Great train robbery (1963)
From Freepedia
The Great Train Robbery was the name given to a train robbery that was committed on August 8, 1963 at Bridego Railway Bridge, Ledburn near Mentmore in Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom.
The Royal Mail's Glasgow to London travelling post office (TPO) train was stopped by tampered signals. The 15-member gang, led by Bruce Reynolds and including Ronnie Biggs, Charlie Wilson, Jimmy Hussey, John Wheater, Brian Field, Jimmy White, Tommy Wisbey, Gordon Goody and Buster Edwards, got away with £2.6 million. Although no guns were used in the robbery, Edwards struck the train driver, Jack Mills, on the head with an iron bar. Mills never fully recovered from the attack and never returned to work. He died in 1970.
Thirteen of the gang members were caught after police discovered their fingerprints in their Oxfordshire farmhouse hide-out. The robbers were tried, sentenced and imprisoned. Biggs escaped from prison 15 months into his sentence, eventually settling in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Charlie Wilson escaped and was living outside Montreal, Canada on Rigaud Mountain. In the upper-middle-class neighbourhood where the large, secluded properties are surrounded by trees, Wilson was just another resident who enjoyed his privacy. Only when his wife made the mistake of telephoning her parents in England, was Scotland Yard able to track him down.
Despite the injury to the train driver, the robbery and escape are regarded by many as highly romantic, and Ronnie Biggs is treated affectionately by some of the British tabloid press.
In May 2001 Biggs, aged 71, returned to Britain. He had suffered several strokes and had indicated his desire to return to England even if it meant being imprisoned. He was.
The story of Ronald "Buster" Edwards, who fled to Mexico but later surrendered to authorities, was dramatised in the 1988 film, Buster, which starred Phil Collins in the title role. Edwards became a flower seller outside Waterloo Station on his release from prison, and also allegedly a police informer. He apparently committed suicide in 1994.
One of the TPO carriages involved is now preserved at Birmingham Railway Museum.
The robbery was investigated by Detective Chief Superintendent Jack Slipper of the Metropolitan Police (widely known in the Press as "Slipper of the Yard"), who became so involved with its aftermath that he continued to hunt down many of the escaped robbers in retirement. He was one of those who believed Ronnie Biggs should not be released after returning to the UK in 2001 and he regularly appeared in the media to comment on any news item connected to the robbery. He died aged 81 on August 24, 2005 after a long illness.
The stolen money was never recovered.



