From the 1790s to the 1870s, the area around Cave-in-Rock was plagued by what historians as early as the 1830s referred to as the "Ancient Colony of Horse-Thieves, Counterfeiters and Robbers", and better known today due to Otto Rothert's history early in the 20th century as the "Outlaws of Cave-in-Rock". In 1790, counterfeiters
Philip Alston and
John Duff (or John McElduff) used the cave as some type of rendezvous, though details are scarce. Although folklore printed in 19th century histories failed to establish a prior connection between the two men, both had lived in the area of
Natchez, Mississippi, at the start of the
Revolutionary War. Duff was living upriver a few miles, either at Battery Rock or across the Ohio River at what would become
Caseyville, Kentucky, when in 1797
Samuel Mason moved his base of operations from
Diamond Island and
Red Banks to the cave and made it the home of river pirates. Two of Mason's brothers had been business partners of Duff in
Kaskaskia, Illinois, in the 1780s. Mason created a combination
tavern,
gambling den,
brothel, and criminal refuge. His men lured in gullible river travelers and then robbed and killed them. James Wilson, also known as Bully Wilson, may actually have been an
alias for Samuel Mason, the next leader of the gang after Mason's hasty departure, or possibly the front man for Mason's operation. He may be the Wilson who married one of Mason's nieces. In 1799, he hung a sign over the cave's entrance saying "Wilson's Liquor Vault and House for Entertainment". By this time, Duff and his associates had been making salt (or looking for
silver) in the area around the
Illinois Salines along the
Saline River in southeastern Illinois. A
detachment from the
U.S. Army garrison at
Fort Massac, down river from Cave-In-Rock, captured him and three of his men, Blakely, Hazle and Hall. The soldiers took their prisoners by boat down the Saline River to the Ohio River, intending to return to the fort. Old histories do not explain why they stopped at the cave. Subsequent events suggest it took place during the spring of 1799, when Wilson was in business, making it a stop for entertainment. Duff and his men escaped and overpowered the soldiers. They tied them up, put them in a boat, and pushed it into the river to float downstream to the fort. On June 4, 1799, the
commandant of Fort Massac, Captain Zebulon Pike Sr., father of the future explorer of
Pikes Peak, hired a
French Canadian coureur de bois and three
Shawnee warriors to assassinate Duff, which they did. The infamous
Harpe brothers also reached the cave region in the spring of 1799. They are associated with two separate stories at the cave and one at the infamous Potts Spring area to the north. The first story has them pushing a young couple off the top of the cliff above the cave. They survived. The second was an act of piracy in which only one man survived. Later, he was forced off the cliff as well, this time involving the man being tied down to a horse. Neither survived. The Potts Spring story is recalled as a murder of two or three hunters. This Harpe murder site within twenty years would become the future location of the legendary
Potts Inn, which was presumed to be a human death trap for unsuspecting travelers along the
Ford's Ferry High Water Road, an early frontier highway, who wanted to spend the night for food and lodging. Mason and Wilson's time at the cave may have come to an end during the summer of 1799, when they were attacked by a group of
bounty hunters/
vigilantes under the leadership of Captain Young calling themselves "The Exterminators". No contemporary accounts attest to river pirates occupying the cave in the first decade of the 19th century. The Harpes retreated back into Kentucky, while Mason traveled downriver and began to focus on highway robbery along the
Natchez Trace. The next generation of outlaws in the region sprang either from the
Sturdivant Gang, a group of counterfeiters based at
Sturdivant Fort, on top of the bluffs overlooking the Ohio River at what is now
Rosiclare, Illinois; or the
Ford's Ferry Gang led by
James Ford, based a few miles upriver from the cave at what became known as Ford's Ferry, Kentucky. Law enforcement officials led three raids against Sturdivant Fort in 1822 and 1823. Although it is not clear what happened following the raids, the gang had disappeared from the area by 1830. The Ford's Ferry Gang was broken up following the mysterious deaths or murders of James Ford's two sons, followed by his own assassination in 1833. Even after the death of Ford, outlaws remained.
Isaiah L. Potts operated Potts Inn on the Ford's Ferry High Water Road in Illinois north of the cave. Travelers checked in, but sometimes failed to check out. This presumed frontier hotel was very similar to the
Bloody Benders' Wayside Inn, which appeared fifty years later in
Labette County, Kansas. The legend of
Billy Potts, the returning son who was murdered unknowingly by his father, likely took place in the months following Ford's assassination. This tragic story of
poetic justice has taken on
folklorish proportions. Records show the elder Potts and his wife separated in 1834 or 1835. Eson Bigsby (the first name sometimes spelled "Eason" or "Enos" and the last name sometimes spelled "Bixby") took up counterfeiting in Hardin County in the decades following the Sturdivants. His attack on his wife Anna in an effort to find out where her first husband's money was buried dates to the early 1860s and led to the legends of Anna Bixby, her treasure and her ghost. She survived running off a cliff in the dark. She is the namesake of the
Anna Bixby Women's Center in nearby
Harrisburg, Illinois. Although not completely connected to the "Ancient Colony", Logan Belt and the Logan Belt Gang terrorized Hardin County in the 1870s and 1880s, until Belt was assassinated. in 2013 In the middle of the 1800s, church services were being held in the cave. This earliest Christian
congregation eventually formed the Big Creek
Baptist Church. Founded in 1807, it was the first church organized in southeastern Illinois. Cave-In-Rock incorporated in 1839, in the same year that Hardin County was created from a section of
Pope County. According to the
Illinois Department of Natural Resources, "in 1929, the State of Illinois acquired for a park that since has increased to . The well-wooded, hills and the rugged bluffs along the river—commanding expansive views of the famous waterway—became
Cave-In-Rock State Park". ==Geography==