
tenant farmer named George Barker. Over the next decade, the couple had four
sons: Herman, Lloyd, Arthur (nicknamed Doc) and Fred. (Arizona Clark had by
then had adopted the nickname "Kate," and taken her husband's last
name.)
As the
Barker boys aged, they were constantly in trouble with the law. Herman, the
oldest, was arrested in 1910 for petty thievery. By the time Barker's two
youngest, Doc and Fred, had reached their teen years, all four sons were
repeatedly landing themselves in prisons and reformatories. But Kate Barker
refused to discipline her boys and would fly into a rage at anyone, including
her husband, who tried to scold them. After the family relocated to Tulsa in
1915, George left Kate.
Barker-Karpis Gang
In the
spring of 1931, Ma Barker's youngest son, Fred, was unexpectedly paroled from
Lansing Prison, in Kansas. Fred brought with him a fellow parolee named Alvin
Karpis. He and Fred agreed to become partners in crime. Ma approved of the
newly formed Barker-Karpis Gang and let them use her Tulsa shack as a hideout.
Living vicariously through the exploits of her boys offered Ma the adventure
she had always craved.
Fred and
Alvin quickly went to work, committing a series of burglaries and small?time
bank robberies. In December 1931, they robbed a department store in West
Plains, Missouri. The next day, they shot and murdered the town's Sheriff, C.
R. Kelly, at point blank range. Kelly's murder started a pattern of excessive
violence and thoughtless killing that soon became the trademark of the
Karpis-Barker Gang. For the first time, Ma Barker became a wanted woman.
On March
29, 1932, Fred, Alvin and three accomplices robbed the Northwestern National
Bank in Minneapolis and made a clean getaway. The Barker?Karpis Gang got away
with more than a quarter of a million dollars in cash and bonds.
In
September of 1932, Ma's son Doc was paroled from a murder sentence at the same
time that his brothers were free. The Barker gang was back at full strength and
more menacing than ever. With Ma's blessing, they quickly plotted another bank
job for December, at the Third Northwestern National Bank in Minneapolis. This
time, however, they failed to adequately think the job through. The consequence
was a violent shootout with the police, which only served to solidify their
reputation as the most vicious criminal gang in America.
Another
shootout between the Barkers and the authorities would occur on the morning of
January 16, 1935, when the FBI raided the house in Oklawaha, Florida, where Ma
and Fred were staying. Heavily armed FBI agents surrounded the house and
ordered the pair to surrender. With no reply, the agents threw tear gas
canisters at the windows. Fred fired a machine gun and a shootout began that
left the house riddled with bullets. Fred and Ma fought for their lives,
shooting back with everything they had. Finally, after four hours, the federal
agents began to run out of ammunition and the scene became deathly quiet. Ma and Fred
Barker were found together, dead in an upstairs bedroom. A stash of weapons and
thousands of dollars were recovered at the house.
Clancy's comment: Wow. What a wild mob, eh?
I'm ...
Wow! I learned so much from this. Ma Barker has always just been a name to me. Thanks for the education and the fabulous post!
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