From Deseret News archives:
Little left of Butch's life in Circleville
CIRCLEVILLE The house where Butch Cassidy was raised is unmarked.
And so, if you believe the locals, is his grave.
I arrived at the Circleville city limits early on a morning washed clean by thunderstorms the night before. As a rooster crowed nearby, I pulled into the parking lot of Butch Cassidy's Hideout Cafe, where the eggs were already cooking inside. I asked a friendly teenage waitress named Ashley the obvious.
"So where's Butch's place?"
Ashley answered without a flinch. "Just before you come into town is the house where he grew up," she said. "It's just off the highway; you can go see it if you want."
So I did, retracing my route two miles just beyond mile marker 156 on Highway 89, where sure enough, about 100 yards across a hay field stood an old wooden house with mud mortar between the planks.
Who'd have thought this would lead to that?
I rode back to the cafe and asked Ashley if any of Butch's kin might still be in Circleville, and she referred me up the road to a gas station and convenience store called The Station. "You'll get more details there," she said.
She was right. Kirk Fullmer was behind the counter, and not only did he verify that the wooden shack on the outskirts of Circleville is the old Parker place, but he was a wealth of additional information. He said he is old enough to remember when Butch's sister, Lula Parker Betenson, was still alive.
"I talked to Lula when I was a boy," he said. "She's the one who wrote the book about Butch never dying in Bolivia like they said. When he heard that he was dead, he just came back here and laid low. Which was fine with him. He worked for a while as a security guard in Nevada and then died of natural causes."
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