Sunday, March 31, 2024

Wild West; Old West Ranching in The Early Days by Robert M. Wright.

                                           Old West Ranching in the Early Days

                                                   By Robert M. Wright

                                  Article permission from the Kansas Heritage Group





"Plainsman, Explorer, Scout, Pioneer, Trader and Settler,"

(excerpt from Dodge City, the Cowboy Capital, 1913)

THE ranches in those days were few and far between. Beyond the Grove were Peacock's ranch, at Cow Creek, Alison's ranch, at Walnut Creek, and also that of William Greiffenstein, with whom I afterward had the pleasure to serve in the house of representatives. The following is a true story of the fate of Peacock, as related to me a few years after his death. Peacock kept a whisky ranch on Cow Creek. He and Satank, the great war chief of the Kiowas, were great friends and chums, as Peacock knew the sign language well. He had quite a large ranch and traded with the Indians, and, of course, supplied them with whisky. In consequence, the soldiers were always after him. Satank was his confidential friend and lookout. He had to cache his whisky and hide it in every conceivable manner, so that the troops would not find it. In fact, he dreaded the incursions of the soldiers much more than he did the Indians. One day Satank said to him: "Peacock, write me a nice letter that I can show to the wagon bosses and get all the chuck I want. Tell them I am the great war chief of the Kiowas, and ask them to give me the very best in the shop." Peacock said, "All right, Satank," and sat down and penned this epistle: "This is Satank, the biggest liar, beggar, and thief on the plains. What he can't beg of you he will steal. Kick him out of your camp, as he is a lazy, good-for-nothing Indian." Satank presented his letter several times to passing trains, and, of course, got a very cool reception, or rather a warm one. One wagon boss blacksnaked him, after which indignity he sought a friend, and said to him: "Look here! Peacock promised to write me a good letter, but I don't understand it. Every time I present it the wagon boss gives me the devil. Read it, and tell me just what it says." His friend did so, interpreting it literally. "All right," said Satank, and the next morning a daylight he took some of his braves and rode to Peacock's ranch. He called to Peacock, "Get up; the soldiers are coming." The summons was quickly obeyed. Seizing his field-glass, Peacock ran to the top of his lookout, and the instant he appeared, Satank shot him full of holes, exclaiming as he did so, "Good-by, Mr. Peacock; I guess you won't write any more letters."


Then they went into the building and killed every man present, except one, a sick individual, who was lying in one of the rooms, gored through the leg by a buffalo. All that saved him was that the Indians were very superstitious about entering apartments where sick men lay, for fear they might have the smallpox, which disease they dreaded more than any other. I came from the mountains in the spring of 1864 to Spring Bottom, on the Arkansas River. The Cheyennes, Arapahoes and Kiowas were committing many depredations along the Arkansas that summer. Shortly after our arrival, my partner, Joe Graham, went to Fort Lyon after supplies to stand a siege, as we expected daily to be attacked, the hired man and myself remaining at the ranch to complete our fortifications. On the night of Graham's return I started for Point of Rocks, a famous place on the Arkansas, twenty miles below our ranch, to take a mule which he had borrowed to help him home with his load. The next morning at daylight our ranch was attacked by about three hundred Indians, but the boys were supplied with arms and ammunition, and prepared to stand a siege. After they had killed one Indian and wounded a number of their ponies, the savages became more careful; they tried by every means in their power to draw the boys. outside; they even rode up with a white flag and wanted to talk. Then they commenced to tell in Spanish, broken English, and signs, that they did not want to hurt the boys; they simply wanted the United States mail stock; and if it was given up they would go away. When this modest demand was refused, they renewed their attack with greater fury than ever before.


My wife and two children were with me at the ranch at the time, and, at the commencement of the fight, Mrs. Wright placed the little ones on the floor and covered them over with feather beds; then she loaded the guns as fast as the boys emptied them. She also knocked the chinking from between the logs of the building, and kept a sharp lookout on the movements of the Indians. Often did she detect them crawling up from the opposite side to that on which the boys were firing. Upon this information the boys would rush over to where she had seen them, and by a few well-directed shots make them more than glad to crawl back to where they had come from. This was long before the days of the modern repeating rifle, and of course they had only the old-fashioned muzzle-loaders. For about seven hours the Indians made it very warm for the boys; then they got together and held a big powwow, after which they rode off up the river. The boys watched them with a spy-glass from the top of the building until they were satisfied it was not a ruse on the part of the savages, but that they had really cleared out. Graham then took my wife and two children, placed them in a canoe, and started down the Arkansas, which was very high at the time. The hired man saddled a colt that had never before been ridden, and left for the Point of Rocks. Strange as it may seem, this colt appeared to know what was required of him, and he ran nearly the whole distance-twenty miles-in less than an hour and a half. He was the only animal out of sixteen head that was saved from the vengeance of the Indians. He was a little beauty, and I really believe that the savages refrained from killing him because they thought they would eventually get him. He was saved in this manner: After the attack had been progressing for a long time and there came a comparative lull in the action, my wife opened the door a little to see what the Indians were up to, while the boys were watching at the loopholes; the colt observed Mrs. Wright, made a rush toward her, and she, throwing the door wide open, the animal dashed into the room and remained there quiet as a lamb until the battle was over.


The Indians killed all our mules, horses and hogs--we had of the latter some very fine ones--a great number of our chickens, and shot arrows into about thirty cows, several of which died. The majority of them recovered, however, although their food ran out of the holes in their sides for days and weeks until the shaft of the arrows dropped off, but, of course, the iron heads remained in their paunches; still they got well. I had just saddled my horse, ready to start back to the ranch, when the hired man arrived, bringing the terrible news of the fight. He told me that I would find my wife and children somewhere on the river, if the savages had not captured them. "For my part," he said, "I am going back to my people in Missouri; I have had enough." He was a brave man, but a "tenderfoot," and no wonder the poor fellow had seen enough. His very soul had been severely tried that day. I at once called for volunteers, and a number of brave frontiersmen nobly responded; there were only two or three, however, who had their horses ready; but others followed immediately, until our number was swelled to about a dozen. A wagon and extra horses brought up the rear, to provide means of transportation for my wife and little ones. When we had traveled thirteen miles, having carefully scanned every curve, bend, and sand-bar in the stream, we discovered Graham, Mrs. Wright, and the children about two miles ahead, Graham (God bless him!) making superhuman effort to shove the boat along and keep it from upsetting or sinking.


