Wrong Place, Wrong Time
By Joseph Geringer
Court TV Crime Library
The Ballad of Pretty Boy Floyd
"Then he took to the trees and rivers to lead a life of shame.
Every crime in Oklahoma was added to his name."
-- The Ballad of Pretty Boy Floyd
Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd rose from callus-fingered cotton
picker to trigger-fingered desperado, one of the most colorful, nervy bank robbers
in the history of Depression-era America. Less a bad man than a symbol of a
turbulent era in the saga of the sagebrush. A Robin Hood who enjoyed hitting
back against the wealthy for the defense of the poor, he is remembered in legend
and in song, recalled not with a shudder but with almost a fond salute. In Oklahoma's
Cookson Hills, where he grew up, he is an icon. "Pretty Boy," says
biographer Michael Wallis, "is the stuff of legends."
But, Floyd was born too late, when the world was caught in a turmoil between
past and present, from horse to horseless carriage, from telegraph to radio,
from spoken legend to recorded deed. Even though his beloved Cookson Hills was
slower to enter the 20th Century than much of the more populated areas of the
country, it was maturing nevertheless, daily, impacted by an undeniable financial
depression and a series of soil-sucking droughts that weakened even the leathery
Okies' ability to endure their own growing pains.
Floyd transcended the discomfort of a backwards country boy thrust dizzily from
the old world into the brink of the modern era. Like so many others who found
it humanly impossible to cope with the ravages of a newer and less tranquil
world, he fought back. And when he did so he found a fight unexpected –
not the romantic glory gained by Jesse James, Henry Starr, Cole Younger and
other boyhood heroes who had grown up on the same roads here he lived.
Because the world was changing swiftly, because highwaymen now moved quicker
behind the wheel of a Ford Sedan than in the stirrups of their old gray mare,
a new way of battling those highwaymen became apparent. Technology -- radio
and telephone – produced a communications system that, even in infancy,
outdid the old days when Jesse could ride faster than the news of his latest
bank robbery. Floyd couldn't ride faster, but he tried. To the death he tried.
"He modeled himself after the desperadoes of the Wild West," says
a special chapter of the popular television program, Biography. "While
much of his heroics have been greatly exaggerated, there was an element of truth."
Many say that Charles Arthur Floyd --, they called him Choctaw, or Choc -- in
an earlier setting, might never have resorted to crime. "He robbed banks,
but he had morals, he had truth," nephew Glendon Floyd tells us in that
same telecast. He was a boy who needed to "sow wild oats," attest
his defenders, but unfortunately for him he was beginning to sow them at the
time when the Oklahoma State Bureau of Criminal Identification, despite and
because of its newness, was out to get its man. Even though the 1920s in this
country practiced a flippant attitude to many social wrongs, it was the big
city gangster in Chicago, New York and Kansas City who enjoyed that benefit.
But, Choc could not buy the politicians who wanted to be bought nor pay off
the brilliant lawyers who proved brilliant only when well-paid; Choc stole just
enough from the banks to keep himself and his gang members fed, their automobiles
gassed and his fellow Oakies out of the poor house. And, therefore, his oats
were sowed to consequence.
n the end, Choc Floyd was betrayed. Not by a woman in red, as was Indiana bank
robber John Dillinger; not by his own taste for blood, as was the mad-boy child
"Baby Face" Nelson; not by a death wish that was Bonnie and Clyde's.
But, allegedly, by an ambitious protector of American Justice called J. Edgar
Hoover who thought Floyd would be better a stepping stone to higher things if
killed and not incarcerated. In short, America betrayed him when it forecast
an end to its tolerance for wild oats to make way for progressiveness and modernity.
Charles Arthur Floyd couldn't keep up.