6 Cp! A [ } . - * " ™ \j tf* STORIES OF THE SECRET SERVICE BY Capt. Patrick D. Tyrrell 112 STORY No. 5 The Boscobel Koniackers Being an Account of the Capture and Conviction of the Band of Counterfeiters Operating in Wiscon sin in 1878. By CAPTAIN PATRICK D. TYBRELI [Copyright. 1905. by Marlon G. Scheltlin.] The further identification of Conway was a simple matter. I found he had affiliated with counterfeiters for many years, and in 1876 had been arrested for horse stealing and convicted, car rying his case to the supreme court. After securing his freedom on bail he had disappeared from his Wisconsin haunts. He had been an associate of the mysterious "Watson brothers," and had visited them at their farm at Clear lake. Further than this he had been closely connected with a band of "ko niackers" that made headquarters in St. Paul. In short, the connection be tween the "Watsons," Conway, the Bos cobel gang and the St. Paul counterfeit ers was found to be very close, al though the theft of the team of horses in Watseka county, Minnesota, was the only' fact discovered that could bo used against Conway at the forthcoming trial. The defense of Conway at the trial was that "Charles Scott," whom he sub poenaed, had given him the bill. Scott tes'.iiied to this fact. Conway admitted lie had been arrested, and said after his arrest he had come to Chicago and then gone to New York, assuming the name of L. C. Lavaree. He remained in New York a year, he said, and then returned to Wisconsin. His defense availed him nothing and he was sentenced to serve five years. In the meantime the case in Parsons, Kan., had been made and lie served another five years for that offense. Subsequently he was given another five years for horse stealing. • • * With Conway "settled" in the peni tentiary an investigation was made to determine the identity of the "Wat !Bons." While it had not been proved, jthera was little doubt that Conway had igone east for the purpose of establish ing a connection with one of the bands of counterfeiters which Infested the Atlantic seaboard, that he had formed euch a connection and that he had un dertaken to "shove" some of the "co ney" that was being issued by them. To a secret service man it was also clear that such a man as Conway, who had never been east before his arrest for horse stealing, could not have formed such a connection without tak ing with him first-class references from counterfeiters in the west who were well acquainted with the more promi nent men in that line in the east. From all that 1 could gather of Con way's record he had not been asso ciated before his eastern trip with men in the weHt who were on close terms wun the eastern counterfeiting aristo crats. The high artistic character of the SIOO bills he had "shoved" iu the Mississippi valley was indication sufll clent thut they had come from the hands of artisans of much skill. In establishing the identity of ihe "WaU son" brothers, therefore, we hoped to to be able to determine who had pla< ed ('on way in touch wtih the eastern coun terfeiters and eventually to uncover the makers of the SIOO plate. To relate the details of this Investi gation would commons more time and' space than I liavc at my disposal, and 1 shall, therefore, stale that the "Wat sons" were found to have been the Bai lard brothers—Thomas, George and John. In all the annals ot counterfeit- j ing in the United States ihe name of' Thomas Ballard nmst stand out most prominent, and I shall lake the liberty of telling enough about this remarka ble criminal character to give my read ers some conception of his importance in "koniactung" history. FLiSt, let not the members of the masonic fraternity bo shocked when 1 say that Thomas Ballard, at the sum mit of his success as a counterfeiter, was the master of Park lodge, A. F. & A. M., in New York city. He came of good family, never smoked a cigar nor took a drink of intoxicating liquor, was married to an estimable woman, and, like many of his kind, was a model "family man." He was born in New York state in 1840, and learned the trade of fancy carriage painting. When 18 years old he went to work for Henry Hinman, a wealthy carriage builder of New York city, and related by marriage to Joshua D. Miner, a prominent New York politician and city contractor. Hinman observed the genius of young Ballard and ipduced him to learn the trade of banknote engraving, at which he served four years. Aided by Miner, Ballard obtained val uable information from the engraving department of the government. In 1862 Ballard produced for Miner and Henry C. Cole a plate of the one dollar United States treasury. His next was a plate of the two-dollar bills of the National Shoe & Leather bank, of New