Lord Gordon-Gordon: The Erie Swindle That Almost Started a
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A fake Scottish lord conned Jay Gould out of nearly a million in Erie stock, then Minnesota sent a posse over the Canadian border to grab him back.
Horace Greeley vouched for him. Jay Gould handed him $40,000 as pocket-money commission. When 'Lord Gordon-Gordon' skipped to a Manitoba farmhouse in 1872, a group of Minneapolis worthies — including a future governor — crossed the border, bagged him, and got themselves arrested by the Mounted Police for their trouble. Minnesota called up the state militia; the Lieutenant Governor demanded extradition; the whole mess almost cracked the young Dominion open. Then, hours after his hearing ended in August 1874, Gordon-Gordon shot himself, and nobody ever did learn who he actually was.
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The Footnote runs on cold coffee, old newspapers, and an unreasonable amount of time spent in archives nobody else visits. None of which pays. If the show is worth a few dollars a month to you, this is where you say so — and you’ll be personally funding a man’s refusal to get a normal hobby. Either way, thank you for listening. — Wendell
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