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Jesse “Three- Finger Jack” Dunlap

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Jesse “Three- Finger Jack” Dunlap

Birth
Texas, USA
Death
22 Feb 1900 (aged 27–28)
Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona, USA
Burial
Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona, USA GPS-Latitude: 31.719896, Longitude: -110.0703555
Plot
Row 7, Lot 5
Memorial ID
View Source

THE FAIBANK TRAIN ROBBERY FIASCO! 3 FINGERED JACK SHOT BY JEFF MILTON!


The railroad arrived in what was to become Fairbank in 1881. It was the closest rail station to the bustling boom town of Tombstone; one of the largest cities in the West at that time. The train station was the scene of a sensational attempted train robbery on February 15, 1900, purportedly by five outlaws led by Three-Finger Jack Dunlap and Bravo Juan Yoas, all thought to be members of the Burt Alvord gang. The heist was thwarted by famous ex-Texas Ranger Jeff Milton, who was riding that day as messenger for Wells Fargo.


Posing as drunken cowboys, the bandits opened fire on Milton as he stood in the open door of the mail car as it pulled into the station. Seriously wounded, Milton fell back
inside the car behind a trunk. His gunfighter instincts took over and he grabbed a Wells Fargo shotgun.

Thinking mistakenly that Milton was dead, the bandits raced towards the open door. Three-Finger Jack was in the lead, and he caught a full shotgun blast in his mid-section. Bravo Juan saw it coming and just had enough time to turn around. He took a blast from some distance in the seat of his pants.


The outlaws went away that evening empty-handed. Three-Finger Jack was mortally wounded and only a few miles from Fairbank his pals reportedly left him to die along the trail.
Back at Fairbank a posse was organized, and trackers easily picked up the trail leading to where Jack lay dying. He was understandably more than a bit upset at being left behind to die and was only too willing to give the posse enough
information to arrest all the gang members, including gang leader Burt Alvord.


From The Tombstone Prospector:


"BANDIT DIES FROM THE EFFECT OF HIS
WOUNDS.


Yesterday morning about 7 o'clock Jesse
Dunlap, known as Three Fingered Jack, died at the hospital from the wounds he received while in the holdup at Fairbank last week from the gun in the hands of Messenger Milton."


Three-Finger Jack Dunlop was laid to rest at Boothill Graveyard, in Row 7, Lot 5, here in Tombstone, Arizona. At 62, Jeff Milton becomes the first officer appointed to the U.S. Immigration Service Border Patrol in 1924, and for the next 8 years he pursues border patrol work
with unbridled enthusiasm.



THE FAIBANK TRAIN ROBBERY FIASCO! 3 FINGERED JACK SHOT BY JEFF MILTON!


The railroad arrived in what was to become Fairbank in 1881. It was the closest rail station to the bustling boom town of Tombstone; one of the largest cities in the West at that time. The train station was the scene of a sensational attempted train robbery on February 15, 1900, purportedly by five outlaws led by Three-Finger Jack Dunlap and Bravo Juan Yoas, all thought to be members of the Burt Alvord gang. The heist was thwarted by famous ex-Texas Ranger Jeff Milton, who was riding that day as messenger for Wells Fargo.


Posing as drunken cowboys, the bandits opened fire on Milton as he stood in the open door of the mail car as it pulled into the station. Seriously wounded, Milton fell back
inside the car behind a trunk. His gunfighter instincts took over and he grabbed a Wells Fargo shotgun.

Thinking mistakenly that Milton was dead, the bandits raced towards the open door. Three-Finger Jack was in the lead, and he caught a full shotgun blast in his mid-section. Bravo Juan saw it coming and just had enough time to turn around. He took a blast from some distance in the seat of his pants.


The outlaws went away that evening empty-handed. Three-Finger Jack was mortally wounded and only a few miles from Fairbank his pals reportedly left him to die along the trail.
Back at Fairbank a posse was organized, and trackers easily picked up the trail leading to where Jack lay dying. He was understandably more than a bit upset at being left behind to die and was only too willing to give the posse enough
information to arrest all the gang members, including gang leader Burt Alvord.


From The Tombstone Prospector:


"BANDIT DIES FROM THE EFFECT OF HIS
WOUNDS.


Yesterday morning about 7 o'clock Jesse
Dunlap, known as Three Fingered Jack, died at the hospital from the wounds he received while in the holdup at Fairbank last week from the gun in the hands of Messenger Milton."


Three-Finger Jack Dunlop was laid to rest at Boothill Graveyard, in Row 7, Lot 5, here in Tombstone, Arizona. At 62, Jeff Milton becomes the first officer appointed to the U.S. Immigration Service Border Patrol in 1924, and for the next 8 years he pursues border patrol work
with unbridled enthusiasm.



Bio by: Trevor Meade


Inscription

3-Fingered
Jack Dunlop
Shot by
Jeff Milton

Gravesite Details

Shot by Jeff Milton. A train robber who attempted to rob an express car in which Milton was a guard. Critically wounded and left to die, Three Finger Jack was brought to Tombstone and lived long enough to point the finger to his friends.


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  • Maintained by: cloughley
  • Originally Created by: MB
  • Added: Jul 2, 2003
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7647615/jesse-dunlap: accessed ), memorial page for Jesse “Three- Finger Jack” Dunlap (1872–22 Feb 1900), Find a Grave Memorial ID 7647615, citing Boothill Graveyard, Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona, USA; Maintained by cloughley (contributor 47023161).