They saw us at the same moment, but they immediately put to cover on a big island. We shouted and waved our hats, and did everything to induce them to come to us, but in vain, for, as they told us afterwards, the Indians had tried the same maneuvers a dozen times that day, and Graham was too wary to be caught with chaff. At last Mrs. Wright recognized a large, old, white hat I was wearing, and she told Graham that it was indeed her husband, Robert. When they reached the bank, we took them out of the canoe more dead than alive, for the frail, leaky craft had turned many times; but Graham and Mrs. Wright, by some means, had always righted it, and thus saved the little children. A party went with me to our ranch the next day, and we witnessed a scene never to be forgotten; dead horses, dead hogs, dead cows and dead chickens piled one upon another in their little stockade. Two small colts were vainly tugging at their lifeless mothers' teats; a sad sight indeed, even to old plainsmen like ourselves. Both doors of the building were bored so full of bullet holes that you could hardly count them, as they lapped over each other in such profusion. Every window had at least , a dozen arrows sticking around it, resembling the quills on a porcupine. The ceiling and walls inside the room were filled with arrows also. We thought we would follow up the trail of the savages, and while en route we discovered a government ambulance, wrecked, and its driver, who had been killed, with two soldiers and citizens, so horribly butchered and mutilated that the details are too horrible and disgusting to appear in print. They had also captured a woman and carried her off with them, but the poor creature, to put an end to her horrible suffering, hung herself to a tree on the banks of a creek northeast of where the Indians had attacked the ambulance. In consequence of her act, the savages called the place White Woman. The little stream bears that name today; but very few settlers, however, know anything of its sad origin (it was on this creek, some years later, that the gallant Major Lewis met his death wound at the hands of the Indians, while bravely doing his duty).


After the fight at Spring Bottom, I moved down to Fort Aubrey, where, in conjunction with Mr. James Anderson, I built a fine ranch. At that place we had numerous little skirmishes, troubles, trials, and many narrow escapes from the Indians. While at Aubrey, I had my experience with Fred and the bull buffalo, as described in a previous chapter. Just before I moved from Aubrey, J. F. Bigger and I had a sub-contract to furnish hay at Fort Lyon, seventy five miles west of Aubrey. While we were preparing to move up to go to work, a vast herd of buffalo stampeded through our range one night and took off with them about half of our work cattle. The next day the stage driver and conductor told us they had seen a few of our cattle about twenty-five miles east of Aubrey. This information gave me an idea in which direction to hunt for them, and I started after the missing beasts, while my partner took those that remained and a few wagons and left for Fort Lyon. I will interpolate here the statement that the Indians were supposed to be peaceable, although small war parties of young men, who could not be controlled by their chiefs, were continually committing depredations, while the main body of the savages were very uneasy, expecting to go out any day. In consequence of this threatening aspect of affairs, there had been a brisk movement of troops stationed at the various military posts, a large number of whom were supposed to be on the road from Denver to Fort Lyon. I took along with me some ground coffee, filled my saddle-bags with jerked buffalo and hardtack, a belt of cartridges, my rifle and six-shooter, field-glass and blankets, and was ready for any emergency.


The first day out I found a few of the lost cattle, and placed them on the river bottom, which I continued to do as fast as I recovered them, for a distance of about eighty-five miles down the Arkansas, where I met a wagon train. The men told me I would find several more with the train that had made the crossing of the Cimarron the day before. I came up to this train in a day's travel south of the river, got my cattle, and started next morning for home. I picked up my cattle on the river where I had left them, as I went along, and, having made a tremendous day's travel, about sundown concluded to go into camp. I had hardly stopped before the cattle began to drop down, so completely tired out were they, as I thought.


Just as it was growing dark, I happened to look toward the west, and saw several fires on a big island near what was called the Lone Tree, about a mile from where I had halted for the night. Thinking they were campfires of the soldiers I had heard were on the road from Denver, and anticipating and longing for a good cup of coffee, as I had had none for many days, and besides feeling very lonesome, knowing, too, the troops would be full of news, I felt good, and did not think or dream of anything else than my fond anticipation; in fact, was so wrapped up in my thoughts I was literally oblivious to my, surroundings. I was wild to hear the news and wanted a good supper, which I knew I would get in the soldiers' camp. The Arkansas was low, but the bank was steep, with high, rank grass growing to the very waters' edge. I found a buffalo trail cut through the steep bank, very narrow and precipitous. Down this I went, and arrived within a little distance of my supposed soldiers' camp. When I got in the middle of a deep cut I looked across to the island, and saw a hundred little fires and something less than a thousand savages huddled around them. I slid back off my horse and by dint of great exertion worked him up the river bank as quietly and quickly as possible, then led him gently away out on the prairie.


My first impulse was not to go back to the cattle; but we needed them very badly; so I concluded to return to them, putting them on their feet mighty lively, without any noise. Then I started them, and, oh, dear, I was afraid to tread on a weed lest it would snap and bring the Indians down on my trail. Until I had put several miles between them and me I could not rest easy for a minute; and tired as I was, tired as were my horse and the cattle, I drove them twenty-five miles before I halted. Then daylight was upon me and I lay down and fell asleep. I was at what is known as Choteau's Island, a once famous place on the old Santa Fe trail.


Of course I had to let the cattle and my horse rest and fill themselves until the afternoon, but I did not sleep any longer myself. As I thought it was dangerous to remain too near the cattle, I walked up a big, dry sand creek that ran into the river at that point, and, after I had ascended it a couple of miles, found the banks very steep; in fact, they rose to a height of eighteen or twenty feet, and were sharply cut up by narrow trails made by the buffalo. Here I had an exciting adventure with a herd of buffalo, but will reserve the account of it for another chapter. Nothing further, of note, happened during the afternoon, and, resuming my journey, I finally arrived at the ranch without mishap. The day after I arrived at home I was obliged to start to Fort Lyon with fourteen or fifteen yoke of cattle and four or five wagons. A Mr. Ward volunteered to accompany me; and let me say right here, he was as brave a young man as it has ever been my fortune to know. He was true blue; a chip of the old block; a nephew of General Shelby; he might well be proud of his pluck. I coupled all the wagons together and strung all the fifteen yoke of oxen to them, and as young Ward could not drive the cattle he went along for company and helped me yoke up.