York. From that he wen* to -$lO counterfeits of three national banks of Poughkeep sie, the S2O bill of the Shoe & Leather bank, and then to the SIOO and SSOO "old issue" United States treasury notes. Ballard had a comfortable residence at No. 225 West Fifty-third street, and '''' dovlE here was supposed to be a painter. He left home every morning at seven o'clock togo to the carriage factory, in which he was interested, but instead of going there he went to No. 25ti Kiv ington street, where his brother John lived, and where the counterfiting plant was located. The neighbors at No. 256 Rivington street believed Bal lard to bt « -pvitchman in the custom hoase, and he left there regularly in the evening togo "to work," but in reality went home. He lived this dual life without detection for years. The government at that time had a contract with the Glenn mills, at West Chester, Pa., for its entire output of the celebrated "fiber" paper, the mills being run under supervision of govern ment officials to prevent the paper or the secret of its manufacture being stolen. Ballard, in addition to being a high-class engraver, was the only man in the world who could successfully make this paper outside of the Glenn mills. As an engraver, chemist, paper maker and ink manufacturer. Ballard was unexcelled. The treasury officials and money experts generally believed the "fiber" paper to be a complete guard against counterfeiting, and they were amazed at the product of Thomas Ballard long before such a man was known to the secret service. The presses of Hinman, Miner and Ballard turned out bogus money in such amounts that the lawful currency be came disparaged, and the capture of the makers of the clever counterfeils became a matter of imperative impor tance. He was caught in 1871, broke jail soon afterward, and his subsequent history would fill a good-sized volume. Arrested in Buffalo for engraving a plate of a SSOO treasury note, which was pronounced superior to the gen uine, Ballard was sent to Auburn peni tentiary, from which institution he es caped. While in Buffalo he had also worked on a plate with which he said he was going "to bankrupt Canada," and from the perfection of the work he seemed in fair way to make good his Intention. In 1875 he was sentenced to serve 150 years in the penitentiary, aft« r having been at large atioiit three years with a standing reward of $."1,000 for Ills cap ture. In 1878 he ripped open his own abdomen and severad an intestine in IrylnK to take his life, but recovered. A year later he drew a sharp knife across his throat, severing the wind pipe and muscles of the neck, and again recovered. It was during the wanderings follow ing Thomas Mallard's first arrest and while the reward of |S,ooo was hang ing oVer lilin, that '-tie and his two brothers came west and took up their CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1906. residence on 11 form near Clear la. They assumed the family name of Watson, and, naturally, fell into asso ciation with the counterfeiters oper ating in the northwest. They became! acquainted with the Boscobel and St. 1 Paul gangs, and with Frank Conway, 1 which fact accounts for the frequency . with which I encountered the assumed ; family name of the Ballards while try -1 ing to identify the man who had been r arrested in Vandalia. The St. Paul con- I tingent of counterfeiters had in their i possession, it was afterward found, the I Poughkeepsie and Peakskill plates that had been made in the east by Ballard i and had issued money from them. . There was no evidence that the Bal - lards accomplished much in the line of ) producing "coney" while in the west, r It is only fair that I here call atten tion to the fact that from this point s any credit accruing to the secret serv- I ice for the ultimate discovery of the engravers and producers of the SIOO Wilkesbarre, Boston and New Bedford bills should be bestowed on A. L. Drummond and other operatives in the eastern division of the service, in the west we had first found the bills, de termined beyond doubt their eastern origin, showed the connection between Conway and the Ballards and indicated that in Conway's associates while in the east the secret service would prob ably find the producers of the bills. As I have pointed out, the Ballards had given Conway credentials when he started east which, with his arrest and conviction for horse stealing, was suf ficient to satisfy the eastern contingent that he was a safe man with whom to "do business." I had carefully pre served Conway's testimony at his Springfield trial, in which he told of his places of residence and some of his movements in New York, and forwarded them to headquarters, although Con way probably