Clyde Barrow Almost Had A Completely Opposite Life

By the time they met their deaths on a rural road in Louisiana, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were blamed for murdering 13 people, nine of them lawmen. The couple, with a rotating crew that included Buck Barrow and one of Clyde’s childhood friends, blasted and robbed their way across five states, from New Mexico to Missouri.

Even while committing murders, kidnappings, and holding up banks and stores, Barrow continued to enjoy playing music. On several occasions, the police found Barrow’s guitars that he’d been forced to leave behind while escaping from the law. In one instance, he cheekily got his mother to ask for the instrument back from the police, who refused. Inside the Ford in which Barrow died, the police found a saxophone, along with a huge cache of guns. It was too bad for both Barrow and his victims that the Navy rejected him and that his music career never took off.

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