We made eighteen miles the first day and stopped at Pretty Encampment, one of the most celebrated camping places on the old Santa Fe trail, located at the foot of Salt Bottom. We yoked up the next morning several hours before daylight, as the moon was shining brightly; we wanted to cross the bottom before we ate breakfast. A few miles from the head of the bottom the trail diverges, one cutting across the bluff and the other following the Arkansas; we were on the lower one. Presently the stage came along, lumbering over the bluff, stopped, and called to us. I went to it, only a few hundred yards over to the other trail, when who should I see but my partner, Mr. B. F. Bigger, and four or five other men in the coach, besides the driver.


They all at once cried out, Bigger leading: "Go back with us, go back with us, or you will both be killed." I said: "Bigger, be a man; stop with us and defend your property; a lot of these cattle here belong to you; and besides you have a splendid rifle." He replied: "No, I must go to Aubrey to protect my wife and child." I answered: "My wife and children are there, too, in one of the strongest little forts in the country, six or eight men with them, and plenty of arms and ammunition; all the Indians on the plains cannot take them." He said: "You don't know how many Indians there are; they stopped the coach, took what they wanted in the way of blankets and ammunition, two or three six-shooters they found on the front seat, besides other things." I asked him why they didn't take his rifle, and he replied: "I reckon they would have done so, but we hid it." I said: "I wish they had; if you won't stop with us, loan us your gun; we have only one rifle and a six-shooter." He said: "No, leave the cattle and go back with us; they will be down on you in a little while." "Well, wait until I see Ward," I answered. "Be quick about it then," replied he. I went back to Ward and asked him what he wanted to do. I said: "You have nothing to gain and all to lose.


The people in the coach yonder say there are several hundred Indians above the bend; and while they are not actually on the warpath, they stopped the coach and robbed it, whipped the mules with their quirts until they got them on a dead run, then fired at them, and shot several arrows into the coach; some are still sticking into the back of it." Ward asked me what I was going to do. I said that a man might as well be dead as to lose his property, and I proposed to stay with it; "Maybe! we won't see an Indian." He replied: "I am going to stay with you." "God bless you for it," I said, "but it is asking too much of you." "Well, I am going to stay with you, anyhow." Then I motioned to the stage-driver to go on, and he did so right quickly. The cattle had all laid down in the yokes while we halted, but we soon hustled them up and started, feeling pretty blue.


We first held a little consultation, and then moved all the ammunition to the first wagon, on which Ward was to sit. I gave him the rifle; I had on a six-shooter and a belt full of cartridges, and we agreed to let the Indians take the grub and the blankets if they came, but that we would stay by our guns and ammunition. Ward said he would never get off the box containing the ammunition. We had proceeded about two miles, were awfully tired and hungry, had just driven out of the road to make a temporary camp, congratulating ourselves that we had missed the Indians, when here they came, two on their ponies at first. I said to Ward that we would lick these two; they dare not tackle us, but we had better keep right on and not go into camp. Ward raised his gun and motioned for them to keep off. They circled and went to the rear, when just over a little rise the whole business of them poured.


I pounded away and yelled at the cattle to keep them moving, but there were so many Indians they blocked the road, and we came to a standstill. They swarmed around us, and on all the wagons, but the front one; this Ward kept them off of. They took all of our grub and rope, but nothing else. After stringing their bows and making lots of threats and bluffs at us, they dropped a little behind and we drove off and left them. We hustled the cattle along five or six miles, when we came to a good place to water. Ward ran up on a bluff to see what had become of the savages, while I drove the cattle chained together to the river. Ward commenced to shout just as I reached the bank. The oxen got no water that day. I turned them around in a hurry, hitched on, and started. Ward said that the Indians were not more than three miles off, coming our way. We never made another halt until we were in sight of the lights on Commissary Hill, at old Fort Lyon, which we reached about one o'clock that night. I reported to the commanding officer the next morning, and we learned afterwards that these Indians had been on Sand Creek to bury the bones of their dead who were killed in the Chivington fight several years before. Only a week after our escape there was a general outbreak and war.

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Wild West; Santa Fe Trail History;

 

                               Santa Fe Trail History

                              Courtesy Kansas Heritage Group

William Becknell, 1821

The Santa Fe Trail (aka, Santa Fe Road) was an ancient passageway used regularly after 1821 by merchant-traders from Missouri who took manufactured goods to Santa Fe to exchange for furs and other items available there. Mexican traders also provided caravans going to western Missouri in this international trade.

For many years after the Santa Fe Trail was opened, Council Grove was the only trading post between Independence, Missouri and Santa Fe, New Mexico. Council Grove was the rendezvous of westward bound travelers and freighters and traders who were crossing the plains. The region from Council Grove to near Santa Fe was the most hazardous part of the trail, which was about eight hundred miles long when Westport or Independence, Missouri were the jumping-off-places.

In western Kansas a Santa Fe-bound caravan had the choice of two routes:

The Mountain Route (Long Route) of the Santa Fe Trail was the 230 miles of unprotected campsites between Fort Larned and Fort Lyon in Colorado. It followed the Arkansas River into Colorado before turning south.The Jornada Route was the water less (dry or desert route) stretch cutting southwest at Cimarron Crossing and other Arkansas River crossings. This route saved ten days and would carry 75 percent of all future trade.

1821 - William Becknell, a Missouri trader, was the first to follow the route that later became known as the Santa Fe Trail. His mule train passed through Morris County at what became known as Council Grove. The Santa Fe Trail was established to haul freight from Kansas City to Santa Fe, New Mexico and to trade with the Spanish.

Early in the 1820s wagon trains were being sent over this route (Santa Fe Trail) from the Missouri River to Santa Fe, NM.

1822 - William Becknell used wagons instead of pack mules or horses to take trade goods over the Santa Fe Trail. Because Becknell found a good mode of transportation and a passable wagon route, he is credited as the Father of the Sante Fe Trail.

1825 - By a council under a tree (Council Oak) and a treaty signed with the Osage Indians, the United States Government obtained the right of way for a public highway, established as the "Sante Fe Trail."

1825-1827 By 1825 the Santa Fe Trail had become so important that Congress authorized an official survey of the route by George C. Sibley and Brown. Major George C. Sibley was an Indian agent and the Factor at the Indian Factory (trading post) at Fort Osage (later Fort Sibley) on the Missouri River east of Independence, Missouri. Sibley was involved in the negotiations for the opening of the Santa Fe Trail in 1825 and the inspection of the trail with the official surveyor. He stated his mission to survey the Santa Fe Trail from Fort Osage. This survey was completed in 1826 and provided an alternate, little-used 773-mile route south from Chouteau's Island; two-thirds of it was in Kansas.

