Sep 102021
 

Younger’s Bluff at Monegaw, real photo postcard.

 

 

Youngers Lookout is an often-photographed feature of the Monegaw Springs area.

Cole Younger, the last surviving member of the James-Younger Gang, is said to have had his picture taken here in the early 1900s after his release from a Minnesota prison. The attachment of his name to this bluff may date from that event and not the gunfight of 1874 with Pinkerton agents, which occurred some three miles away.

Known as the Rosco Gun Battle, one Younger and two Pinkerton detectives were killed. Two monuments mark the spot along the lonely St. Clair County road where it occurred.

In 1897, Cole Younger, serving life with brother Jim in a Minnesota prison after the disastrous 1876 Northfield bank robbery that finished the James-Younger gang, wrote a sentimental poem:

 

 

‘Tis twenty years and more, Jim

Since we breathed the air of home.

Or gazed upon the hills and vales

We loved to oft to roam . . .

 

One grim old cliff I have in mind

That stands majestic, grand,

While far below the fair Osage

Sweeps o’er her silver sand.

 

There countless names are carved with ours

Where we have stood with awe

And gazed upon its marble face,

Near dear old Monegaw!

Many names of vacationers are carved into the sandstone bluffs along the Osage. We’ve looked, but never found any of the Youngers’ names.

 

From Damming the Osage: The Conflicted Story of Lake of the Ozarks and Truman Reservoir. Lens & Pen Press is having a half price sale for all titles. Damming the Osage is now available on our website at www.dammingtheosage.com for $17.50 (half the original price of $35), postage paid.

Mar 282019
 

My Irish Wilderness Google alerts delivered to my inbox an article about the recent meeting of the Oregon County Historical Society in Thayer.  Members discussed “Ozarks Outlaws and Gangsters.”

“Vice President Mike Crawford discussed property in the Irish Wilderness that was rumored to have been visited and traveled through by Jesse and Frank James.”

Yes, “The Irish” remains to this day a place of mystery, curiosity, and respite from the modern world!

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