California Gold Country historian George Hoeper reveals what promises to be the final piece to the 100-year-old puzzle of the infamous Stagecoach Robber Black Bart.
Speculation has placed Bart in many places, including the Eastern Seaboard, Mexico and Japan, but according to information Hoeper has uncovered, it is more likely the legendary Black Bart met his demise in the dry Nevada wasteland and today rests in a sandy, unmarked grave..
In 1888 he disappeared from the Palace Hotel in Visalia, CA, never to be heard from again.
Between robberies Bart would live the life of a Boulevardier in San Francisco, hobnobbing with the city\'s best.
During theis time, Bart, who operated on foot with an unloaded shotgun and never robbed Stagecoach passengers or drivers, soon became something of a folk legend. with a string of at least 28 Stagecoach robberies.
For over eight years the Mysterious and very polite Charles Boles (alias Black Bart) plagued Wells Fargo & Co.
California Gold Country historian George Hoeper reveals what promises to be the final piece to the 100-year-old puzzle of the infamous Stagecoach Robber Black Bart