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REYNOLDS GANG CAPTURE
Five members of the notorious James Reynolds gang of
Confederate raiders were captured by citizens and Colorado soldiers near
Canon City, Colorado, in September 1864. Citing authority granted him by
Colorado’s militia law, Colonel John M. Chivington ordered Captain Theodore
Cree to take the criminals to Fort Lyon to stand in military trial for
crimes committed in the state, including robbery and assault. The gang
members, including Jim Reynolds himself, were killed by Cree’s company en
route, raising speculation in some political camps that an
execution without proper trial occurred. Chivington’s political opponents
claimed this incident was another example of the controversial Colonel’s
heavy-handed rule over the Colorado Territory. The Rocky Mountain News, a
supporter of both Chivington and Governor John Evans’ candidacy in the
upcoming elections, published the following editorial in defense of the
Reynolds incident.
Reynolds Gang
Capture

Reynolds Gang Robbery, McGlaughlin’s Ranch, Fairplay, Colorado 1864

Attack
on Reynolds Gang Camp, Geneva Gulch 31 June 1864

Reynolds Gang Execution, Russellville, Colorado September 1864

Reynolds Gang Treasure Map
All Pictures from the Book “Hands Up, or Thirty-Five Years
of Detective Life in the Mountains and on the Plains”, Reminiscences of
General D.J. Cook, Chief of the Rocky Mountain Detective Association.
Compiled by John W. Cook, A Condensed Criminal History of the Far West,
Denver: The W.F. Robinson Printing Company, 1897.
Rocky Mountain News Editorial, September 9, 1864:
THE REYNOLDS BAND
We probably shall never again have occasion to mention the Reynolds Guerilla
band except as a thing of the past. Of the nine that originally formed it,
six have gone to their last accounts. Stowe (some say Singletary) was killed
in the Platte Canyon when they were first dispersed and five were afterwards
taken prisoner and brought to Denver. Here they had a military examination
and though we know not what was its proceedings, we have been informed that
the prisoners were very impudent and defiant, Jim Reynolds particularly
openly boasting that he had intended to destroy Denver and that he expected
yet to lay the city in ashes. He boasted of his lawless acts and that he was
(illegible) to emulate Quantrill.
Last Saturday morning, the prisoners were placed in charge of Co. A of the
3rd Colorado Cavalry for removal to Fort Lyon. On the road, we learn that
they were impudent and insulting to the soldiers and abused all the Colorado
volunteers. At California Ranch they were especially abusive and insolent.
Captain Cree was obliged to interfere and send his men away, after which he
warned the prisoners that they must treat his soldiers with respect or he
would not answer to the consequences; that they had already made them so
angry that he could hardly control them.
Beyond the point named a few miles at the old Russellville town site, the
wagon containing the prisoners and its guard had fallen fifty or sixty rods
behind the command when they halted to water their horses. Whilst doing so,
the prisoners made a concerted attempt to escape when they were fired upon
by the guard and all immediately killed. So we learn from various sources,
and publish to quiet the thousand and one reports, rumors and surprises
respecting the matter that have been rife in our community since yesterday
noon.
But few will regret their end, and many will breathe easier that they are
gone. Their acts of robbery, rapine and murder are avenged, and some more of
the actors in the Lawrence massacre (sic) have gone to their last account.
The three who escaped were pursued by Captain (Charles) Kerber away into the
mountains of New Mexico before he lost their trail. He followed them with
his command two hundred and twenty miles in two days.
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