Introduction: A Note to the Reader

Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid

No-one who relished every second of George Roy Hill's brilliant and now cult 1969 movie Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid can be surprised to learn that the real life Butch and Sundance made a lasting impression on everyone they met. Leaving no diaries or personal accounts they wrote few letters, but managed to write themselves handsomely into the history books and the legends - and they are still writing.

All written and oral records confirm that talented screenwriter William Goldman and megastar actors Paul Newman and Robert Redford got the basic characters just about right: Butch was affable, good-humoured and intelligent while Sundance, warier but still friendly, was the quieter of the two - though he liked sharp suits and monogrammed clothing. Both were criminals rather than killers. Indeed some historians believe that right up to the final shoot-out in Bolivia neither Butch nor Sundance had blood on their hands. If true this is likely to have been a matter of sheer efficiency rather than conscience - for years they were clearly happy to ride and rob with some very desperate and bloody men.

What is certainly true is that Butch and Sundance were consummate professionals at their craft, undoubtedly the best in their business in every way: longer active careers, more sophisticated planning, higher success rates, less prison time and greater financial returns for a given investment of risk. However, as law enforcement entered the telegraph age and the frontier finally closed in 1900, they were smart enough to know the game was up. They moved to South America and tried to go straight. Sadly, their best-laid plans didn't quite work out.

But this book concentrates on their travels and exploits in the American West. It describes a daunting - maybe insane would be a better word - journey by two Englishmen who followed the Outlaw Trail on horseback across two thousand miles of desert, mountain, canyon and high plains wilderness, from Mexico to Canada via New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana.

We would ride, as nearly as possible exactly as they did, the almost inaccessible trails that linked the robberies, escapes and hideouts of the two most elusive and successful outlaws of the Wild West.

As well as our adventures and the many colourful characters we met, we have described baldly the life-threatening hazards, hopes and fears, tensions and often angry dissentions and confrontations of riding the Outlaw Trail, whether then or now.

Enjoy the read.



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