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Depending on your point of view, the “Car Barn Bandits”,
who wreaked havoc in Chicago in 1903, were either the
first or the last of their kind. Some saw them as the
first organized crime ring to operate in the city, which
would make them a foreshadowing of things to come, while
others saw their exploits as something out of a Wild
West dime novel, hearkening back to an earlier
generation. No matter what they were, they were
undoubtedly one of the deadliest gangs to terrify
Chicago in the early twentieth century.
The bandits were young men, barely out of their teens,
and the gang was made up of Peter Niedermeyer, Gustav
Marx, Harvey Van Dine, and Emil Roeski. They had all
grown up together on the Northwest Side of the city and
all came from good families that offered them love,
support and a good education. Somewhere along the line,
though, they simply went bad, creating a record of
robbery and murder that shocked Chicago at the time of
their capture.
Their criminal exploits began in the summer of 1903,
when they committed a number of robberies, hold-ups and
murders. On July 20, they robbed a bar on Milwaukee
Avenue, wounding a saloon keeper named Peter Gorski. On
August 2, they struck again at a bar on West North
Avenue and killed the owner, Benjamin La Grosse, and a
twenty-one year old customer. They committed robbery and
murder at Greenberg’s Saloon, located at the southwest
corner of Addison and Robey Streets (now Damen Avenue),
and followed that with another hold-up in a tavern at
Roscoe Street and Sheffield Avenue. By all accounts, the
bandits were having more fun than they had ever had in
their lives.
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One August night, while walking around the city, the gang
noticed some men counting money inside of a railroad car barn.
This gave them an idea and they began planning another robbery.
On the night of August 30, 1903, Niedermeyer, Marx and Van Dine,
met on 63rd Street on Chicago’s South Side and walked over to
the City Railway Company car barn, which was located just two
blocks away. They found the door unlocked and they simply
walked, in and pulled their guns on the startled clerks. They
immediately began searching for money. Van Dine smashed open a
door with a sledgehammer and stormed into an office. According
to Marx, he saw police officers outside and to hurry things
along, fired a few shots into the ceiling. A window was smashed
open and Niedermeyer began shooting out of it, aiming for the
men that had been spotted outside. They weren’t police officers
but railroad workers and in the confusion, a railroad motorman
was killed and two cashiers were wounded. Meanwhile, Van Dine
had ransacked the office and came out with a bundle of cash
under his arm. “I’ve got enough, boys!” he shouted at his
friends and the bandits fled from the scene, running toward 60th
Street.
The area seemed deserted and no one followed them as they
strolled down the old midway into Jackson Park, the now
abandoned site of the World’s Fair of ten years before. They
roamed the park and the ruins of the Exposition until daybreak,
and then they divided their loot, which came to $2,250. They
took a streetcar downtown and celebrated their success with
cigars and a big breakfast. Afterward, they had a grand time
reading about their “daring robbery” in the morning editions of
the local newspapers. The stories noted that the police had no
idea as to the identities of the young robbers.
The next day, the three boys, along with Emil Roeski, spent the
afternoon in Humboldt Park, smoking cigars and reading more
stories about the robbery. They began to dream of something even
more adventurous – robbing trains. After a night at an expensive
hotel, they used some of their ill-gotten gain to purchase train
tickets to Denver, Colorado, believing that it would be easy to
buy dynamite in one of the nearby mining towns. They enjoyed
themselves for a few days in Denver and then went to Cripple
Creek, where they purchased a bundle of dynamite in a mining
supply store. They quickly returned to Chicago, still making big
plans.
The robbery turned out to be a bust. They packed about fifty
pounds of dynamite near the Northwestern Tracks in Jefferson
Park and made plans to stop the train. Roeski waved a red flag
at the train as it approached, but the engine never even slowed
down. Angry, he pulled out his revolver and fired a shot at the
train, which finally stopped it. Unfortunately for their plans,
it stopped too far away from the dynamite for them to rob it and
the bandits ran away.
The failed robbery attempt frightened the young robbers and they
became increasingly paranoid. Van Dine spent three days at his
window with a rifle, waiting for the police to come. He finally
calmed down but his paranoia, as it turned out, was not
unjustified. The police were looking for them. It was not for
the failed train robbery, but for their earlier robberies. The
methods the young men had employed in various tavern hold-ups
caused the police to suspect they were the Car Barn Bandits.
