hmtl5 Earl Cassity b. 29 Nov 1907 Brookfield, Linn County, Missouri d. 5 Oct 1983 Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska: Hedges Genealogy

Earl Cassity

Male 1907 - 1983  (75 years)


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  • Name Earl Cassity 
    Born 29 Nov 1907  Brookfield, Linn County, Missouri Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Gender Male 
    Died 5 Oct 1983  Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska Find all individuals with events at this location  [2, 3
    Buried Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Gretna, Sarpy County, Nebraska Find all individuals with events at this location  [2, 3
    Person ID I4477  Hedges
    Last Modified 9 May 2023 

    Father James H. Cassity,   b. Feb 1880, Linn County, Missouri Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 11 Dec 1915, Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 35 years) 
    Mother Velma Myrtle Barnette,   b. 1886, Missouri Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Feb 1974, Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 88 years) 
    Married 29 Apr 1906  Appanoose County, Iowa Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F1966  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Ann Barron,   b. 4 Jan 1911, Gretna, Sarpy County, Nebraska Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 27 Mar 1992  (Age 81 years) 
    Last Modified 7 Nov 2021 
    Family ID F2002  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 29 Nov 1907 - Brookfield, Linn County, Missouri Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 5 Oct 1983 - Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBuried - - Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Gretna, Sarpy County, Nebraska Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 
    Pin Legend  : Address       : Location       : City/Town       : County/Shire       : State/Province       : Country       : Not Set

  • Notes 
    • Cassity – Earl, age 75 years of 617 So. 19th St. Survived by wife, Ann A.
      Funeral services Sat. 10AM at Mortuary. Interment St. Patrick’s Cemetery, Gretna, NE. Visitation with family Fri. 6-8PM at Mortuary.
      Fitch & Cole Chapel, Farnam at 36th St. 344-4777
      Omaha World-Herald, Omaha, Nebraska. Thursday, 6 October 1983.
      [3, 4]
    • Boy Says Stole Auto To Win Girls’ Favor
      Dance Hall Check Boy Gives Police Names Three “Sheik Bandit” Suspects.
      Caught in First “Job”
      Earl Cassity, 17, check boy at a local dance hall, longed for a motor car so he could be popular with the girls, he told Detectives Buglewicz and Miklas after they had arrested him with a car they charge he stole a few minutes before from near the Grain Exchange.
      “It was the first one I ever took,” the boy said. “I had experimented on a dozen or more, but never had been able to back them away from the curb. This one was parked so I could drive it forward.”
      The officers arrested the boy when they spotted the stolen car in front of them.
      Detective Miklas said the boy gave him names of three “sheik bandits” who had ben patronizing the dance hall where he and his mother, Mrs. Velma Cassidy, 620 South Seventeenth street, operated a check stand. They had confided hold ups in him, he said.
      Earl was in jail last July after he shot himself through the hand while trying out some guns he and a chum said they took from a sporting goods house. He also was charged with being one of the gang which tried to haul away the safe from Pelton’s garage and abandoned both truck and safe. He was paroled at that time to his mother.
      Omaha World-Herald, Omaha, Nebraska. Sunday, 25 January 1925, page 3.
      [4]
    • Dance Halls Blamed for Youth’s Fall
      Poolhalls During Day and Girls at Night Demand Money, Boy Tells Police After Arrest
      Names Companions
      A round of pool halls in the day time and dance halls at night, indulged in by a group of Omaha boys whose names have not been made public, was described to detectives Saturday night by Earl Cassidy, 17, 620 South Seventeenth street, who was arrested for an alleged automobile theft.
      Detectives Buglewicz and Micklas arrested young Cassidy late Saturday, after receiving a report that a car had been stolen from in front of the Grain Exchange building.
      “Pardner” of Theft Suspect.
      In this confession Cassiday admitted that he was a “pardner” of Orvis Bonham, 18, now in county jail awaiting trail for burglary. These two youths are believed by police to have attempted some 30 daring robberies, may of which turned out so badly that the youths’ efforts seems almost Don Quixotic.
      One of the attempted robberies was at the Pelton garage, twenty-second and Farnam streets, in which the youths used an automobile wrecking derrick to lift a safe into a Stutz car. They then discovered that they could not operated the car in which they had place the safe, nor even start it.
      Had Enough Guns to Start War.
      Another of their exploits, young Cassidy told detectives, was the burglarizing of a sporting goods house, when they obtained enough guns to start a war, but found to their dismay that they didn’t know how to shoot them.
      They persevered, however, establishing a rifle range north of Florence. But young Cassidy accidentally shot himself, and as a result he and Benham were arrested. Cassidy was arraigned in juvenile court and paroled to his mother, Mrs. Velma Cassidy, who operated the check stand at a dancing academy.
      Young Cassidy defended the actions of the three boys whose names he gave to police, declaring that the cost of shooting pool and doing the dance halls necessitated the business of raising money in some manner. They have no time to earn money any way except by stealing it, the said, according to the detectives.
      Perfects Ford Key.
      Cassidy’s arrest occurred Saturday only a few minutes after he had taken the car. He said he had perfected a key for stealing Fords, but that he tried 17 before he succeeded in getting one of the temperamental machines under way. He explained that he was none too adept at driving any kind of car, and that he couldn’t back any out, but finally found one which stood parallel with the street. He had only drive as far as Eighteenth and Douglas streets, and was proceeding cautiously when the detectives discovered him, ran him into the curb and arrested him.
      Cassidy steadfastly denied that he, himself, came under the sheik class. He declared he couldn’t’ dance, and really hadn’t intended to steal the car.
      “I just wanted to take some girls for a ride,” he said.
      Omaha Daily Bee, Omaha, Nebraska. Sunday, 25 January 1925, page 1.
      [4]

  • Sources 
    1. [S48] US World War II draft registration.

    2. [S6] Find a Grave.

    3. [S9] Obituary.

    4. [S87] Newspaper article.