Henry Methvin

Member

Birthday April 8, 1912

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Louisiana, United States

DEATH DATE 1948-4-19, Sulphur, Louisiana, US (36 years old)

Nationality United States

#35956 Most Popular

1912

Henry Methvin (April 8, 1912 – April 19, 1948) was an American criminal, a bank robber, and a Depression-era outlaw.

He is best remembered as the final member of Bonnie and Clyde's gang.

Henry Methvin was born in Louisiana on April 8, 1912, to Ivan "Ivy" T. Methvin and Avie Stephens.

1934

Methvin was serving a 10-year prison sentence at the Eastham prison farm in Huntsville, Texas when Bonnie and Clyde came to break out Raymond Hamilton on January 16, 1934.

One guard was killed and another wounded in the prison break.

In the confusion, Methvin and three other inmates took the opportunity to escape with Hamilton.

Though Hamilton initially ordered them to go back, Clyde welcomed the convicts and offered to let them join the gang.

Though the three other opportunistic inmates chose to take their chances alone, Methvin accepted Clyde's offer to stay.

He remained with the gang until their end five months later.

About a month after the breakout, on February 19, Methvin joined Hamilton and Barrow in stealing guns and ammunition from a National Guard armory in Ranger, Texas, under the cover of darkness.

Eight days later, the men used the weapons to steal $4,138 from a bank in Lancaster.

Bonnie and Clyde agreed to drive Methvin to visit his father near Gibsland, Louisiana, on March 1.

Methvin was present when, on April 1, the gang shot and killed Texas state troopers E.B. Wheeler and H.D. Murphy.

Conflicting reports from relatives and alleged eyewitnesses have implicated each of the four gang members.

Barrow was inconsistent about who he believed was the shooter.

He wrote to relatives blaming Methvin, who he claimed had misunderstood Barrow’s suggestion that they "take" the troopers, meaning to disarm and take them for a "joyride", and instead opened fire.

In a later letter to authorities, Barrow named Hamilton as the killer.

Regardless of Methvin's role, he was part of another of the gang's murders five days later.

On April 6, their car became stuck in mud near Commerce, Oklahoma.

While trying to get the car moving, they were surprised by two local officers out on patrol and fired at them.

Constable Cal Campbell was killed, and Police Chief Percy Boyd was wounded.

Boyd was taken hostage by the gang and later released at Mangle Corner, near Fort Scott, Kansas.

The next day, while eating at a cafe in Stillwater, they abruptly left when a patrolman passed by.

Methvin and the gang remained on the run for the next few months.

On April 30, Methvin took part in a Kansas bank robbery with the Barrow gang, joined by Joe Palmer, and they escaped with $2,800.

On May 1, the gang was identified in a bank robbery in Sac City, Iowa.

Two days later they took $700 from a bank in Everly.

They traveled south to meet relatives in Dallas on May 6, and another family meeting with Methvin's father in Louisiana.

On May 19, Methvin was sent into a diner to get sandwiches for the gang.

While he was at the counter, a police car passed the diner, and Clyde drove off, leaving Methvin behind.

He hitchhiked to Ruston, where his parents were living at the time.

According to most versions of the story, Methvin told his father that the gang had planned a spot for a rendezvous in the event that any of the gang were separated.

Methvin was supposed to meet the gang on a deserted stretch of highway south of Arcadia.

Ivan Methvin, then being harassed by lawmen in pursuit of his son and the rest of the gang, was alleged to have given this information to Louisiana sheriff Henderson Jordan, who then passed it on to Texas Ranger Frank Hamer.

In exchange, Methvin was promised that his son would not get the death penalty for the murders of Troopers Wheeler and Murphy in Grapevine, Texas two months earlier.

It is unclear whether Henry Methvin was aware of this arrangement.

On May 23, 1934, Ivan Methvin parked his truck near the meeting spot and removed one of the wheels as if changing a flat tire.

When Bonnie and Clyde stopped to assist Methvin, Hamer gave the signal and his 6-man posse fired, killing both of them.

1967

His role in the gang has often been misattributed to teenage gang member W.D. Jones as both men were portrayed as composite character "C.W. Moss" in the film Bonnie and Clyde (1967).

1990

An alternate scenario in the 1990s, supposedly suppressed for over 60 years, claimed that Ivan Methvin had been forced to go along with the ambush.