had no idea that the in formation he gave at that time would be of any value to us. It proved, how ever, to be of much service to the east ern operatives in unearthing the crowd that issued the bills which Conway had "shoved" in the west. There were in the United States in the year 1879 but four men capable of pro ducing Much high-class plates as th<*se from which had been printed the SIOO bills received in Chicago from several western points. These were Charles F. Ulrich, Benjamin Boyd, Thomas Bal lard and Charles H. Smith. EaclT of these men possessed a distinctive style, which was familiar to the members of the secret service who had made these things the subject of long study. Ul rich's method was to lay before him a genuine bill of the issue he intended to counterfeit and laboriously and as faith fully as possible copy it on steel. Boyd was the inventor and sole owner of a process whereby he transferred by the use of acids a reproduction of the genuine bill onto a steel plate, after j cutting the plate by the lines trans- i ferred. Italian! used the copying proc- j ess, but his work was much liner than ! Ulrich's. and had a distinct character under the microscope. Smith was at that time an engraver in the employ of the United Bla ten treasury department, and his work showed clearly the dis tinctive character of government en graving. lioyd was in prison, and the work on the bills was apparently not that of Mallard nor Ulrich. For some time the secret service offi cers had had pretty accurate informs tion of the operations of the baud to which 3mith belonged W. K. iirock way was the leader of this crowd and enjoyed the distinction of being the j first man who us«d the electrotype I process. 11" svns ulso a fine rhemlst. but Smith did the engraving. For years Smith had been employed by the gov ernment in engraving plates for cur rency and bonds, and his character was supposed to be above reproach. I do not know how he became enlangled with Brock way. The third principal member of this crowd was James B. Doyle, who owned a GOO acre farm n«ar Bradford, 111. Doyle had a brother-in law named Thomas Shotwell, who was a counterfeiter. Through Shotwell, presumably, Doyle hail met Dr. Parker, Louis Sleight and other well-known western counterfeit ers, and had made a trip to New York, where he had formed the business con nection with Brockway and Smith. When he came west he brought with him some of the same bills we were try ing to trace. Doyle's visit to New York had been reported to headquarters by the western division, and he was "piped" in that city by Operative Ken noch, at the order of Chief Operative Drummond. When Doyle left the eastern metropo lis for Chicago, Kennoch was on the same train, and Doyle was arrested aa he stepped from the train in Chicago. He was tried and convicted. At the time of his arrest he had in his possession counterfeit United States bonds repre» senting $204,000. These also were from plates made by Smith. They were ab solutely perfect with the exception of a slight inaccuracy in the margin on one corner, and would have made the gov ernment a lot of trouble if they had not been confiscated. Smith worked in the treasury depart ment engraving room on genuine plates during the regular working hours, and on counterfeit plates during the time he was not working for the government. At the same time Doyle was arrested in Chicago, Brockway and Smith were ar rested in the east. If my memory serves me right, Smith never turned informer, but Brockway, seeing that the eastern secret service officers had unearthed much accurate information concerning his operations, told the government where the SIOO bill plates and the plate 3 from which the bonds were printed could be found. He claimed he had thrown the SI,OOO plate which was much wanted, into East river some time before when he became convinced he was being crowded to the wall by the secret service. This seizure was most important, as it put a stop to the issue of currency and bonds which were so cleverly done that they would have proved a source of endless trouble. The sentences of Brockway and Smith were suspended in reward for their dis closure of the location of the plates, this being, I believe the first case under that administration in which such len iency was shown, but being justified by the great value of the plates to the gov ernment. ' Before closing this narrative I wish to say that when the Ballards left Clear Lake, la., to return east they buried ten sets of plates near the farmhouse they had occupied. This burial was accord ing to the ironclad rule of "good" coun terfeiters never to carry such evidence with them. Other counterfeiters, how ever, knew where they were hid, and