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The Story of Cole Younger by Himself: Being an Autobiography of the Missouri Guerrilla Captain and Outlaw, His Capture and Prison Life, and the Only ... Account of the Northfield Raid Ever Published
 
 
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The Story of Cole Younger by Himself: Being an Autobiography of the Missouri Guerrilla Captain and Outlaw, His Capture and Prison Life, and the Only ... Account of the Northfield Raid Ever Published [Paperback]

Cole Younger , Marley Brant

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Product details

  • Paperback: 127 pages
  • Publisher: Minnesota Historical Society Press,U.S. (1 Oct 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0873513932
  • ISBN-13: 978-0873513937
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 14 x 1.2 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,092,962 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Cole Younger
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Product Description

Product Description

Born near Lee's Summit, Missouri, Thomas Coleman ('Cole') Younger (1844--1916) rode with William Clarke Quantrill's Confederate raiders during the Civil War, participating in many daring and bloody exploits, including the infamous Lawrence, Kansas, massacre of 1863. Following the war, Younger continued his celebrated career as a desperado, robbing banks and trains with Jesse James and other members of the James-Younger gang. A fateful attempt in 1876 on the Northfield, Minnesota, bank sent Cole to the state prison in Stillwater for decades. Here he became a model resident, helping both to protect women inmates during a fire and found the Prison Mirror, a newspaper intended to shed 'a ray of light upon the lives of those behind the bars'. Paroled in 1901, Younger successfully sought a pardon, operated a Wild West show with his old comrade Frank James, and lectured on 'What My Life Has Taught Me'. Always known for intelligence and coolness under pressure, he published this autobiography in 1903, reflecting on the colourful and sometimes violent experiences of 'the gentleman, the soldier, the outlaw, and the convict'.

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Amazon.com:  15 reviews
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful
His own take on history 26 Jan 2005
By Atheen M. Wilson - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This was a surprising book. I'm not sure what I expected of it. My exposure to this phase of history was mostly by way of Saturday afternoon movies and television westerns which I shared with my father when I was a kid. I was aware of the character Cole Younger and his "brothers"-they were usually not named-but the "bad guys" always seemed of limited dimension and intellect, avarice being their single most defining characteristic; that and, I suppose, a profound underlying wickedness that actually found satisfaction in doing evil. I had long since given up westerns and their "black hat/white hat" mentality, and probably wouldn't have given a book about Cole Younger a second glance in the ordinary way of things.

I found the autobiography, The Story of Cole Younger, tangentially when reading about the Civil War and its outcomes. A book I had already read on the James brothers made it quite clear that much of what happened before and after the war in Missouri and Kansas had set the tone for the later history of the "Wild West" and for the American character in general. It reminded me once more that history is not just a disconnected series of interesting vignettes, despite the fact that it's often studied, taught and written about in that fashion. History is a linear and multifaceted continuum that helps to structure, define and direct the present and the future in a much more profound way than most people realize. What was surprising about this book was the degree to which the author himself was aware of that fact.

Even more surprising was the erudition and insight with which Cole Younger wrote about his activities. I had expected a less literate individual, a flatter, less multidimensional figure than I discovered. It would appear that although he did not receive a great deal of education, he did receive some. It would also seem that he was a reader. He was made librarian at Stillwater Prison for many years, and I suspect made good use of the facility. While time in a 19th century prison may well have weighed heavily on many men, it would appear that Younger made good use of it. It would also seem that he was smart enough to realize that obeying the rules and conforming to the lifestyle would make his life easier and more satisfying than railing against the system. It was certainly central to his having been paroled rather than left confined until his death. It was also probably responsible for his having lived as long as he did (he died in 1916). Removed from a hostile environment and protected by the law itself, he lived considerably longer than others of the kind, as for instance Jessie James who died in 1882.

While I agree with some of the statements of Marley Brant, who discusses the author's personality and history and his relationships with his family and with the James brothers, I am not so certain that Younger was quite as intentionally devious as Brant suggests. I believe that in common with most mature people-the author was almost 60 when he wrote the book-Younger desired to appear in a good light. Certainly the lengthy philosophical summing up of life, both his own and life in general, suggests someone who has given the events that shaped the course of his personal history considerable thought. Certainly until he wrote his own thoughts down for posterity, nearly everything written about him had been penned by individuals with their own personal agendas, usually with a profit motive heading their list. While he may have fudged to make himself and his motives appear in more favorable light, I suspect that much of what he wrote he believed was true.

