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The Dumb Countersign

A Deputy’s Story

by Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.


In the Summer of 1843 Jackson County was infested by a gang of desperadoes that for a time threatened to overturn the whole arrangement of social and domestic affairs. Horses were carried off; cattle and sheep were stolen; houses were broken into and robbed; travelers were waylaid and relieved of their valuables; and in some instances still grosser outrages were committed. Our sheriff call us, his deputies, together, and told us that something must be done to put a stop to this dreadful state of things. We held a long conference, and the separated and set out upon our travels, some going East, some, West, some North, and some South, in search of the marauding ruffians. We traveled two or three weeks—traveled all over the county; we met wayfaring men of whom we made all sorts of inquiries; we stopped at public places; and we arrested a few men on suspicion; but we met with no real success. Those whom we arrested proved their innocence, and others whom we would have arrested eluded our search. And yet, during all this time the depredations went on as before. Robberies were committed almost under our very noses; horses were carried off; houses were broken into; and even good, honest Andrew Drake, our high sheriff, had his portmanteau rifled of its contents while stopping at a public house in Clayburgh. The innkeeper was arrested instantly; but he proved himself as innocent as a lamb.

“Mr. Clark, what do you make of it?” asked Drake, when he met me at Errol.

I answered him that the robbers evidently had an organization more perfect than was the organization that had been brought to bear against them.

The sheriff admitted that I was right. It was very evident that the villainous gang was not only perfectly organized, but that the members were individually shrewd and daring, and true to each… Read More