George "Dutch" Anderson was a Danish-born criminal who helped lead an early Prohibition-era gang in the United States from 1919 until the mid-1920s.
Background
Anderson was born Ivan Dahl von Teler to a wealthy Danish family circa 1880, Anderson graduated from the University of Uppsala and Heidelberg studying music, literature and several languages before emigrating to the United States around the beginning of the 20th century.
Education
Although he attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison for a time, Anderson eventually dropped out and, by 1907 had begun committing petty thefts.
Career
He was considered a mentor to his comrade Gerald Chapman, who was perhaps the most famous bandit of the 1920s. He was in and out of prisons in Illinois, Ohio and Wisconsin until 1914. In 1917, Anderson was arrested by police in Rochester, New New York
Sentenced to five years for burglary in Auburn State Prison, Anderson became acquainted with bank robber Gerald Chapman.
Influenced by the better-educated Anderson, the young Chapman became a voracious reader and self-styled gentleman, and was later known as the "Count of Gramercy Park."
Following both men"s paroles in 1919, they began bootlegging operations in Toledo, Ohio and Detroit, Michigan. In late 1921, along with former Auburn inmate Charles Loeber, Anderson and Chapman began committing armed robberies.
The three men eluded identification for months. They were eventually arrested by United States Postal Inspectors William Doran, Jim Doyle and William Cochraine on July 3, 1922, after Chapman attempted to sell Argentine gold notes (stolen during the Leonard Street mail robbery) to an undercover Postal Inspector posing as a stock broker.
Anderson and Chapman were both sentenced to 25 years at the Atlanta Federal Prison.
Anderson escaped from the Atlanta prison on December 30, 1923, six months after Chapman"s more dramatic escape from the same facility. They were believed to have teamed up again on several robberies. Chapman, wanted in the killing of a Connecticut police officer, was recaptured on January 18, 1925, in Muncie, Indiana, due to local informant Ben Hance.
Authorities saw the double murder as revenge by Anderson and his gang for Chapman"s capture.
Through his passing of counterfeit money, Anderson was eventually traced to Muskegon, Michigan. On October 31, 1925, Police Officer Charles Hammond spotted him there, and the ensuing gunfight left both men dead.
Anderson"s more notorious protégé, Chapman, was convicted of murder and was hanged in Connecticut in 1926.