Banditti of the Prairie Robert Birch became involved in crime, as a teenager, being described by Bonney, as "suspected of robbery and even of murder ever since he had attained the age of fifteen". Robert Birch was a close associate of bandit, William Fox, as both were considered notorious "prairie pirates" and longtime members of what were called the
Banditti of the Prairie. Birch was a self-styled Mormon, who conveniently, used his church membership, as a Latter Day Saint, to gain protection in Nauvoo, Illinois, when the law was hot on his trail. criminal gang leader
John A. Murrell from the only known, accurate portrait made of him during his lifetime. Robert Birch was said to have had criminal connections with Murrell but this is highly improbable since he would have been only a seven-year-old child or possibly Birch's criminal father was associated with John A. Murrell. in 1858 in helping found
Arizona's first
gold rush boom town
Gila City in which Birch became the first
postmaster. He would later join Snively and
James W. Hicks in discovering gold deposits on Bear Creek. The ghost town
Pinos Altos was first named Birchville in his honor. , Robert Birch enlisted in the
Confederate Army in the
Rebel-held, southern half of the
Union New Mexico Territory, known as the
Confederate Territory of Arizona with
Company A, Arizona Rangers. The Rangers would later occupy
Tucson in February 1862, raising the
national flag of the
Confederate States of America. in the
Texas 2nd Cavalry of the
Confederate Army on the
Rio Grande Alleged criminal connections with John A. Murrell Robert Birch, may have had ties to Tennessee outlaw,
John A. Murrell and his Mystic Clan, using a number of criminal aliases including; Robert Harris, R. Harris, R. Haris, Haris, Owin, Haines, Gains, Thomas Brown, Tom Brown, Robert Blecher, R. H. Blecher. But, this claim does not hold up to scrutiny, as Birch would have been only seven years old, in 1834, when Murrell was arrested and began serving his ten-year prison sentence. Robert Birch, more likely, might have had older relatives, such as his father, uncles, or cousins, who were on the Mystic Clan's membership rolls in the
U.S. Southern states or were connected to outlaws who were Murrell associates. After the demise of Murrell, many of the members of the future "Banditti" were driven out of "The South" and to avoid arrest, execution, or death at the hands of
regulators and moved farther north, relocating their criminal activities in the still, lawless, frontier of the
Middle West, mainly in the states of
Illinois,
Indiana, and
Ohio.
Torture-murder of Colonel Davenport, arrest, and escape When Robert Birch was 18 years old, he was alleged by
James Henry Tevis of being involved in the torture-murder of Colonel
George Davenport at his home on July 4, 1845. Robert Birch was one of several members later identified by
Edward Bonney who had infiltrated the gang as a bogus
counterfeiter. Ironically, three years earlier, Bonney had been arrested and charged with
counterfeiting in
Indiana but escaped before his conviction. Birch was soon apprehended, in part due to information from Bonney, and he soon agreed to testify against the others in exchange for a reduced sentence. Granville Young and brothers John and Aaron Long were later executed for the murder. After several court delays, Robert Birch broke out of jail, through outside help or bribery, in
Knoxville, Illinois, March 22, 1847. ==Honest pursuits in New Mexico Territory==