Ronnie Biggs

Birthday August 8, 1929

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Stockwell, London, England

DEATH DATE 2013-12-18, Barnet, London, England (84 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#18664 Most Popular

1929

Ronald Arthur Biggs (8 August 1929 – 18 December 2013) was an English criminal who helped plan and carry out the Great Train Robbery of 1963.

Biggs was born in Stockwell, London, on 8 August 1929.

As a child during the Second World War, he was evacuated to Flitwick, Bedfordshire, and then Delabole, Cornwall.

1947

In 1947, at age 18, Biggs enlisted in the Royal Air Force.

He was dishonourably discharged for desertion two years later after breaking into a local chemist shop.

One month after that, he was convicted of stealing a car and sentenced to prison.

On his release, Biggs took part in a failed robbery attempt of a bookmaker's office in Lambeth, London.

During his incarceration in HM Prison Wandsworth, he met Bruce Reynolds.

After his third prison sentence, Biggs tried to go straight and trained as a carpenter.

1960

In February 1960, he married 21-year-old Charmian (Brent) Powell in Swanage, the daughter of a primary school headmaster.

They had three sons together.

1963

In 1963, Biggs, who needed money to fund a deposit on the purchase of a house for his family, happened to be working on the house of a train driver who was about to retire.

The driver has been variously identified as "Stan Agate", or because of his age, "Old Pete" or "Pop".

The train driver's real name is unknown, since he was never caught.

Biggs introduced the driver to the train robbery plot, which involved Reynolds.

Biggs was given the job of arranging for Agate to move the Royal Mail train after it had been waylaid.

On the night of the hold up, Biggs told his wife he was off logging with Reynolds in Wiltshire.

The gang then stopped the mail train in the early hours of 8 August 1963, which was Biggs's 34th birthday.

Agate was unable to operate the main line diesel-electric locomotive because he had only driven shunting locomotives on the Southern Region.

Therefore, the driver of the intercepted train, Jack Mills, was coshed with an iron bar and forced to move the engine and mail carriages forward to a nearby bridge over a roadway, which had been chosen as the unloading point.

Biggs's main task had been to get Agate to move the train, and when it became obvious that the two were useless in that regard, they were banished to a waiting vehicle while the train was looted.

Having unloaded 120 of the 128 mailbags from the train within Reynolds' allotted timetable, and returned to their hideout at Leatherslade Farm, various sources show that the robbery yielded the participants £2.6 million (equivalent to about £0 million in 2024 terms); Biggs's share was £147,000 (equivalent to £0 in 2024).

With their timetable brought forward due to the police investigation closing in, Biggs returned home on the following Friday, with his stash in two canvas bags.

After an accomplice failed to carry out his instructions to burn down Leatherslade Farm to destroy any evidence there, Biggs's fingerprints were found on a tomato sauce bottle by Metropolitan Police investigators.

Three weeks later, he was arrested in South London, along with 11 other members of the gang.

1964

In 1964, nine of the 15-strong gang, including Biggs, were jailed for the crime.

Most received sentences of 30 years.

1965

He subsequently became notorious for his escape from prison in 1965, living as a fugitive for 36 years, and for his various publicity stunts while in exile.

Biggs served 15 months before escaping from Wandsworth Prison on 8 July 1965, scaling the wall with a rope ladder and dropping onto a waiting removal van.

He fled to Brussels by boat then sent a note to his wife to join him in Paris where he had acquired new identity papers and was undergoing plastic surgery.

During his time in prison, Charmian had started an extramarital relationship and was pregnant by the time of his escape to the Continent.

Choosing to support her husband, she had an illegal abortion in London and then travelled with their two sons to Paris to join Biggs.

1966

In 1966, Biggs fled to Sydney, where he lived for several months before moving to the seaside suburb of Glenelg in Adelaide, South Australia.

By the time Biggs and his family arrived in 1966, they had spent all but £7,000 (equivalent to £0 in 2024) of his £147,000 share of the train robbery proceeds: £40,000 (equivalent to £0 in 2024) on plastic surgery in Paris; £55,000 (equivalent to £0 in 2024) paid as a package deal to get him out of the UK to Australia; and the rest on legal fees and expenses.

1967

In 1967, just after their third child was born, Biggs received an anonymous letter from Britain telling him that Interpol suspected that he was in Australia and that he should move.

In May 1967, the family moved to Melbourne, where he rented a house in the suburb of Blackburn North while his wife Charmian and their three sons lived in Doncaster East.

Biggs had a number of jobs in Melbourne before undertaking set construction work at the GTV Channel 9 Television City studios.

1969

In October 1969, a newspaper report by a Reuters correspondent revealed that Biggs was living in Melbourne and claimed that police were closing in on him.

2001

In 2001, Biggs returned to the United Kingdom and spent several years in prison, where his health rapidly declined.

2009

He was released from prison on compassionate grounds in August 2009 and died in a nursing home in December 2013.