Railroads Provided Means of Escape Their Builders Never Anticipated


Much as been made about how the coming of the railroads expanded the cultural and commercial opportunities in rural areas like the the Northwest Corner. Like any new technology, the railroads brought some negative impacts as well. One of those was to provide a means of escape for people who had some reason to flee. This tale is about two types of "getaways": criminals and runaway spouses.

We are tempted to believe that crimes such as "blowing a safe" and gun battles are the stuff old Western novels. That is a false impression, however, and our local area was the scene of more than one shootout and daring robbery.

Consider two events that occurred in North Canaan during the 1890s.


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"On Tuesday morning, about 2:45 o’clock, burglars broke into the store of Geo. L. Parsons & Son. They forced open the front door with tools procured at Mr. Pasmore’s wagon shop. The safe was then blown open by filling the cracks around the edge of the door with nitro-glycerine, or some other powerful explosive, and igniting it by means of a piece of paper inserted into the crack. The force of the explosion was so great that the door of the safe was blown off and completely shattered and the front lights of the windows in the front of the store were broken."

The two men who committed this robbery left town via the railroad and escaped.

Not long after, robbers struck the firm of Fuller & Peet:

"Martin Rood, who has slept in Fuller & Peet’s store every night for several months past woke Sunday morning about four o’clock and heard men moving about and talking in low tones in the front part of the store. As he raised himself up on his couch, in the space partitioned off for the bank office, he heard one of the men say ‘Hark, there’s somebody.’ It was too dark in the store to see anything, but Martin seized his trusty revolver and fired four shots in the direction of the voice... It is believed that one of the burglars was hit because an unflattened bullet was found on the floor and also drops of blood on the floor and on the depot platform, across which the burglars were heard running by the night operator in the P. R. & N. E. office."

These would-be robbers also made good their escape by rail and it is doubtful that much energy was expended in chasing them as they had not succeeded in taking anything.


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These events certainly sound more like the Wild West than the Northwest Corner of Connecticut and escape by rail offered an effective means of avoding capture and punishment for one’s misdeeds. Indeed it might have been a very reliable means of escape but for the use of another technological advancement: the telegraph. Railroads depended on the telegraph for running trains. Most early railroads had a single track and trains had to be carefully managed so that travel in both directions could be accomplished safely. The telegraph was the means of providing the necessary communication between stations to accomplish safe scheduling.

It also provided communication to assist in capturing fleeing criminals. One example of that use of the telegraph is the fate of two robbers who struck in Canaan one night in November 1894. This story appeared in the Nov. 15, 1894, issue of the Connecticut Western News:


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"During Saturday night or in the ‘wee sma hours’ of Sunday morning the store of Fuller & Peet was entered by tramps, probably four in number who affected an entrance by breaking in one of the cellar windows. They made a complete change of their wardrobes supplying themselves with new clothing including hats (or caps)and shoes and stockings and underwear. They also took pistols and knives. The value of goods stolen amounted to about $100. Their old clothes were left in the store. They left town the same morning on the six o’clock west bound freight although they were put off once before the train started. Telegrams were sent, however, in all directions.

"Tuesday afternoon Fuller & Peet received a telegram from Fishkill Landing, N.Y. stating that men answering the description had been arrested there. Fuller & Peet telegraphed a description of the property stolen and yesterday a message came back that the men arrested were the parties wanted. Accordingly George S. Fuller and Deputy Sheriff William B. Perry of Lakeville, went to Fishkill Landing by the 12:38 p.m. train yesterday to take the proper steps to secure their atendance before a justice in this town."

Note also that justice was much faster in 1894 than it is today. The robbers in this story probably found themselves captured, tried and sentenced within two weeks of their misdeed! It also appears that Fuller & Peet got tired of being a burglary target and hired the watchman who shot at the burglars in the previous story.


To be continued...


 


Dick Paddock lives in the Taconic section of Salisbury and volunteers at Beckley Furnace in East Canaan.


 

 


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While usually somewhat less violent than the safe crackers and robbers, domestic disputes also led to escapes by rail. It is much harder to judge these events as it is easy to imagine someone trapped in a bad marriage cracking under the strain and jumping on the next train train out of town. Divorce was not really an option until the latter part of the 20th century, so domestric stress was probably more common in the 19th century. Based on the stories in the contemporary press, running out on one’s spouse was indeed much more common than divorce in the 19th century. Instances of "The French leave," as it was called, were frequent fodder for the press in those days.

The experience of one Edward Boinay is an example of elopement by rail. The story has an interesting twist, though, that leads to questions about the motives of the fleeing spouse. The story begins as follows:


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"If the News was a sensational paper it would devote a column or more to the elopment which took place in this town last Thursday, but everything is not fish which comes to the net of the News and the elopment will not be made the leading feature of this issue. Suffice it to say that Edward Q. Boinay is a charcoal burner by occupation and with his wife, two daughters, one 17 years of age, the other 6 years, one son 12 years old, has resided in a cabin on his coal bush on the west side of Canaan mountain and about 1 1/2 miles south of this village. For five or six years one Fred Avery has been in the employ of Mr. Boinay, but until recently Mrs. Boinay seemed to have an aversion to Avery, and the husband never suspected there was any undue attentions on the part of Avery."

From this preamble you can guess the course of events. It began when Mrs. Boinay announced that she and the children were planning a trip.

"Mr. Boinay states that Mrs. Boinay and the three children left home last Thursday moring, and Mrs. Boinay told him she and the children were going to Falls Village on the 9:40 a.m. train, to visit relatives, and would return by the noon train on Saturday."

Needless to say, they did not return on Saturday and Mr. Boinay discovered that all their clothing and linens were missing in addition to all the ready cash he had on hand. So far, this sounds like a pretty simple case of a wife running off with the hired hand, but this story has an odd twist. In the very same issue of the paper that carried this story were listed the marriage announcements from nearby towns. Included in the list was an item from Millerton announcing the marriage of Mary Jane Deane and Ferdinand Avery. It seems that Mrs. Boinay (nee Deane) and "Fred" Avery had taken the train west to Millerton and gotten married in a ceremony of dubious legality, or as the editor of the News put it: "Can it be possible that Mrs. Boinay has added the crime of bigamy to the elopement?"

As of this writing, no further information on this event has come to light. It could have been that Mrs. Boinay was simply fed up with life on the "coal bush" and wanted out. In fairness to her, however, charcoal burners were known to be a tough lot and it is quite possible Mr. Boinay drove her away. We will never know, but whatever the case the fleeing couple certainly did not cover their tracks very well.

These snapshots of 19th-century life show clearly how tightly life in those times was tied to the railroads, both for better or worse.

 


Dick Paddock is...

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