''Bad Luck Bank Robbers'' is a 2006 book by Canadian historian Grace Barker about the
Havelock Bank Robbery.
The book documents the robbery, the police chase, the escape, the search and capture of the five robbers, and their trail. It inspired a 2016 play by the same name.
Author
Grace Barker is a Canadian author based in
Campbellford
Campbellford is an unincorporated place and former town in Northumberland County, Ontario, Canada, in the township municipality of Trent Hills. It lies approximately midway between Toronto and Ottawa. It is situated on both the Trent-Severn W ...
, Ontario.
She was supported by former police officer Clive Naismith of Trent Valley Archives during the research of the book.
Barker previously wrote ''Timber Empire: The Exploits of the Entrepreneurial Boyds,'' a historical account of lumber baron
Mossom Boyd
Mossom Boyd (7 December 1814 – 24 July 1883) was an Anglo-Irish entrepreneur who developed and operated a large lumber business on the Trent river system in Ontario, Canada.Curtis, C"Mossom Boyd" ''The Canadian Encyclopedia'' (2008).
Biogra ...
and his family.
Synopsis
The book documents the
Havelock Bank Robbery of the
Toronto Dominion Bank
Toronto-Dominion Bank (french: links=no, Banque Toronto-Dominion), doing business as TD Bank Group (french: links=no, Groupe Banque TD), is a Canadian multinational banking and financial services corporation headquartered in Toronto, Ontario. T ...
in 1961 and the police chase of the robbers.
The book describes the two years of planning that went into the robbery, learning the patterns of the staff and the timing of the managers vacation.
It details the limited capacity of the local police force.
It also talks about the errors made by the robbers, how the local butcher spotted their vehicle and the series of unlucky events that slowed their escape, including a bulldozer blocking road an the breakdown of another vehicle on a single lane road.
The book describes how the delays allowed the police to catch up with the robbers, the subsequent gun fight and then the robbers escape into the Ontario wilderness.
It details the police-led search, the capture and then the trail of four of the robbers, and the death in custody of the fifth.
The book ends by discussing the mystery of the missing $230,000.
Critical reception
Kelsey Powell writing for ''Kawartha Now'' praised the author's evidence gathering and described the book as a "must read" for history fans.
The book inspired a play by the same name that premiered at the
4th Line Theatre The 4th Line Theatre is a Canadian theatre company located near the small town of Millbrook, Ontario in the township of Cavan Monaghan that is dedicated to producing and developing original Canadian theatre, from small-town stories to broad nationa ...
in 2016.
References
External links
Official website''Bank robbery mystery still captures the imagination'' John Campbell, ''Trent Hills Independent'', September 15, 2015
{{Authority control
2006 non-fiction books
Crime books
Bank robberies
Works about crime in Canada