In spite of the fact that they knew the police were looking for
them, the bandits boldly went out drinking, paying big tips and
brandishing their revolvers. The police tracked down Gustav Marx
first and they came to arrest him at Greenberg’s Saloon, which
he and his friends had robbed earlier that summer. Police
Detective John Quinn came in the front door and Detective
William Blaul slipped in through a side entrance. When Marx saw
the officer walk in, he quickly pulled his gun. Out of the
corner of his eye, he saw Quinn come through the front door and
he turned and shot him. As he fell lifeless to the floor, Blaul
opened fire and wounded Marx in the arm. Blaul grabbed the
bandit, who tried to flee, and dragged him across the room to a
telephone. He called the station house for back-up as Marx
begged him to “Kill me! Kill me now!”
But Detective Blaul didn’t kill him. Instead, he took him to the
police station and locked him up. Marx fumed in his cell for a
while and when his friends didn’t show up to bust him out, as
they planned to do in the event that any of them were captured,
he angrily decided to confess every detail of the Car Barn
Bandits’ crimes. He spilled his guts about twenty robberies and
six murders – seven, counting the shooting of Detective Quinn.
The police began a massive manhunt for Niedermeyer, Van Dine and
Roeski. Word came in that a general store owner had spotted them
in the town of Clark Station and it was realized that they
planned to make their escape into the wilds of the Indiana
Dunes. Eight detectives were quickly dispatched on their trail
but the men quickly became lost in the tangle of unmarked roads,
sand dunes and forests. They followed several leads but became
lost over and over again. One of the wagons that they were
traveling in overturned in the sand, injuring a few of the
detectives. Eventually, late in the night, they found a dugout
in the dunes that was located about two hundred feet from the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad tracks and three miles from the
closest town. The hideout was empty but some leftover sausage
links found inside showed that it had recently been in use. This
meant the bandits were still somewhere nearby.
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Lawmen search the railroad dugouts
along the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad tracks in northern
Indiana as they search for the bandits that the press
dubbed the "Automatic Trio".
They were eventually found hiding in the cellar of a
railroad telegrapher's home that had burned down years
before and were taken back to Chicago.
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The detectives stayed the night in a barn near Edgemoor,
Indiana. When daylight came, the farmer’s wife brought them
coffee and they went out into the November snow. Later that
morning, they found another railroad dugout, similar to the one
they had discovered the night before. The dugout was the cellar
of a railroad telegrapher’s home that had burned down years
before and it was surrounded by fresh footprints in the snow.
However, the entrance to the dugout had been covered with boards
and the detectives had trouble finding another way inside. After
some time, an old staircase was discovered and the detectives
took up position around it, revolvers in hand, and shouted for
the bandits to come out.
A reply was heard from the darkness below. “We’ll come out when
you carry us out!” a voice cried, and the sound was followed by
several gunshots.
The detectives fired their guns down the staircase and after a
pause, Niedermeyer’s face appeared at the bottom of the steps.
The detectives assumed that he was surrendering, but instead, he
pulled out two guns, fired manically at them and then ducked out
of sight. The exchange of gunfire continued, with dire results
for the policemen. Officer Joseph R. Driscoll was shot in the
abdomen and Officer Matthew Zimmer was wounded in the arm.
Harvey Van Dine came out of the dugout long enough to shoot
Zimmer again, this time in the head.
As the police officers pulled back, the bandits made a daring
escape from the dugout. They ran away on foot, firing at the
detectives as they hurried toward the woods. Niedermeyer was hit
once in the neck as he ran down a hill into a ravine, but
managed to get back up and keep running with the others. The
bandits escaped while the detectives wired for reinforcements
and tried to tend to their wounded comrades. They were able to
flag down a passing train and the wounded men were put on board
and taken to a hospital. Officer Driscoll died a few days later.
Fifty police officers with repeating rifles were rushed to the
scene on board a special train. They followed the tracks south,
stopping to examine the deserted dugout where the bandits had
been found. The room was well-stocked with food and ammunition
and outfitted with bunk beds.
The original detectives, now five in number, followed the
bandit’s trail through the snow, passing a brakemen’s cottage
that the outlaws had tried to break into and failed. As they
followed the footprints and occasional spatters of blood in the
snow, they were startled and opened fire on what turned out to
be nothing but Niedermeyer’s overcoat, which he had strung up in
some tree branches as a decoy. One set of tracks, Roeski’s, led
into a cornfield and the others continued south. Roeski, who had
been wounded badly in the gun battle, was captured in the
cornfield later that day.
Niedermeyer and Van Dine made it to the town of East Tolleston,
four miles from the dugout. There, they found a Pennsylvania
Railroad gravel train sitting on the tracks, preparing to leave.