1827 Independence, Missouri founded. By 1832 it was the outfitting point for, and eastern terminus of, the Santa Fe Trail.

1834 Bent's Fort (Fort William), fur trade post on the upper Arkansas established. A Bent, St. Vrain and Company party (with wagons) eastbound from Santa Fe, NM in the late summer traveled by way of Taos and Raton Pass to Fort William; then came down the Arkansas to the Santa Fe Trail--thus opening the Bent's Fort branch of the Santa Fe Trail.

1845-1846 Kearny's expedition of 1845 left the Santa Fe Trail east of Willow Springs and blazed a route northeastward to Fort Leavenworth, ferrying the Kansas, near the Wakarusa's mouth, on flat boats operated by Shawnee Indians. In 1846 Kearny dispatched his Army of the West to New Mexico over this Fort Leavenworth branch of the Santa Fe Trail. Much-traveled in 1846, the road seems to have had limited use after that. Some '49ers traveled it.

1849 - The Sante Fe Trail to New Mexico having been established, a contract was let by the Government to Waldo, Hall & Co., to carry the United States mail to Santa Fe, a point seven hundred miles west of the Missouri River.

1849 A branch trail from the Missouri border by way of Fort Scott and the "Old Pottawatomie nation reserve" joined the Santa Fe Trail east of Council Grove.

In 1849 (and succeeding years) westbound emigrants (in increasing numbers) traveled the Santa Fe Trail-Bents Fort route to the upper Arkansas, and journeyed northward by a trail along the base of the Rockies to the South Platte, and to Fort Laramie.

1849 From Harrisonville, Missouri, a new branch trail west joined the Santa Fe Trail east of Council Grove. Presumably the traffic passing Ottawa Baptist Mission (described by Missionary Meeker) was on this route.

1851 Aubry, in October (after a first attempt in May), found a good Santa Fe Trail cutoff that avoided the Jornada. He turned off the established route near (or at) Cold Spring, on the Cimarron, and traveled "from 10 to 40 degrees east of north" to the Arkansas.

The Santa Fe Trail was heavily used during the Mexican War because of the large volume of military supplies that were transported from the Missouri River Towns to the Southwest.

1860s Santa Fe Trail was shortened at its eastern end, and with the coming of the Santa Fe Railroad, the trail was virtually deserted. Wagon caravans picked up goods at the railhead, decreasing the length of the trail as the railroad increased.

1866 The long wagon trains that previously formed at Council Grove now formed at Junction City and moved westward over the Smoky Hill route. The Stage Company moved its entire outfit from Council Grove to Junction City.

1872 When the Santa Fe Railroad was completed to the Colorado border, the days of the Santa Fe Trail as a main transportation route were over.

Wild West; Kansas Wild West Period timeline; Courtesy of Kansas Heritage Group

 


TIMELINE 
"1872--A branch of the Santa Fe Railroad arrived at Wichita, and the town "busted-wide-open." A sign was erected at the outskirts of town proclaiming: "Everything goes in Wichita."


1870/1871--After the Civil War, many families came from Clermont County, Ohio and settled on the high prairie in what is now known as Ohio Township in the northwest part of Morris County. On their way, they laid over at Topeka where they met others from Clermont County, Ohio.


1871--Many Italian and other immigrants came to the coal mining region of southeast Kansas.

Crawford County: Arma, Bruce; Mulberry, Pittsburg, Litchfield.

Cherokee County: Stilson/Scammon, Wier City, West Mineral.


1871--About then coal mines were opened near Mulberry--Crawford County. This was also about the date of transition from the name Mulberry Grove to Mulberry.


15-Apr-1871 James Butler Hickok replaced Tom Smith as Marshal of Abilene.


Jul 1871--The Santa Fe Railroad extended its line to Newton, Kansas, which then succeeded Abilene as the terminus of the Chisholm Trail. The cattle boom at Newton only lasted a year for the railroad was soon extended to Wichita.


Aug 1871--During this period there was considerable violence in the saloons and dance halls at Newton, with nine men being shot down in one shootout.


1872--"Home on the Range" song words written in Smith County by Dr. Brewster M. Higley, M.D.


1872--Ellsworth succeeded Abilene as the northern terminus (shipping point) of the Texas cattle trail.


1872--A branch of the Santa Fe Railroad arrived at Wichita, and the town "busted-wide-open." A sign was erected at the outskirts of town proclaiming: "Everything goes in Wichita."


1872--When the Santa Fe Railroad was completed to the Colorado border, the days of the Santa Fe Trail as a main transportation route were over. Dodge City remained the cattle shipping point for 10 years.


1873--The Kaw Indians were removed from their reservation in Morris County to Oklahoma Territory, thus opening this land for white settlement.


1873/1874--German Mennonite immigration to Kansas and South Dakota from Russia. Southeast McPherson and adjoining Marion (Hillsboro), Harvey (Halstead-where they built a flour mill by the Little Arkansas River, North Newton), and Reno (Buhler-one of the oldest Mennonite Brethren churches in Kansas) counties became the home of German-Russian Mennonites.


1870s--Bethel College at Newton was founded by Swiss and German Mennonites from Russia; what is now the General Conference Mennonite Church.


Mar 1874--The Kansas legislature amended the state militia law. This allowed anyone who objected to military service on religious grounds to obtain release. All they had to do was sign a declaration of objection in the county clerk's office.


31 Jul/Sep 1874--Grasshopper plague (Rocky Mountain Locust) visited Kansas. The grasshopper invasion devastated crops (corn) in Kansas and many people lost nearly everything. Aid (clothes, provisions and money) was sent from the East to help the people get through the hard winter.


1874 Four Kansas Railroads shipped 122,914 head of Texas cattle in eight months.


1874/1875 -- Mennonites from Russia introduced Turkey Red wheat to Kansas.


Mid 1870's--Small western towns such as Catherine, Munjor, Pfeifer, Schoenchen and Liebenthal were founded in the middle 1870's by Volga Germans, German catholics who emigrated from Russia.


1875--The Kansas State Historical Society was organized.


1876--State legislature abolishes color distinction from Kansas law.


1878--By this time the buffalo, upon whose abundance the plains Indian's life and culture were wholly dependent, had disappeared from Kansas and was rapidly approaching total extinction.


1878--Robert Layton took advantage of the available fuel at Pittsburg, Crawford County and established a zinc smelter. Pittsburg became the center of the leading zinc-smelting area in the United States.


