In 1914 a newspaper called the Atlanta Georgian was owned by William Randolph Hearst. Like most Hearst newspapers, the Georgian placed a high emphasis on sensationalism. Crime and scandal were frequently the lead stories.
We’ve been digging through late 19th and early 20th-century issues of the Georgian in the Georgia Historic Newspapers database, looking for stories involving Cobb County and its cities.
While this story wasn’t quite John Dillinger or Bonnie and Clyde caliber, it had enough gunplay and car chase to make the front page in the February 16, 1914 edition.
2 Auto Bandits Taken in Wild Night Chase
Youths Decoy Taxi Driver to Obscure Place, Rob Him and Flee With Machine.
Following a wild auto chase across Fulton and Cobb Counties Sunday night, the Atlanta police Monday have in jail two taxicab hold-up men giving the names of C. A. Gray and William Paul Gray, of Birmingham. After robbing A. C. Hodge and stealing his machine, the men gave him a dime for carfare back to town. The police will seek to identify these two men with other Atlanta holdups and similar crimes in other Southern cities.
The two Grays decoyed Augustus C. Hodge, taxi driver, to Neal and Ashby streets on the pretext that they were legitimate fares.
Robbed Him at Pistol Point.
There they confronted him with Colt revolvers, robbed him of $1.45, compelled him to show them how to run the machine, then left him on the sidewalk while they rode into the country at top speed. Hodge is employed by the J. A. Gwinn Taxicab Company.
Hodge telephoned police headquarters, and two automobile loads of officers soon were traveling 60 miles an hour in the wake of the bandits. At Buckhead they picked up Lieutenant Cheshire, of the county police. Race Through County. Out along the Howell Mill road raced the pursuers, then on through a maze of country roads into Cobb County. At times the front machine could see the taxicab of the bandits weaving and careening…
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