The engineer had gone to get dinner for the fireman, Albert
Coffey, who was still in the cab. The bandits climbed into the
cab and put a revolver to the fireman’s head. A brakeman, L.J.
Sovea, thought the bandits were rail yard drunks and he jumped
up and grabbed Niedermeyer by the wrist. During a struggle,
Sovea was shot in the face and his lifeless body was dumped on
the side of the tracks.
The bandits forced Coffey to start the engine and he took them
two miles to the town of Liverpool, where a locked switch
prevented him from going any farther. Niedermeyer and Van Dine
made him back up almost a half mile and then they jumped out of
the cab and ran across the prairie.
Meanwhile, posses made up of farmers and police officers formed
in East Tolleston to pursue the men. Liverpool had been warned
about them by telegraph and sent out posse of their own. They
tracked down the fleeing robbers as they ran toward a cornfield
and opened fire on them – with shoguns filled with birdshot.
Niedermeyer and Van Dine were both hit in the face but the
wounds were far from fatal. Nevertheless, they surrendered. They
were taken back to Liverpool and then sent back to Chicago.
Indiana Governor Winfield Durbin promptly issued a statement: “I
congratulate the authorities on the capture. Chicago can keep
the prisoners – Indiana doesn’t want them.”
The six-month crime spree of the Car Barn Bandits had finally
ended. The laughing young men were quick to admit to their
robberies and murders and all of them were soon charged with
murder and put on trial. The bandits confessed to not only
crimes in Chicago, but other hold-ups around the country. They
wanted to make sure that everyone knew just who had committed
the crimes. Niedermeyer kept track of the crimes that offered
rewards and demanded that his mother be given the money since he
had provided the information. The confessions told of daring
lives of crime that became the stuff of short-lived legend. It
was revealed that they had robbed one hundred and fourteen
people, and killed eight, in just sixty days. The case captured
the attention of the public and newspapers around the country
sent reporters to Chicago to cover the trial.
Nothing could be done to save the young bandits at their trials
since they had already confessed to everything they had done.
Niedermeyer, Van Dine and Marx were tried together and Roeski
was given a separate trial since wasn’t present at the Car Barn
robbery. Attempts were made to show that the boys were “victims
of society” and also to show that insanity ran in Van Dine’s
family, but the jury wasn’t fooled. The first three defendants
were found guilty and sentenced to hang.

The Cook County Jail, where the Car Barn Bandits
were hanged. |
At Roeski’s trial, Marx swore that he, not Roeski, had
killed nineteen year old Otto Bauder on July 9 at Ernest
Spire’s tavern on North Ashland Avenue, a crime for
which Roeski was accused. However, on April 20, 1904,
Roeski was found guilty of murder, but the jury decided
to spare his life since there was still some question as
to whether or not he pulled the trigger during Bauder’s
murder. He was taken away to Joliet prison and his
friends were scheduled to hang two days later.
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A crowd gathers on Illinois
Street to await word of the hangings |

Gustave Marx, awaiting
execution |
The bandits were housed at the Cook County Jail before
their executions. Niedermeyer attempted suicide by
trying to cut his wrist with a lead pencil and by
swallowing the sulfur tips of matches. On the day before
the hangings, though, the three condemned man sat
quietly talking and smoking with their jailers.
Outside of the jail, a crowd that numbered almost one
thousand gathered to wait for news about what was
happening inside. A detail of one hundred police
officers surrounded the jail to keep the onlookers in
line and to prevent them from loitering on Dearborn
Street.
Niedermeyer was scheduled to be the first to die,
insisting to anyone who would listen that he would “die
game”. But when the time actually came to go to the
gallows, his courage gave away and he nearly fainted.
The guards placed him on a gurney and wheeled him to the
scaffold. Too weak to stand, he was strapped to a chair
and a hood was placed over his head. The trap was sprung
and the bandit dropped to his death, still seated in the
chair. The shroud fell off and the assembled crowd was
shocked by the gruesome sight of his face as he
strangled to death. His neck was broken, but it took him
nearly twenty minutes to die.
Marx was brought out next. He was praying and holding a
crucifix as he walked to the gallows. He continued to
pray as the shroud was placed over his face and the rope
slipped around his neck. He died instantly.
Van Dine also prayed as the trap was opened and like
Marx, he died when his neck snapped.
For years, the Car Barn Bandits were hailed as the most
famous criminal gang in Chicago history. On numerous
occasions, gangs of amateur bandits who idolized them
were captured, sometimes while lurking in the bandits’
old hideouts. Eventually, though, they faded into
history and by the latter part of the twentieth century,
were almost completely forgotten.
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