1878--Prag, a Czech Community in Rawlins County (P.O. located 7 miles below the forks of the Beaver River, near Ludell), is mentioned in a report submitted by Captain William G. Wedemeyer of the 16th Infantry, regarding losses suffered by settlers during the 1878 Cheyenne raid in Northwestern Kansas.


27 Sep 1878--Chiefs Dull Knife and Little Wolf of the Northern Cheyenne led their people in a rebellion and flight from confinement and starvation on the reservation in Oklahoma (Indian Territory) to their home lands in Yellowstone. The trek climaxed on 27 Sep 1878, when 284 braves, women and children made their final stand on the bluffs of Ladder Creek, now Beaver Creek, just south of Scott County State Park. This encounter with the U.S. Cavalry was the last Indian battle in Kansas. The site--Squaws Den Battleground--drew its name from the pit in which the women and children were placed after helping to dig rifle pits for the warriors. The breastworks the Indians dug to withstand the attack by soldiers are still visible.


1878--Western Kansas continued to have Indian problems until the last Indian raid in Decatur County, Kansas in 1878.


1878/1879--A colony of several hundred (Susquehanna) River Brethren from Pennsylvania arrived in the old-time corrupt cowtown of Abilene, Dickinson County, Kansas. They brought with them fifteen carloads of household and farming equipment, and more than 500,000 dollars in cash. With this stuff they at once began to organize homes and fields on virgin land purchased from the Kansas Pacific Railroad.



1879--The prominent issue of the Kansas legislature was prohibition.


1880--An amendment to the Kansas Constitution approved by Kansas voters prohibited the manufacture, sale, or gift of all forms of intoxicating liquor. Kansas became the first state in the United States to pass this controversial amendment.


1880's--Carry A. Nation lived at Medicine Lodge before she began her crusade against liquor that took her to all parts of the United States and England.


1881--Bethany College of Lindsborg was founded by Swedish immigrants.


1881/1882--Most of the trail herds headed for Dodge City, another shipping point on the Santa Fe Railroad line.


1882--Dodge City was the "Cowboy Capital" of the West.


1883 Litchfield--Crawford County is listed as "located four miles northeast of New Pittsburg. It is a coal town in every sense, about 500 car loads of coal being shipped each month. There are here a post office, public school, a general store, a drug store, two blacksmith shops, a wagon shop and about 200 inhabitants" according to A. T. Andreas HISTORY OF THE STATE OF KANSAS in 1883.


30 Apr 1884--Several cowboys, including Henry Brown (later Caldwell City Marshall), attempted to rob a Medicine Lodge bank.


1884--Lane University was established in Lecompton and was attended by Ida Stover, President Eisenhower's mother.


1884--Haskell Indian Nations University was established in Lawrence.


1884/1885--The era of the great cattle drives ended when the Kansas Legislature, alarmed by the increase of the cattle disease called "Texas Fever" brought into the state by the Texas tick, passed legislation forbidding the importation of Texas cattle between March 1 and December 1, the season for the long drives.


1885--Last Texas cattle drive to Dodge City.


1886--Kansas Wesleyan University was built in Salina, Kansas.


1887--Susanna Medora Salter of Argonia was the first woman mayor in the United States to be elected in southeastern Kansas.


1887--while drilling a well, Sam Blanchard struck salt at 300 feet. Hutchinson has been built on top of one of the world's greatest salt deposits.


1888--Almost a dozen salt plants were in operation at Hutchinson.


1889--Mentholatum was invented by Albert Alexander Hyde of Wichita.


5 Oct 1892--The notorious Dalton Gang rode into Coffeyville, Montgomery County, Kansas and attempted to rob two banks, the Condon Bank and the First National Bank. They took about $25,000 in 12 minutes. A shootout followed which claimed the lives of eight men: the outlaws, Grat and Bob Dalton, Dick Broadwell and Bill Powers; and four Coffeyville residents, Charles T. Connelly, Coffeyville city marshal (killed by Grat Dalton in "Death Alley"), Lucius M. Baldwin, George B. Cubine and Charles Brown. Three other townsmen were wounded.


1894--Many companies organized to develop oil and gas fields in Kansas.


1895--Wichita State University in Wichita was founded as Fairmount College.


1896--West Mineral in Cherokee County was founded in 1896 as a mining town.


1898--Kansas enlists four regiments for service in the Spanish-American War.


1900--The last ethnic group to enter Kansas in large numbers was Spanish-speaking Mexicans, brought to the state as laborers for various Railroad companies. Numbering only 71 in 1900, their totals reached 13,570 in 1920 and 19,042 in 1930. Their primary population concentrations were in Railroad centers.

Wild West; Dodge City Kansas, Reproduced from the Kansas Heritage Group


WILD WEST TOWN, DODGE CITY


                    The following was reproduced with the permission of George Laughead


Front Street, Dodge City, KS, 1874, with Robert Wright and Charles Rath's General store, Chalk Beeson's Long Branch, George M. Hoover's liquor and cigar store, and Frederick Zimmermann's gun and hardware store. All rights reserved, FCHS.

"...in all our years together, he [Wyatt Earp] never described a gun battle to me. He considered it a great misfortune that he had lived in such a time and under such circumstances that guns had figured at all in his career."

-Josephine Marcus Earp

Dodge City history is a pure definition of the West--a historical gateway that began with Francisco Vasquez de Coronado crossing the Arkansas River in 1541, leading to the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 -- Dodge City is on the 100th meridian 1824 adjusted border -- and the 1821 opening of the Santa Fe Trail ("Santa Fe Road") by William Becknell, which became the great commercial route, between Franklin, Missouri and Santa Fe, New Mexico, until 1880. Thousands of wagons traveled the Mountain Branch of the trail which went west from Dodge City along the north bank of the Arkansas River (pronounced 'Are-Kansas') into Colorado. For those willing to risk the dangers of waterless sand hills, a shorter route called the Cimarron Cutoff crossed the river near Dodge City and went southwest to the Cimarron River. H.L. Sitler, the first settler of what became Dodge City, said; "If you stood on the hill above Dodge City, there was traffic as far as you could see, 24-hours a day, seven days a week on the Santa Fe Trail."

     In those days, safety from marauding Indians was essential. Fort Dodge, Kansas, was established in 1859, and opened in 1865 on the Santa Fe Trail near the present site of Dodge City, offering protection to wagon trains, the U.S. mail service and serving as a supply base for troops engaged in the Indian Wars. Kiowa, Cheyenne and other plains tribes inhabited the area and wild game was abundant including vast herds of buffalo (American bison). Fort Dodge was the first fort opened after the Civil War.

