Irish Sunday Mirror

BONNIE AND

- From GREG WOODFIELD in Miami

The pair’s gang struck terror across three states, shooting anyone who dared deny them the proceeds of crime.

And now the world is gripped by them again as a fascinatin­g hoard of gang memorabili­a has come up for sale.

Bonnie Parker was devoted to a gangster she had met when she was 19.

Clyde Barrow was two years older. He was dangerous, ruthless, merciless.

But his brutal hands also possessed an artistry and craft that has triggered huge interest in the auction world.

A snakehead ring he crafted for Bonnie in jail is one of the auction’s star attraction­s alongside Al Capone’s watch.

The ring has surfaced 83 years after Bonnie and Clyde were gunned down.

It has lain hidden in an attic belonging to the family of a Texas sheriff who ambushed them in 1933, six months before they finally died in a shootout.

Lawman Richard “Smoot’’ Schmid found the ring in Bonnie and Clyde’s bullet-riddled Ford Model B after they managed to escape.

SMUGGLED

Clyde had made the ring as he languished in a Texas jail and was pining for Bonnie. They had met in 1930 – then he was jailed for burglary.

Bonnie smuggled a gun into prison and Clyde escaped, only to be recaptured and given hard labour in Eastham State Farm jail north of Houston.

The outlaw crafted the intricate ring from copper, coated it with silver and added three jewels. An arrow shaped hallmark inside could signify Cupid or be a play on his surname – B-arrow. Clyde made other pieces of jewellery as well as decorative woodworkin­g and leather. These include a beaded necklace for his sister Marie, a hand-tooled leather belt with blue and red stones and his own silver belt buckle featuring the five-pointed Texas Star.

Sheriff Schmid’s family put the ring up for sale and bids last night topped €12,600 as the sale headed to a close.

RR Auctions, handling the sale in Boston, Massachuse­tts, said: “The belt buckle and ring exhibit similar styles and the same level of high quality, though unrefined, craftsmans­hip.”

Bobby Livingston, the firm’s executive vice president, added: “It’s astonishin­g that they have been sitting in an attic since the 1930s. The sheriff took them from a shot-up car in November 1933 near Sowers, Texas. Smoot found a treasure trove of their possession­s. The sheriff ’s family live just outside Houston and the later generation­s don’t feel such an emotional tie to his collection.

“It only emerged when we went to see the family. They got in touch after we sold Bonnie’s .38 detective special handgun and Clyde’s 1911 Colt. 45 in 2012 for €460,000. The ring is the closest thing to a wedding ring between Bonnie and Clyde. Theirs was an incredibly romantic relationsh­ip.

“Bonnie was wounded and badly crippled for the last nine months of her life and Clyde cared for her at his own peril. She did not have to die with him, but chose to.”

Hollywood stars Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty starred in the 1967 movie Bonnie and Clyde, which was accused of glamorisin­g the killers. Their murderous Bonnie’s note and sheriff’s Colt .45 Bonnie in cigar pose

 ??  ?? SMOKING GUN CRIME RING
SMOKING GUN CRIME RING
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 ??  ?? LETTER OF THE LAW
LETTER OF THE LAW

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