The Barrow Gang was an American criminal organization of the 1930s active between 1932 and 1934.
The Barrow Gang were undoubtedly "casing-out" banks to rob as well.
The Barrow Gang packed up what they could and decamped.
After 1967, the year Arthur Penn's romanticized film ignited a new generation's interest in the Barrow Gang, his arrests made the local news.
That was the first killing of a lawman by what was later known as the Barrow Gang, a total which would eventually amount to nine slain officers.
The Barrow Gang would not hesitate to shoot anyone, lawman or civilian, who got in their way.
July 24 - Several members of the Barrow Gang are injured or captured during a running battle with local police near Dexter, Iowa.
Buck and Blanche were part of the Barrow Gang from late March 1933 until their capture on July 24, 1933.
Raymond Hamilton (May 21, 1913 - May 10, 1935) was a member of the notorious Barrow Gang during the early 1930s.
Hamilton left the Barrow Gang after a fight about O'Dare and was recaptured on April 25, 1934.