 Just six years later in 1871, five miles west of Fort Dodge at the foot of a hill along the Santa Fe Trail on the 100th meridian as it crossed the Arkansas River, a rancher by the name of Henry L. Sitler constructed a three-room sod house, the first structure on the future site of Dodge City. Built to oversee his cattle ranch, Sitler's home became a frequent stopping place for buffalo hunters and traders. Dodge City history starts the next year.


     In June 1872, Dodge City was founded five miles west of Fort Dodge on the northwest edge of the military reservation, with the Sitler's home as the only building. George M. Hoover had the first business--a whisky bar built out of sod and boards. It quickly became a trade center for Santa Fe Trail travelers and Buffalo hunters.

 A group of leaders, businessmen and military men from Forts Dodge, Riley and Leavenworth, KS, completeed the formal organization of the Town Company on August 15, 1872, and began planning the development of the town site. Originally the early settlers named the little settlement Buffalo City, but another town was using that name, so it was changed to Dodge City, after Ft. Dodge, KS. (The fort was named after General Grenville Dodge.)

Charles Rath, famous buffalo hunter, seated on rick of 40,000 hides in Robert Wright's Dodge City hide yard in 1878, with M.W. (Doc) Anchutz (in white shirt, back). FCHS.

     By September of 1872, the shiny steel rails of the brand new Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad stretched into view. And a town, Dodge City, was waiting. The railroad initiated a tremendous growth for many years. Already, south of the tracks, hastily built frame buildings and tents were housing two grocery and general merchandise stores, a dance hall, a restaurant, a barber shop, a blacksmith shop - even a saloon next to Sitler's original sod house. The famous Front Street legend had begun. Dodge City was already setting a record for growth.

  Stacks of buffalo hides towered along Front St. - filthy buffalo hunters and traders filled the town's establishments - and the term "stinker" was coined. Train-masters would take their red caboose lanterns along when visiting the town's "soiled doves" - and the term "red light district" came to life.

Front Street, Dodge City, Kansas, c. 1879, looking west from train depot. John Mueller's bootshop, with black boot in front, is third building from right.

 During those early years, Dodge City acquired its infamous stamp of lawlessness and gun-slinging. There was no local law enforcement and the military at Ft. Dodge had no jurisdiction over the town. Buffalo hunters, railroad workers, drifters and soldiers scrapped and fought, leading to the shootings where men died with their boots on. And that created a hasty need for a local burial place - Boot Hill Cemetery. It was used until 1878. For six years before Boot Hill, Dodge City had no official cemetery. Persons dying who had friends, money or standing in the community were buried in the post cemetery at Fort Dodge. Others, penniless or unknown, were buried where it was convenient to dig a hole.

Dodge City Town Company, Ford Co., Kansas. Inducements offered to actual settlers! Prospects of the town better than any other in the upper Arkansas Valley! Free Bridge across the Arkansas River! The town a little over one year old, and contains over seventy buildings! Good school, hotel, etc. AT & SF RR depot in town... Enquire of: R. M. Wright at Chas. Rath & Co. store or E. B. Kirk, Secy and Treas., Fort Dodge. Dodge City Messenger, June 25, 1874

Town founder and Dodge City Town Company president, Robert M. Wright, noted in his 1913 book, Dodge City, The Cowboy Capital:

"It has already been said that Dodge City was established in 1872, upon the advent of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad. Dodge was in the very heart of the buffalo country. Hardly had the railroad reached there, long before a depot could be built (they had an office in a box car), business began; and such a business! Dozens of cars a day were loaded with hides and meat, and dozens of carloads of grain, flour, and provisions arrived each day. The streets of Dodge were lined with wagons, bringing in hides and meat and getting supplies from early morning to late at night.

"Charles Rath & Company ordered from Long Brothers, of Kansas City, two hundred cases of baking-powder at one order. They went to Colonel W. F. Askew, to whom we were shipping immense quantities of hides, and said: "These men must be crazy, or else they mean two hundred boxes instead of cases." They said there were not two hundred cases in the city. Askew wired us if we had not made a mistake. We answered, "No; double the order." Askew was out a short time after that and saw six or eight carloads of flour stacked up in the warehouse. He said he now understood. It was to bake this flour up into bread.

"I have been to several mining camps where rich strikes had been made, but I never saw any town to equal Dodge. A good hunter would make a hundred dollars a day. Everyone had money to throw at the birds. There was no article less than a quarter--a drink was a quarter, a shave was a quarter, a paper of pins a quarter, and needles the same. In fact, that was the smallest change. Governor St. John was in Dodge once, when he was notified that a terrible cyclone had visited a little town close to the Kansas line, in Nebraska. In two hours I raised one thousand dollars, which he wired them. Our first calaboose in Dodge City was a well fifteen feet deep, into which the drunkards were let down and allowed to remain until they were sober. Sometimes there were several in it at once. It served the purpose well for a time. "Of course everyone has heard of wicked Dodge; but a great deal has been said and written about it that is not true. Its good side has never been told, and I cannot give it space here. Many reckless, bad men came to Dodge and many brave men. These had to be met by officers equally brave and reckless. As the old saying goes, "You must fight the devil with fire." The officers gave them the south side of the railroad-track, but the north side must be kept respectable, and it was. There never was any such thing as shooting at plug hats. On the contrary, every stranger that came to Dodge City and behaved himself was treated with politeness; but woe be unto the man who came seeking a fight. He was soon accommodated in any way, shape, or form that he wished.


"Often have I seen chivalry extended to ladies on the streets, from these rough men, that would have done credit to the knights of old. When some man a little drunk, and perhaps unintentionally, would jostle a lady in a crowd, he was soon brought to his senses by being knocked down by one of his companions, who remarked, "Never let me see you insult a lady again." In fact, the chivalry of Dodge toward the fair sex and strangers was proverbial. Never in the history of Dodge was a stranger mistreated, but, on the contrary, the utmost courtesy was always and under all circumstances extended to him, and never was there a frontier town whose liberality exceeded that of Dodge. But, while women, children, and strangers were never, anywhere, treated with more courtesy and respect; while such things as shooting up plug hats and making strangers dance is all bosh and moonshine, and one attempting such would have been promptly called down; let me tell you one thing-none of Dodge's well-known residents would have been so rash as to dare to wear a plug hat through the streets, or put on any "dog", such as wearing a swallow tailor evening dress, or any such thing. "




Original photograph of the 'Dodge City Peace Commission' in June 1883. Front, l-r; Chas. E. Basset, Wyatt S. Earp, Frank McLain, and Neil Brown. Back, l-r; W. H. Harris, Luke Short, W. B. Bat Masterson, and W. F. Petillon. This is the version with Petillon beside Masterson. All rights reserved. FCHS.

