The Locksmith Journal Jul-Aug 2014 - Issue 33 | Page 36

PROUD SPONSORS OF THIS PAGE HISTORYOFLOCKS The Yale Double Pindial Time Lock Lock historian BRIAN MORLAND provides another fascinating insight into the historical development of locks and safes, in which crimes and criminals - such as notorious outlaw Jesse James - played a part. Safes, in the scheme of things are a relatively modern invention. Certainly, there were boxes stoutly made of oak and banded with iron, and the later Georgian cast iron strongboxes. From the early 19th century safes evolved into those efficient steel doors and receptacles with patent anti-pick and anti-violence properties and becoming impregnable to those that might wield a crowbar or try it with black powder. The years from around the mid 1860s saw the birth of another worrying trend of safe opening. A spate of intimidating and violent armed bank robberies by a gang headed by Robert C Scott, Billy Connors and Rufus Ring in the USA finally convinced bankers to fit Time Locks. Bankers and their families were terrorised into opening their safes and vaults by armed gangs, sometimes the banker paying the ultimate price. The incident known as the ‘The Great Northampton, Massachusetts Robbery’ was pivotal to banking institutions adopting time locks. Over one and a half million dollars in cash and securities were stolen after hours of terrorising of not just the bank officials but also their families. Another incident where the infamous Jesse James was thwarted by a time lock thus proved its value. James had fought for the south during the American Civil War, but after it was over he carried on robbing banks, stage coaches and trains. Very often seeking vengeance for the Confederate defeat, although there were one or two spectacular robberies from banks the spoils very often not amounting to much, he revelled in the publicity though, good or bad, depending on where sympathies were - in the north or the south. What was achieved , however, was Jesse James c1886. In