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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dick_LiddilDick Liddil - Wikipedia

    Dick Liddil. James Andrew " Dick " Liddil (September 15, 1852 – July 13, 1901) was an American outlaw who was one of the last surviving members of the James-Younger Gang. His surname is often misspelled as Liddel, Liddell, or Liddle . Early years. Liddil was born to James Milton Liddil and Elizabeth Forsby in Jackson County, Missouri in 1852. [1] .

  2. Dick Liddel. James Andrew “Dick” Liddel was an outlaw from Missouri who joined the James Gang in 1879. He was one of the last surviving members. James was born to Milton and Elizabeth Liddil in Jackson County, Missouri, on September 15, 1852. In the mid-1870s, he did a stint in prison in Mt. Vernon County, Missouri, for stealing horses.

  3. James Gang member Dick Liddil, if his testimony is true, made a very damaging case against defendant Frank James on a Saturday morning during the 1883 trial in Gallatin. Objection to his testimony was immediately raised by the defense on the grounds that Liddil had been convicted and sent to the penitentiary for felony (for horse stealing, with ...

  4. James Andrew "Dick" Liddil (15 September 1852-13 July 1901) was an American outlaw who was affiliated with the James-Younger Gang of the Wild West. James Andrew Liddil was born in Jackson County, Missouri in 1852, and he was arrested for horse stealing in Vernon County in the mid-1870s. After...

  5. A strong connection between the gang and Hudspeths, if not already known by the authorities, became obvious from the testimony of former gang member James Andrew ‘DickLiddil at the 1883 Gallatin trial of Frank James.

  6. by Mark Boardman | Sep 16, 2021 | True West Blog. Dick Liddil found a new calling at the race track. Dick Liddil joined the James Gang in 1879, near the end of its run. He eventually was arrested, tried and convicted for his crimes. But he was pardoned after turning state’s evidence. By the early 1890s, he found his true calling: horse racing.

  7. Dick Liddil said that he was born on September 16, 1852, the son of James Milton Liddil and the former Elizabeth Forby, and raised in Missouri’s Jackson County. Although he has often been called a former William Quantrill raider, he never rode with the infamous Civil War Southern guerrilla leader; Liddil would have been 13 in 1865.