Prisoners Breaking Jail
“About 1
o’clock Tuesday night Sheriff Burns was awakened at his
house by Frank Record, recently
confined in the county jail here on a charge of
horse stealing, who informed him that the remaining prisoners
had made good their escape from the
building.
Hurrying to the spot the sheriff found the report only too
true, as but one prisoner remained in the jail, a Chinaman
arrested about two weeks ago, while Jacob Byard, who was
awaiting trail for
murder in Hall Valley some months back, and Charles Buck,
arrested on a charge of attempted assault, had both
fled.
According to Record’s story Byard has been at work ever since
his imprisonment trying to cut his way out of the cell using
for this purpose a
small saw which is supposed to have been left secreted in the
jail by some former prisoners. In fact, Ernest Christison,
while confined there on a charge of cattle stealing, is
said to have commenced cutting through the steel wall of the
cell nearest the rear of the building, beginning at a point in
the wall about shoulder high and cutting downward, and to have
progressed about six inches, and it was a continuation of this
that Byard worked upon.
As Record has frequently been playing a violin in the jail in
the evening, it may have been that Byard accomplished much of
his work under cover of the sound of the instrument, and this
being the darkest portion of the building is probably a reason
for its not being discovered. Finally, on Tuesday night, he
had succeeded in cutting an opening about 10X16 inches in the
steel wall of the cell, through which he and his fellow
prisoners got into the corridor between the cage and the otter
wall.
Here they first tried to pry open one of the windows, but
failing in that, mounted upon the flat top of the cage from which they
reached the trap door leading into the upper portion of the
jail. Walking
along to the rear end of the building they commenced to remove
stones from the gable, working directly under the point of the
roof.
It did not take long to remove enough stone and lime from the
wall to allow of a man climbing through the
aperture. This
accomplished, one of the prisoners reached the roof through the
opening, and making his way to the front end, secured a ladder
which stood against the building. Carrying this to the rear of
the jail and placing one end upon the ground, the prisoners
easily made their escape.
Upon getting out of the building Byard and Buck are supposed to
have at once started off, while Record first went to his
father’s house, not far from the jail, and in a short time went
and aroused the sheriff as above
stated.
Men on horseback were sent in different directions as soon as
possible, and the telegraph wires have been used to make public
the escape and description of the prisoners, and cause their
arrest. Up to this
time, however, they have not been captured.” FLUME 3/24/1884.
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