Two officers died that Easter in North Texas. Yet we only recall Bonnie and Clyde | Opinion
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- Texas state patrol officers Ed Wheeler and H.D. Murphy,were killed on Dove Road in 1934.
- Community efforts led to a Dove Road marker funded by charity and a monument company.
- Doris Edwards and survivors said glorifying Bonnie and Clyde insults victims' families.
(First published Match 31, 2024.)
That bloody Easter Sunday is more than 90 years gone.
Almost nobody talks anymore about the two law officers killed on Dove Road.
Maybe Doris Brown Edwards was right. We forgot her husband, state patrol officer Ed Wheeler of Fort Worth, and rookie partner H.D. Murphy, shot dead 12 days short of his wedding.
But we remember Clyde Barrow, Bonnie Parker and Henry Methvin.
On Easter morning 1934, Wheeler missed taking his wife to Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth.
That afternoon, he and Murphy lay dead by their motorcycles on Dove Road, then a country lane off what is now Texas 114.
When Edwards called the Star-Telegram in 1996, she was fed up with a new round of movies and TV specials.
“What is everybody thinking?” she asked, breaking her silence of more than 60 years.
“My husband was killed by Bonnie and Clyde.”
The story of Wheeler and Murphy is not some faded news clipping.
It’s Doris Edwards’ story.
Wheeler, 26, had met Doris on a traffic stop in her hometown of Arlington along West Division Street near Fielder Road. They had married and moved into an apartment in the Fairmount neighborhood.
Murphy, 22, had picked out a Fort Worth apartment with his fiancee. School classmate Maree Tullis was 21, both from the East Texas town of Alto.
Instead of a wedding, Tullis wore her wedding dress to his funeral in Alto.
“It was the most tragic story ever, and Maree was never really the same,” said Cherokee County Judge Chris Davis, organizer of an exhibit on Murphy at the courthouse in nearby Rusk.
When the movie “Bonnie and Clyde” came out in 1967, Davis said, “We were kids, and we thought they were heroes. Then we found out our whole hometown grew up with a guy who got killed.”
Barrow, then 25, and sidekick Parker, 23, of Dallas, were near the end of their two-year Depression-era robbery and murder spree across Texas and the Midwest.
Henry Methvin, 21, shot first.
When the officers surprised the three, parked and waiting for an Easter meeting with family members, Methvin panicked and shot Wheeler.
Then Barrow shot Murphy.
Murphy’s bullets were still in his pocket.
The date was April 1, 1934.
It was Murphy’s first day on patrol after a training assignment at the Arlington Downs horse racing track.
“When he grew up in Alto, you couldn’t have found a poorer place in Texas,” Davis said.
“Some kids didn’t even have shoes. A lot of people made whiskey for a living. They were good, Christian people, but it was either do that or starve.”
A job as a patrol officer, then part of the highway department, paid $150 a month.
In a 1996 interview, Edwards remembered listening to the radio in their apartment that 1934 morning and how Wheeler loved hearing the new Broadway song “Easter Parade.”
When he left for patrol, she drove to join her family in Arlington. When she came back that afternoon, a funeral director was parked outside with the news.
I’ll never forget her 1996 phone call after one of the Barrow sisters made the circuit of talk shows.
“It’s like we don’t even count,” she said, then 85 and speaking for the widows left by Bonnie and Clyde and all survivors of fallen officers.
“I’m just one of hundreds of officers’ widows,” she said.
“Glorifying these killers insults all of us.”
Three months later, thanks to an Austin-area charity and a gift by a Rockdale monument company, Edwards stood by proudly as we dedicated a Dove Road marker to the memory of Wheeler and Murphy.
We lost Edwards in 2007. She was 96.
Today, Southlake has grown up around the marker.
But visitors often leave fresh flowers.
Not everyone has forgotten.
This story was originally published March 31, 2026 at 4:19 AM with the headline "Two officers died that Easter in North Texas. Yet we only recall Bonnie and Clyde | Opinion."