Reuters reports a Kansas City, Mo., auction house sold a Thompson submachine gun, also known as a "Tommy gun," was used by Bonnie and Clyde in 1933 after a deadly shootout. An anonymous bidder bought the machine gun as well as an 1897 shotgun used by the couple in a Missouri crime spree.
The fact the auction happened in Missouri highlights the famous partners in crime and their role in the state's history.
Bonnie and Clyde
Clyde Champion Barrow and Bonnie Parker met in Texas in January 1930, according to the FBI. Parker was 19 and Barrow was 21. Parker was married to a prison inmate at the time. It wasn't until December 1932 that the FBI became interested in the pair when a prescription drug bottle was found in a stolen car.
An arrest warrant was issued in mid-May 1933. After a crime spree lasting a year, Parker and Barrow killed 13 people in the middle of committing several robberies and burglaries.
Missouri Connection
Bonnie and Clyde killed two police officers in Joplin, Mo., on April 13, 1933. The Kansas City Star reports the guns bought at the auction were left behind by the criminal couple at the apartment in Joplin after a shootout with police.
A police officer retrieved the guns and gave them to Tulsa police officer Mark Lairmore. His family was the one selling the weapons at the auction.
The Columbia Missourian reported in early 2009 that the garage apartment that hid Bonnie and Clyde applied for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places. Other members of the so-called Barrow Gang were there, including Barrow's brother Blanche and his wife. Everyone in the apartment escaped after a shootout with five law enforcement officers.
Gun Auction
The original owners of the guns had them on display in Springfield, Mo. The History Museum for Springfield-Greene County claimed the guns weren't authentic even though the Lairmore family believes they belonged to Bonnie and Clyde. The serial number on one of the guns matches that of one stolen in Ohio.
The guns were sold for a total of $210,000. The Tommy gun was bought for $130,000 and the shotgun sold for $80,000. The machine gun was manufactured in the 1920s and the shotgun was made in 1897 by Winchester. Pre-auction bids reached $60,000 combined. The person who bought both weapons won the auction over the Internet and remains anonymous at this point.
William Browning, a lifelong Missouri resident, writes about local and state issues for the Yahoo! Contributor Network. Born in St. Louis, Browning earned his bachelor's degree in English from the University of Missouri. He currently resides in Branson.




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