Whatever the case, I agree with Brant that Younger seems distinctly aware of his own place in events. His was a life forcibly shaped by where he was born, to whom he was born, by what happened to those he cared about, by his choice of sides in the Civil War and the cultural, moral and normative definitions that that choice signaled. Had the South won the war, he may well have achieved important financial and political status, as he himself suggested, while other disaffected young men in the North became the "bad guys."

Interesting too was the realization that my notion of the "wild west" and that of the time period were two different things. I doubt that I really gave much thought to the fact that Minnesota-Northfield and its environs-and other mid-western states had been the "wild west" at the time of the bank robbery. Raised in the mid-west themselves it was here the James and the Youngers as well as other disenfranchised and disaffected young men, enured to violence by their early introduction to warfare and catapulted into adult roles by virtue of the attrition among more mature men, made niches for themselves in a postwar environment and a frontier setting that was conducive to it. Just as after most wars when youths of 18 to 20 have lived a larger than life existence, post-civil war soldiers became "misfits and adrenaline junkies" as my husband Mark says. (He made the comparison with the WWII pilots who founded the Hell's Angels.)

What made it an especially intriguing time was that things were changing and changing rapidly, as Cole and his brother Jim discovered after 25 years in prison. They were paroled after 1900, and plunged into a 20th century world that had made them essentially historical figures. One of the stipulations in their parole was that the brothers could not use their notoriety to make themselves side-show characters for a curious audience. This was a time when real cowboys and real Indians were appearing in Wild West shows, most notably Wild Bill's and beginning to find employment in early western movies. So different was the early 20th century from that of the post-Civil War period, that those who had made a name for themselves during the war were a source of considerable wonder. The change in expectations and life styles caused so sudden a transition that Jim Younger committed suicide after only a short period of freedom.

I found the book very enlightening, quite believable and wonderfully entertaining. Although the author of the modern introduction points out there are points where the story is probably more fabrication than truth, it's still well worth reading for anyone interested in the Civil War Era, (pre-, during, and post,) and in the transition between 19th and 20th century life.
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Good First Hand Account 19 Feb 2006
By C. McDonald - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I must recommend this first hand account of Cole's own story. It is not the only story but must always be the most important source and story of someone's life. I would have given this book a 5 as I would have several other books of this time period were it not for the "out-of-place" intro. Someone must have decided that it was important to censor and disclaim Cole's first hand account at the very front of the book. As I have done in the past, I taped these pages of attempted censorship together and noted to subsequent readers my advice on just skipping this questionable intro. Since my books usually get passed around a great deal I felt this was necessary to preserve the great and rare first hand account that Cole provided us of his life.
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Fascinating and Perplexing 21 Mar 2001
By thorvald - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Cole Younger's autobiography doesn't answer all the questions. It creates more. For one thing, Cole Younger claims that the Northfield robbery, that landed him in prison for 25 years, was his first and _only_ robbery. This makes him either one of the world's most misunderstood innocents, or one of its most blatent liars.

Most authors and historians come down on the 'liar' side of the argument and, bearing in mind Younger was an admitted and convicted criminal, that's not unreasonable. However, I'm inclined to think there's more truth in his tale than is generally acknowledged. Most people just don't lie outright in autobiographies--they hedge and recolor and leave things out to make themselves look better. Reading Cole Younger's book, you can see him doing all these things, as well as avoiding outright statements of his own in favor of quoting other people who had favorable things to say about him, or quoting old statements of innocence he had made. Take the book for what it's worth and make your own judgements.

As to the writing itself... Cole Younger is no writer. The book is uneven and choppy, but parts are quite good. He has some moments of actually inspired prose. He includes the text of a lecture he gave in his later days at the end and it's quite good. Some of his war tales are well-told, but a bit scanty on details. He assumes you know the general stories and is often focusing on quelling lies, myths, and fabrications that had grown up around his story. In many of these cases he's probably being quite honest.

Though dubious history, this book is a valuable and intriguing look at the person and personality behind the historical figure.


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