     Dodge City was the buffalo capital until mass slaughter destroyed the huge herds and left the prairie littered with decaying carcasses. An estimated 1,500,000 buffalo hides were shipped from Dodge in the years 1872-1878. For years farmers, during hard times, gathered the buffalo bones and sold them for six to eight dollars a ton. The bones were used in the manufacture of china and fertilizer. By 1875 the buffalo were gone as a source of revenue, but the longhorn cattle of Texas drove the dollars into town. For ten more years, over five million head of cattle were driven up the western branch of the Chisholm Trail - the Great Western Trail or Texas Trail - to Dodge City.



                        William B. 'Bat' Masterson, Ford County Sheriff and Dodge City citizen. 

                                           Courtesy of the Kansas Heritage Group

     Law and order came riding into town with such respectable law officers as W. B. 'Bat' Masterson, Ed Masterson, Wyatt Earp, Bill Tilghman, H. B. 'Ham' Bell and Charlie Bassett. Out of these personalities evolved the famous fictional character of Gunsmokes' Marshal Matt Dillon. The town these early men knew was laid out with two "Front Streets," one on either side of the railroad tracks -- although the name was orginally "Main Street" for the one north of the tracks.

The city passed an ordinance that guns could not be worn or carried north of the "deadline" which was the railroad tracks. The south side where "anything went" was wide open. In 1877 the population was 1,200 and nineteen businesses were licensed to sell liquor.

  During those first years the population varied according to the season, swelling during the summer with the influx of cowboys, cattle buyers, gamblers and prostitutes. Business houses, dance halls and saloons catered to the Texas trade. Saloon keepers renamed their places, Alamo and Lone Star and served brandies, liqueurs and the latest mixed drinks. Ice usually was available so even beer could be served cold. Some saloons advertised anchovies and Russian caviar on their cold menus. Gambling ranged from a game of five-cent "Chuck-aluck" to thousand dollar poker pots. Many saloons offered some type of musical entertainment - a piano player, a singer, or as in Chalk Beeson's Long Branch, a five-piece orchestra. Beeson also organized and led the famous Cow Boy Band (sic) that entertained all over the west at cattlemen's conventions, concerts, dances and in Washington, D.C. at the inauguration of President Harrison.

    Fort Dodge, Kansas was closed in 1882 and due to a January 1886 blizzard, the cattle drives ended. An illustrious period of history was over but the legend lives on in Dodge City's historic preservation of its romantic and internationally famous Old West frontier history.

  As the nineteenth century ended, the bragging of the western pioneers furnished an abundance of materials for dime novels, nickelodeons, Hollywood films, radio and television. Stuart Lakes's Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal, published in 1931 remains the most famous book on that era. Even today, 100,000 tourists relive the legend each year by visiting the Boot Hill Museum and historic Front Street reconstruction. "If the history of the West has been a mother lode of entertainment riches, Dodge City has been its touchstone."

Robert Wright adds, in Dodge City, the Cowboy Capital:

"What made Dodge City so famous was that it was the last of the towns of the last big frontier of the United States. When this was settled, the frontier was gone, it was the passing of the frontier with the passing of the buffalo, and the Indian question was settled forever.

Here congregated people from the east, people from the south, people from the north, and people from the west. People of all sorts, sizes, conditions, and nationalities; people of all color, good, bad, and indifferent, congregated here, because it was the big door to so vast a frontier. Some came to Dodge City out of curiosity; others strictly for business; the stock man came because it was a great cattle market...; the cowboy came because it was his duty as well as delight, and here he drew wages and spent them; the hunter came because it was the very heart of the greatest game country on earth; the freighter came because it was one of the greatest overland freight depots in the United States, and he hauled material and supplies for nearly four hundred miles, supplying three military posts, and all the frontier for that far south and west; last but not least, the gambler and the bad man came because of the wealth and excitement, for obscene birds will always gather around a carcass."

Wild West; Kansas Gun Fighters; Reproduced from The Kansas Heritage Group

     



                                           KANSAS GUNFIGHTERS

The following information was copied from the Kansas Heritage Group's website which is scheduled to be removed in 2024. 

From the website; "The Kansas Heritage site will be going offline in early 2024. Please make copies of any materials or use archive.org for continued use."

It is my intent to preserve this historic information. 

-The blog author

The author thanks George Laughead for permission to republish this material.


Table of Contents

|Sam Bass ||William Bonney--Billy the Kid ||William "Billy" L. Brooks || Henry Brown || Henderson Brumley ||William F. Cody || Dalton Gang || William "Bill" M. Doolin || Wyatt Earp || Patrick "Pat" Floyd Garrett || John Wesley Hardin || Wild Bill Hickok--James Butler Hickok ||John Henry "Doc" Holliday ||Tom Horn || Jesse James Gang ||William Bartholomew "Bat" Masterson ||George Newcomb ||Ed O'Kelley ||James "Jim" Riley ||Luke Short ||Ben Thompson ||Henry Clay White || Younger Gang|

  • The following article was made available through the courtesy of Stephen Chinn. It should not be quoted or retransmitted without a full citation to the author.

General Gunfighters History

The gunfighter era was an outgrowth of the Civil War. Some outlaws were spawned of the Civil War as were Quantrill's Raiders.The average year of birth was 1853. The average year of death was 1895. About 1/3 of all gunmen died of "natural causes." Many gunmen did not die violently and lived a normal life span (70 years or so). Of those who did die violently (shot or executed), the average age of death was 35. The gunfighters-turned-lawmen lived longer lives than their persistently criminal counterparts. Most professional gunfighters died in states or territories where the most shootings occurred: Texas, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, California, Missouri, and Colorado.

The "occupations" of the various gunmen were often those that used firearms in ordinary pursuits. They often carried firearms as a job requirement. There were 110 gunmen who were law officers, 75 who were cowboys, 54 as ranchers, 46 as farmers, 45 as rustlers, 35 as hired guns, but also men who had been soldiers, miners, scouts, teamsters, actors, butchers, bounty hunters, etc.


