Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Rich Hill Depot Ambush: The Tragedy of Constable Samuel Queen

 

The Rich Hill Depot Ambush: The Tragedy of Constable Samuel Queen

Part 1: "You'll Never Get Me to Butler"

In the late autumn of 1913, the quiet roads of Bates County, Missouri, became a pipeline for a modern kind of outlaw. Automobiles were still a luxury, but to a sophisticated ring of thieves operating out of Kansas City, they were a goldmine. The syndicate specialized in grand larceny—stealing high-end motor cars from the city, altering their markings, and trafficking them down through rural border towns like Hume and Rich Hill to be sold off illegally.

But on Sunday, November 23, 1913, Howard Township Constable Samuel L. Queen put a wrench in their gears.

Constable Queen, a respected 40-year-old lawman, along with his deputy, Charles Horton, had successfully tracked down and arrested one of the key operatives of this multi-state auto theft ring: a hardened, dangerous criminal named Dale Jones. Eager to secure the high-value prisoner and get him to the county jail, Queen transported Jones into Rich Hill to await the evening Missouri Pacific train to Butler.

While they waited inside the old Rich Hill jail, an eerie, arrogant confidence settled over the prisoner.

Jones didn't look or act like a man facing a prison sentence. Instead, he looked directly at the lawman and began to taunt him. Over and over, Jones repeated a chilling warning: "You'll never get me to Butler. I'm telling you, you'll never get me to Butler."

Word of the arrest and the prisoner's bold taunts quickly leaked out into the streets. As the afternoon wore on, a heavy sense of dread blanketed the community. The talk of Rich Hill that Sunday wasn't about the upcoming winter or local gossip; it was about the dangerous man sitting in their jail cells. The whole town doubted that the transfer would go smoothly. Whispers passed from neighbor to neighbor, repeating the criminal’s own words: He’ll never make it to Butler.

But Constable Queen had a job to do. As evening fell, he and Deputy Horton marched a shackled Dale Jones out of the jail and down to the bustling Rich Hill railroad depot.

It should have been a routine prisoner transfer. Instead, the town's worst fears were about to come true.

Jones’s syndicate wasn't about to let their man talk to the authorities, and they had used the afternoon to set a deadly trap. In a coordinated ambush, two heavily armed accomplices closed in on the station. One of those men, a cold-blooded gunman named John Shead, quietly slipped unnoticed onto the passenger car, while his partner took up a position outside on the depot platform.

Just as the locomotive hissed steam on the tracks, preparing to pull out of the Rich Hill station, the train car erupted into a warzone.

Without warning, John Shead and his partner opened fire, catching the lawmen in a vicious crossfire inside the crowded train car. Bullets shattered glass and tore through the wooden passenger seats as terrified travelers scrambled for cover. Constable Queen drew his weapon and fought back bravely, but he was caught in the open. John Shead's bullets struck the constable twice—once in the arm, and once heavily in the abdomen.

In the blinding chaos and gunsmoke, Shead and his accomplice managed to overpower the remaining lawmen, break a smirking Dale Jones free from his shackles, and vanish into the dark Rich Hill night.

Constable Queen was rushed back to his home in Hume by Tuesday noon. Though a tough frontier lawman, his abdominal wounds proved too severe. Pneumonia set in, and on Friday, November 28, 1913, Samuel Queen breathed his last, leaving behind his grieving wife, Daisy, and a young daughter, Rita.

Dale Jones had spoken his grim prophecy into existence: he never made it to Butler that night. But the killing of Constable Queen would unleash a relentless, multi-state manhunt that would span from the streets of Kansas City all the way to the coast of California...

Stay tuned for Part 2 and Part 3, where we follow the trail of a dramatic dynamite plot to blow up the Bates County jail, the capture of the shooter John Shead, and the violent "Bonnie and Clyde" style final showdown of Dale Jones on the West Coast.