five sets found their way into the pos session of George Woolsey and Samuel Pizer, of the particular "koniacking" outfit known as the St. Paul crowd, and in August, 1875, I had the satisfaction of arresting these shifty gentlemen and FOUND THE PRINTING PRESS AND MATERIAL. of confiscating these plates, |B,OOO in rep resentative currency and counterfeiting press, inks and paper. Id& not know what became of the other five sets of plates after the Ballards burled them. My information concerning the burial of these plates came to me from a man who may yet be living. He had my word that I would never make public the source of this information, and to re veal his identity might, even at this re mote day, result in dire consequences to him. For be it remembered, there are some bits of secret service history which cannot be written without violation of sacred agreements, even after the lapse of 30 years. . THE END. Myra Kelly as a Car Full. Miss Myra Kelly, the writer of East side stories of New York life, relates this story of a gentleman's politeness to her: "The car was entirely empty, with ths j exception of the one man.and his eon i dition was exactly the reverse. As I en tered lie arose, made me an unsteady but magnificent bow, and said: "Madam, ! please be kind 'nough toasshept thish piashe." There was nothing else for me to do, so I thanked him and sat down. For 20 blocks the Idot hung from a strap, with not a soul In the car but our j selves. "I have been taken for another worn na, but I never before had anyone think I I was a car full."—-Huston Herald. The Limit. Molly -('holly's a fool! Dolly What kind of a fool. Molly The kind thai would say I "Thank you" for a kiss.—Cleveland I Loader. Let Her 00. "How did Smith's wife tome to lea e him?" "It wns all her fault." "But how?" "Why she told Smith that If lie .11 not get her the bonnet she had set her heart on she would go home to her mother." "Why did he not get it for her?" "He would have gotten it for her if she hadn't made that threat." —Hous- ton Post. Friendship's Tribute. "Didn't the wedding go off nicely!" exclaimed Miss Sweetun, enthusi astically. "Yes," said Miss Tartun, "except that poor, dear Fan needn't have been quite so prompt in making her re sponses. She hadn't the slightest rea son to fear that Jack would repent and back out when she had him actu ally at the altar." —Chicago Tribune. Another Version. Jack was just about to build his fa mous house. "Why don't you get some men to help you?" asked a cruious friend. "No, sir," replied Jack, "they would call a strike on me before the house was finished. I'll build it mysel'." Thus we know why the house was called "the house that Jack built."— Chicago Dally News. Parental Solicitude. "Maria, who Is that young chap that's coming to see Bessie?" "His name is Hankinson. He seems to be all right." | "Do you consider him a safe young man?" "Bessie does. She says he's in good circumstances and has been operated on for appendicitis."—Chicago Tri bune. A Confident Forecaster. "The weather bureau needs jes' one thing," said the man who walks with a cane. "Why they have a wonderfully com plete scientific equipment." "Yes. But they ought to have a man with the rhumatism up there to tell 'em dead sure when it's going to rain." —Washington Star. No Trouble. "What is the meaning of 'alter ego?'" asked the teacher of the be ginners' class in Latin. "The other I," said the boy with the curly hair. "Give a sentence containing tho phrase." "He winked his other I." —Chicago Tribune. A Premature Discussion. Miss Flighty—"taave you decided to take any part in the discussion, "What will we do in Heaven?" Good Minister —No, miss. I am at present much more interested in the question, "What shall we do to get there?" —N. Y. Weekly. The Ratio. The statesman strives to be exact, His zeal, he'll ne'er restrain it. It takes a day to state a fact And thirty to explain it. —Washington Star. MIGHT MEAN WAR. "I say, old chap, do you think I look like an Englishman?" "You do, my boy, but don't tell the English, I said so."—Rochester Demo crat-Chronicle. Expensive. We call a girl a priceless pearl. And it is even betting We do it ere we are aware How costly is tile setting. —Puck. G.SCHMIDT'S, 1 HEADQUARTERS FOR Is FRESH BREAD, popular m CONFECTIONERY Dally Delivery. Allorderc given prompt and " •** skillful attention. WHIN IN DOUBT, TRY Th«>h**««lea4 lh*miol lA6AINI Mffori, ISPtll Ik..lifer aAt «M« Mm All df«i»» »»4 lowa n« tlutktd /J.wiiwlir VilwrUM* u> frav«'T ">n4. a>« cmMm alln vmln Uua tin Iwuit riawifllMiiDiiA MaiUS »«l«l t< M' >ia liot-ild !«■>! |uu> J) • i*cut* ai ■•tusSllte •MStMfaMkMk. A44iws rfcAi MIAIOIStf 6*-. 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