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May 23, 2026

May 23, 1934: The ambush that ended Bonnie and Clyde

Today in True Crime by Case Bound

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May 23, 1934: The ambush that ended Bonnie and Clyde

By the spring of 1934, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow had become two of the most wanted people in America. Their two-year crime spree — a string of bank robberies, gas station holdups, and violent encounters with law enforcement spanning four states — had left thirteen people dead, including nine police officers. Their exploits had made them folk heroes in some corners, objects of obsession in the press, and priorities for a federal bureau still finding its footing under J. Edgar Hoover.

Bonnie Elizabeth Parker and Clyde Chestnut Barrow were an unlikely pair. Parker, born in 1910 in Rowena, Texas, had married at sixteen but soon found herself drawn to Barrow, who had been convicted of armed robbery and served time in prison before being paroled in early 1932. Together with a rotating cast of associates — the Barrow Gang — they robbed banks and small businesses, stole cars, and left a trail of dead lawmen across Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Missouri. Parker, who was with Barrow through most of it, became the stuff of legend: photographs of her posing with a cigar and a rifle, found in an abandoned Missouri hideout in April 1933, cemented her image in the popular press as the gun-toting "gun moll."

Bonnie Parker posing with a revolver and rifle — photographed in 1933 after the Joplin, Missouri hideout discovery. Published by Joplin Globe.
Bonnie Parker photographed in 1933 with a revolver and rifle — one of the images found by police in an abandoned hideout that helped cement her 'gun moll' image in the American press.

By May 1934, Barrow had sixteen outstanding warrants for robbery, auto theft, assault, and murder across four states. The Division of Investigation — the federal bureau that would not be renamed the FBI until 1935 — had made the pair national priorities. Frank Hamer, a former Texas Ranger brought in earlier that year specifically to track Barrow, assembled a six-man posse in Louisiana, combining his own expertise with officers from the Texas Department of Corrections and the Dallas Sheriff's Office. They had received a tip that Barrow and Parker were in the area, and Henry Methvin's father, Ivy, had agreed to cooperate with authorities.

The rural Louisiana road near Sailes where law enforcement officers ambushed Bonnie and Clyde on May 23, 1934.
The road near Sailes, Bienville Parish, Louisiana — site of the ambush that killed Bonnie and Clyde on May 23, 1934.

On the morning of May 23, 1934, the six lawmen were concealed in the bushes along a rural road near Sailes, in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Ivy Methvin — Henry's father — had parked his truck by the roadside appearing to have a flat tire, set as a lure to slow any passing car. Around 9:15 a.m., Barrow and Parker appeared in their 1934 Ford V-8, moving slowly down the road. The posse opened fire. The barrage was overwhelming: more than 112 bullet holes were later counted in the vehicle, with approximately thirty rounds striking the couple. Both Parker and Barrow were killed instantly in the initial volley. It was approximately 9:20 a.m.

Interior of the bullet-riddled Ford V-8 showing the arsenal of automatic rifles, shotguns, and thousands of rounds of ammunition found in the vehicle after the ambush.
The arsenal of more than a dozen firearms and thousands of rounds of ammunition found in Bonnie and Clyde's Ford V-8 after the May 23, 1934 ambush — photographed at the scene.

The Ford V-8 that carried them into the ambush had been a symbol of Barrow's obsession — he had written to Henry Ford in April 1934 praising the car's performance. Inside the vehicle, police found more than a dozen firearms, including automatic rifles and sawed-off shotguns, along with several thousand rounds of ammunition. The arsenal made clear that Barrow had been preparing for a fight, not a retreat.

Within hours of the ambush, word spread across the country. The bodies were taken to Conger Furniture Store and Funeral Parlor in Arcadia, Louisiana, where thousands of people descended, creating what one account described as a "circus-like atmosphere." Bonnie Parker's mother had wanted to bring her daughter home to Dallas, but mobs surrounding both the Parker house and the funeral home made that impossible. Barrow's family was permitted a private funeral at sunset on May 25. Parker was buried in Dallas; Barrow was buried alongside his brother Buck in a shared grave outside the city, inscribed with the words "gone but not forgotten."

The bullet-riddled Ford did not disappear with its owners. It became a traveling attraction, displayed at fairs and amusement parks for three decades. It eventually ended up at Primm Valley Resort near Las Vegas, Nevada, where it remains on display today, a relic of the Depression era's most romanticized criminals.

For law enforcement, the ambush was a triumph. It ended a two-year pursuit that had embarrassed federal and state authorities alike. Within months of Barrow and Parker's deaths, Congress passed a package of anti-gangster statutes that strengthened federal reach over crimes exploiting state-by-state jurisdictional gaps — a legislative effort already underway before their deaths, but part of a broader Depression-era crackdown on organized crime. By summer 1935, twenty family members and associates had been arrested and tried for aiding the fugitives.

Ninety-two years later, the ambush at Sailes remains one of the most dramatized criminal deaths in American history. Scholars and historians have continued to examine the reality beneath the legend: thirteen dead, nine of them law enforcement officers, and a country still reckoning with what the press coverage and public reaction revealed about Depression-era America.

Also on this day

  • Joan of Arc Captured — May 23, 1430 · Wikipedia
    French national heroine Joan of Arc is captured at the Siege of Compiègne by troops from the Burgundian faction — a pivotal betrayal during the Hundred Years' War that led to her eventual trial and execution by the English in Rouen.
  • U.S. Consul-General Assassinated in Jerusalem — May 23, 1948 · Wikipedia
    Thomas C. Wasson, the U.S. Consul-General in Jerusalem, dies from a gunshot wound inflicted by unknown assailants the previous day — a rare and significant killing of an American diplomat in the immediate post-World War II period.
  • Italian Anti-Mafia Judge Giovanni Falcone Assassinated — May 23, 1992 · Wikipedia
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Sources used/checked for this issue

  • Bonnie and Clyde, Wikipedia — "Bonnie and Clyde," Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-20.
  • Clyde Champion Barrow — FBI History, Federal Bureau of Investigation — "Clyde Champion Barrow," FBI.gov, accessed 2026-05-20.
  • Joan of Arc, Wikipedia — "Joan of Arc," Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-23.
  • Thomas C. Wasson, Wikipedia — "Thomas C. Wasson," Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-23.
  • Giovanni Falcone, Wikipedia — "Giovanni Falcone," Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-23.
  • Interstate 5 Skagit River bridge collapse, Wikipedia — "Interstate 5 Skagit River bridge collapse," Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-23.
  • Bonnie Parker with cigar and revolver, 1933, Wikipedia Commons — "Bonnie Parker with cigar and revolver, 1933," Wikipedia Commons.
  • Barrow ambush site, 1934, Wikipedia Commons — "Barrow ambush site, 1934," Wikipedia Commons.
  • Barrow death car arsenal, 1934, Wikipedia Commons — "Barrow death car arsenal, 1934," Wikipedia Commons.
  • 1934 Ford V-8 containing the remains of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, Wikipedia Commons — "1934 Ford V-8 containing the remains of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow," Wikipedia Commons.

Today in True Crime by Case Bound — 2026-05-23

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