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      <title>Butch Cassidy, Wayward Mormon, Surfaces Again</title>
      <link>http://www.mormonlife.com/story/65529-butch-cassidy-wayward-mormon-surfaces-again</link>
      <guid>http://www.mormonlife.com/story/65529-butch-cassidy-wayward-mormon-surfaces-again</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 12:43:00 -0600</pubDate>
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source: keepapitchinin.org
&lt;/div&gt;


	&lt;i class=&quot;ml_blurb&quot;&gt;Mormon Life says: Interesting information behind recent discovery, as well as Butch's family.&lt;/i&gt;


The outlaw Butch Cassidy was born as Robert LeRoy Parker on 13 April 1866 in Beaver, Utah, son of Maximilian Parker (a 12-year-old handcart pioneer of 1856) and Ann Gillies Parker (a 9-year-old traveler with the Hodgetts Company, the wagon company that followed after the Martin Handcart Company and shared their disastrous experiences in the Wyoming blizzards). While Robert Parker was still a small child, the family moved across the mountain range to the smaller, newer town of Circleville in Piute County. All the evidence (and I’m something of a Piute County history fanatic), the Parkers were an industrious, well respected, compassionate family. I find Max Parker, for example, riding almost 50 miles on horseback to the nearest telegraph station to send word to distant family members that Max’s neighbor – a passenger with Sam Brannan on the 1846 Brooklyn voyage to San Francisco – had died in a cabin fire in 1897. The next year, Max drove a wagon all the way to Salt Lake City to take a neighbor with appendicitis to the hospital. Max’s obituary reflects his neighbors’ opinion of his service: “He was a quiet, unassuming man and was often called the silent giver.”
&lt;P&gt;
Butch, on the other hand … well, everybody knows something about the outlaw Butch.&lt;/P&gt;

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      <title>Butch Cassidy imposter exposed</title>
      <link>http://www.mormonlife.com/story/65526-butch-cassidy-imposter-exposed</link>
      <guid>http://www.mormonlife.com/story/65526-butch-cassidy-imposter-exposed</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2011 12:11:00 -0600</pubDate>
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source: deseretnews.com
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	&lt;i class=&quot;ml_blurb&quot;&gt;Mormon Life says: Recent news about Butch Cassidy, that infamous Mormon . . .&lt;/i&gt;


Larry Pointer has been chasing the trail of the outlaw Butch Cassidy for 40 years. He thought for sure he had him pinned down — that Cassidy had cheated death in a gun battle in South America, changed his name to William T. Phillips and lived out his life in Spokane, Wash. But Cassidy gave Pointer the slip.
&lt;P&gt;
It turns out Phillips in Spokane wasn't Cassidy after all.
&lt;/P&gt;&lt;P&gt;
It began in the 1970s when Pointer discovered a 96-page manuscript by Phillips titled, &quot;The Bandit Invincible: the Story of Butch Cassidy.&quot; On its surface it was a fictionalized biography of Cassidy, but Pointer noticed Phillips wrote about obscure and unusual details that it seemed only Cassidy himself would know.&lt;/P&gt;

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