On the evening of June 18, 1933, along a quiet stretch of road near Bloomington in Magoffin County, Kentucky, three young men were walking home from work—unaware they were being watched.
Within moments, gunfire erupted from the hillsides.
When the shooting stopped, two were dead, and a third lay gravely wounded.
The Victims
The men targeted that night were members of the Brown family:
- Dudley “Dud” Brown, 20
- Russell “Russ” Brown, 32
- Saul “Sol” Brown, 19 (seriously wounded)
According to contemporary newspaper accounts, the three were traveling along a path near Bloomington—roughly ten miles from Salyersville—when they were ambushed by hidden gunmen, described in multiple reports as “snipers.”
The attackers had chosen their position carefully.
They struck without warning.
A Deadly Ambush
The weapon used was described as a shotgun loaded with slugs, a devastating choice at close range.
Dudley Brown reportedly absorbed as many as sixteen slug wounds, a detail that underscores the sheer brutality of the attack. Both Dudley and Russell were killed instantly.
Saul Brown, shot in the head with at least two slugs, somehow survived the initial assault. He was rushed first to a hospital in Paintsville and later transported to Good Samaritan Hospital in Lexington, where he was listed in serious condition but with what doctors described as a “fighting chance.”
A Pattern of Violence
This was not an isolated act.
In fact, reports at the time emphasized a chilling detail:
This marked the fifth killing of Brown family members in similar ambush-style attacks.
The roots of the violence appear to trace back to earlier conflicts involving the Brown family and others in the region.
- Noah Brown, father of Russell, had been killed previously in the same general area.
- Fred Patrick had once been charged in that killing—but was acquitted after claiming self-defense.
- Dudley Brown himself had been among a group previously charged in the ambush killing of Norman Triplett, a case that also ended in acquittal.
Names like Patrick, Triplett, and Brown appear repeatedly—suggesting not random violence, but a long-running feud or cycle of retaliation.
Confusion in the Headlines
Interestingly, many newspapers at the time misreported the location of the crime, placing it in Paintsville or Johnson County.
In reality, the ambush occurred near Bloomington in Magoffin County—a correction that helps properly anchor the event in its true historical and geographical context.
This kind of reporting error was not uncommon in the 1930s, especially when stories were distributed through wire services like the Associated Press and rewritten by distant editors unfamiliar with Eastern Kentucky geography.
No Arrests. No Justice.
Despite the scale and brutality of the crime, no arrests were ever made.
A posse was reportedly formed, but even at the time, newspapers expressed little confidence that the killers would be captured.
And they never were.
A Forgotten Chapter of Appalachian Violence
Today, the Bloomington ambush is largely forgotten—reduced to scattered newspaper clippings and fragmented memories.
But the story reflects a broader reality of the era:
- Isolated communities
- Deep family divisions
- Cycles of retaliation
- And justice systems that often failed to resolve underlying conflicts
The killing of Dudley and Russell Brown—and the near-fatal wounding of Saul Brown—was not just a single act of violence.
It was part of something larger.
Something older.
And something that, in many cases, was never fully settled.
Closing Reflection
Somewhere along that road near Bloomington, the echoes of gunfire faded into the hills nearly a century ago.
No courtroom ever answered for it.
No official record closed the case.
And like many stories from the mountains, the truth may still lie buried—not in books or archives, but in family memory, land, and silence.
