'REIGN OF TERROR'

Inside US’ ‘forgotten’ blood-soaked mass murder plot that inspired new Leonardo DiCaprio film Killers Of The Flower Moon

ON the face of it Mollie Burkhart had it all — a mansion, chauffeur-driven car and the rights to an oil field.

But being a member of the Native American Osage tribe, said to be the richest people per capita in the world in the 1920s, made her a target for a mass murder conspiracy.

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Leonardo DiCaprio and Lily Gladstone in Killers Of The Flower MoonCredit: Alamy
Lily Gladstone as Mollie Burkhart, Robert De Niro as William King Hale and Leonardo DiCaprio as Ernest BurkhartCredit: Planet Photos
Ernest Burkhart's scheming uncle William Hale, - played by DeNiro - convinced him to wed Mollie in 1917Credit: Planet Photos

One of Mollie’s sisters was shot in the back of the head and dumped in a ravine and another blown up as she slept after a five-gallon keg of explosive nitroglycerin was placed under her home.

Around the same time the young mother was being slowly poisoned by her non-indigenous husband in a plot to steal her fortune.

Mollie asked the fledgling precursor of the FBI to investigate the horrifying slayings.

Despite surviving poisoning after her priest warned her against touching the liquor at home, her sisters were among the first of what is believed to be around 100 Osage victims in what became known as the Reign of Terror.

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Now this tale of greed and betrayal is being told in £160million movie Killers Of The Flower Moon by legendary director Martin Scorsese, starring A-listers Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro.

The film, which opens in cinemas on Friday before being streamed on Apple Plus, is already being tipped for Oscar success and has been described as a “masterpiece”.

DiCaprio, who plays Mollie’s treacherous husband Ernest Burkhart, wanted to make sure the world knew about this shameful part of his country’s past.

The 48-year-old said: “It’s a completely forgotten part of American history and an open wound that still festers.”

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The Osage had been forced off their lands in Missouri and on to what was considered to be an impossible-to-cultivate reservation in northern Oklahoma in 1872.

Thunderous explosion

All it seemed to offer was the beautiful plants that bloomed into what they called “flower moon”.

Then 22 years later the largest deposits of oil and gas in the US were discovered underneath the reservation the tribe had bought.

They managed to fend off attempts by the government to grab their land and, by the 1920s, 2,000 of them were sharing annual royalties worth an estimated £300million in today’s money.

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The Osage bought limousines etched in gold, sent their children to private school, learned ballet and had white servants.

With the rights to each plot abundant with “black gold” automatically passing on to relatives, white men started to see the financial advantage in marrying Osage women.

One was First World War veteran Ernest Burkhart, whose scheming uncle William Hale — played by DeNiro in the film — convinced him to wed Mollie in 1917.

Fraudster Hale was extremely powerful, controlling a bank and part owning a general store in the town of Fairfax.

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