Outlaws and Lawmen

All Episodes

  • Ended
  • 1h
  • Documentary
You know the names - Jesse James, Bat Masterson, Wyatt Earp, Pretty Boy Floyd, Bonnie & Clyde, John Dillinger, The Wild Bunch - but do you know their stories? From the end of the Civil War to the mid-1930s notorious lawmen and lawbreakers rose from obscurity to legend with the twitch of a trigger finger. They were the heroes and villains whose myths shaped our heritage, but the truth has rarely been explored. This magnificent mini-series sheds new light on the saints and sinners in a unique, entertaining and all-American tale that shoots straight from the hip. Executive producer for Discovery Channel: Angus Yates ; created and written by John Byrne Cooke ; Produced by TELENOVA Productions, Inc. in association with DISCOVERY CHANNEL

4 episodes

Series Premiere

1x01 Legacy of War

Series Premiere

1x01 Legacy of War

  • no air date1h

Meet armed bandits like the legendary Missouri outlaw Jesse James with his older brother Frank and the Younger brothers who in the wake of the Civil War committed crimes that were unknown before that time – holding up banks and robbing trains at gunpoint.

1x02 Tall in the Saddle

  • no air date1h

Learn "Who's Who" of the West. This episode profiles some famous outlaws, gunslingers, bank robbers and gang leaders of the wild west along with the famous lawmen who chased them, including Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, Wild Bill Hickock and Bat Masterson.

1x03 The Train Robbers

  • no air date1h

Revisit the daring robberies which escalated the conflict between the law and the bandit gangs. Cole Younger, James brothers, Sam Bass and Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch gang were the last of the old-time western bank and train robbers, a colorful group of outlaws with distinctive personalities and a flair for the flamboyant.

1x04 A New Breed

  • no air date1h

From the depths of the U.S. Great Depression, a new class of rural bandits emerged – outlaws in the Midwest began racing through the heartland robbing banks. To some citizens who had lost all their savings in bank closures, these outlaws were often seen as contemporary Robin Hoods. The newcomers – Bonnie and Clyde, Pretty Boy Floyd, Ma Barker and her brood tommy gun their way into history.

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