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Bonnie Parker's gravestone in Dallas' Crown Hill Memorial Park. |
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“Where’s Section 4?” I ask a man walking in the cemetery with a young girl.
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Killers Bonnie and Clyde |
”Oh, she’s right over this way,” says the man, a visitor from Boston in Dallas with his teen daughter.
Roughly 30 yards from the gray-granite grave of Ray Bobo sits the marker for Parker, who, along with her paramour and partner in crime, Clyde Barrow, left a trail of death and destruction in the Southwest and elsewhere before lawmen sent them to their maker with volleys of lead on a lonely stretch of Louisiana road on May 23, 1934.
”I’ll leave you here to mourn,” the man says.
”Oh, I’m not here to mourn,” I tell him while staring at Parker’s flower-adorned grave. “This woman was a notorious criminal.”
Judging from those flowers and tokens of remembrance on her tombstone, Parker seems more celebrated than vilified. Atop her slab, a step from her mother’s grave, sit nine .44-caliber bullets and a bright orange Wing & Clay 12-gauge shotgun shell. Nearby rest a travel bottle of Maker’s Mark and other liquor containers, a Bud Light can, a half-smoked cigarette and a top for L’Oreal eye shadow — perhaps used by Parker to keep herself beautiful in hell.
“As The Flowers Are All Made Sweeter By The Sunshine And The Dew, So This Old World Is Made Brighter By The Lives Of Folks Like You,” reads the inscription on Parker’s gravestone — an affront to the roughly dozen folks Bonnie and Clyde are believed to have murdered in cold blood.
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Bullets atop the grave marker for Bonnie Parker. |
Minutes later, I find myself in the thick of notorious Dallas traffic, a Blue Bell banana fudge ice cream commercial blaring on the radio of our SUV rental. With Clyde’s South Dallas grave outside my comfort zone, I instead make a beeline for the A.H. Belo mansion in downtown Dallas, not far from where Jack Ruby gunned down Lee Harvey Oswald in the basement of the police department HQ. A funeral home in the 1930s, the mansion is where thousands viewed Barrow’s bullet-riddled corpse days after his demise.
While pulling into the mansion’s narrow driveway, I spy a few feet above my ride a small drone, deployed by a wedding photographer. How surreal. Minutes later, I maneuver from an illegal parking spot and meet the actual early 30ish groom who will exchange vows inside the mansion on this very day. Amazingly cheery (he’ll learn 😳), Mr. Groom talks about marriage.
“Ever hear of Bonnie and Clyde?” his one-track mind inquistor asks.
“Sure,” he replies with a wry smile.
“Well, his bullet-riddled corpse was viewed here in this mansion in 1934 by 20,000 people,” I say almost breathlessly.
“Well, we won’t have that many today,” he tells me.
It’s probably time for me to return to normal society.
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Thousands viewed Clyde Barrow's bullet-riddled body at the A.H. Belo mansion in 1934. |