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Song from the gallows
Gallows ballads were once as common as turkey buzzards in Illinois. The scaffold, it seems, was a sure inspiration to poets and condemned prisoners, who recorded their adventures and misdeeds in popular songs that were often as entertaining as they were morally instructive. Shachna Itzik Birger, better know as Charlie Birger, was arguably the most notorious and beloved outlaw in southern Illinois history. His crimes included murder, arson, bootlegging, procuring, kidnapping, extortion, bribery, and theft. Birger's gang of thugs ran the Shady Rest, a mean roadhouse in Williamson County, and were once proudly photographed hugging their machine guns. Yet the outlaw was considered by many to be a gentleman and a philanthropist, a man who took care of his friends and neighbors. Justice caught up with Birger in 1928. He was publicly hanged on April 19, outside the courthouse in Benton. His ballad, penned by songwriter Carson Robinson, was recorded by Vernon Dalhart in the late 1920s.
"The Hanging of Charles Birger"
I'll tell you of a bandit,
This bandit's name was Birger;
Then Thomasson was captured
On the 19th day of April
The Ten Commandments
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