Gunfighting peaked in the 1870s: Six fights in TX and KS in 1870, 22 in 1871, 13 in 1872, 27 in 1873, 14 in 1874, 13 in 1875, 22 in 1876, 21 in 1877, 36 in 1878, 14 in 1879. In the 1880s: 25 in 1880, 27 in 1881, 15 in 1882, 9 in 1883, 17 in 1884, 7 each in 1885-6, 20 in 1887, 10 in 1888, and nine in 1889. 1895-96 were bad years, 19 fights in each, but then it began to taper off.


Sam Bass: (21 July 1851 - 21 July 1878)

Born near Mitchell, Indiana. After numerous 'money-making' ventures Sam had formed a partnership with Joel Collins and Jack Davis.  After driving a herd of cattle to Dodge City, then on to Ogallaha in the South Platte Valley, they decided to venture on to the Black Hills.  They tried unsuccessfully to establish a freighting outfit. Sam had pointed out that "It's pretty hard to quit our old trade and go into a business that don't pay any better than this." With this Sam and Collins began to form their gang; Tom Nixon, Bill Heffridge and Jim Berry.  Their first target was the Deadwood Stage, they held it up four times, from Jul To Aug 1877. With only seven peaches and less than $50 as their total loot, they agreed to try one more time when Collins had learned of a shipment of $150,000 in gold dust.

The holdup was a failure, which drove them the Union Pacific would be more profitable.   The gang's first train robbery was their most successful. At Big Springs, Nebraska, the loot was $60,000 dollars in shiny new twenty dollar gold coins from the San Francisco mint. The passengers of the train turned over an additional $400 cash and gold watches.


William H. Bonney - aka - Henry McCarty - aka - Billy the Kid: (1859-1881)

William Bonney was born in 1859. Billy the Kid was a lad with buck teeth who could do remarkable things with a .44-40 pistol. His career began in Silver City, New Mexico Territory. 14 Jul 1881 Billy the Kid was fatally shot by his old friend, Pat Garrett, in the bedroom of Pete Maxwell at Fort Sumner in New Mexico Territory. Billy the Kid died at age 21, having killed 21 men during his gunslinger career, a victim of circumstances, and many claim the dupe of the Lincoln County War.


William "Billy" L. Brooks: (Abt. 1849 - 1874)

By 1870 he already had the reputation as a tough character. He was also supposed to have been a noted buffalo hunter and was to have been dubbed 'Buffalo Bill' (which confuses him with William F. Cody, the best known, or William Mathewson, the original Kansas 'Buffalo Bill' who was known as "Buffalo Bill' as early as the 1860's). Brooks had appeared in Wichita in 1870, he was employed as a driver by the Southwestern Stage Company, the stage company switched routes to Newton,  Brooks found that in Newton the cattle trade was in full swing and was in bad need of law enforcement.  Early in 1870 Newton was incorporated as a third-class city, the city council wasted no time in appointing a police force.  Brooks' tough reputation led to his being appointed town marshal on 1 April, by the 14th of June Brooks had decided that the $75 wage wasn't nearly enough for laying his life on the line.  Much of Brooks' subsequent career is a mixture of hearsay, alleged gunfights and tall tales.  By 1874 Brooks had turned to outlawry and horse thievery. Following a siege near Caldwell, Kansas, Brooks, Charlie Smith and L. B. Hasbrouck were removed from jail by a large gang of silent men and taken to a large tree on the main road.  Despite pleas for mercy and a fair trial, the three were hung. Brooks reportedly begged for mercy.


Henry Newton Brown: (1857 - 30 April 1884)

Born at Cold Spring Twp, Missouri in 1857, had one sister. They were orphaned at an early age, and raised by an uncle on his farm near Rolla, Missouri.  Left home at seventeen, worked as a cowboy, buffalo hunter, became entangled in the Lincoln County cattle war, joined with Billy the Kid in some of the more bizarre incidents. Ended up in Caldwell Kansas where he was appointed as a deputy marshal, in about 1882 he was promoted to marshal, he also appointed Ben Robertson (aka Ben Wheeler) as his deputy.  They did such a good job, that Henry was presented a brand new Winchester rifle.  Married in 1884, most citizens regarded him as a solid officer and citizen.  On 30 April 1884, he and Wheeler and two cronies from the Oklahoma territory attempted to rob the bank at Medicine Lodge, Kansas, having convinced the mayor of Caldwell that they needed the time off to pursue a murderer headed into the Oklahoma Territory.  The robbery needless to say was a failure, they killed numerous citizens before being pursued and captured by the enraged townspeople of Medicine Lodge. Later that same evening, the four were dragged out of their jail cell, Brown tried to escape and was blasted to death with a shotgun. The other three were dragged to a tree and hung. 


Henderson Brumley:

A member of the Rube Burrow train robbing gang in TX for a short time.

William Frederick ('Buffalo Bill') Cody:

The most noted of all buffalo hunters, William F. Cody, later achieved even wider fame as a Wild West showman.

William "Bill" M. Doolin:

The train robbery occurred about half a mile west of Cimarron, Kansas, about half way between Dodge City and Garden City on the major east-west line of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad. On May 26, 1893, one of his gang flagged down the westbound California Express. Before the train could come to a complete stop, Doolin and another outlaw had swung onto the locomotive from opposite sides and covered the engineer and fire fighter with revolvers. Three more outlaws joined the others as they tried to break into the express cars. Shots were fired, and the express car's messenger was wounded. Doolin and the others managed to break the door down, and they escaped with a few thousand dollars. Doolin formed his gang soon after Bob and Emmett Dalton had said they were tired of running and intended to settle down. Doolin's gang consisted of 'Bitter Creek' Newsome, Charlie Pierce, Bill Powers and Dick Broadwell. They were all hunted down by the four great lawmen of the frontier: Bill Tilghman, Chris Madsen, Heck Thomas and Bud Ledbetter.

Between 1893 and early 1895, Doolin and his gang made their biggest hauls robbing banks, including those in Spearville and Cimarron, Kansas. According to the best estimates, Doolin and his gang stole about $175,000 in gold and currency during this period. What happened to the loot is the basis for this legend.


Patrick "Pat" Floyd Garrett: (1850-1908)

Patrick Floyd Garrett was born in 1850. Pat Garrett was a tall, rangy individual. He married Polinaria Guiterrez. They had seven children. 1880 Pat Garrett went to New Mexico Territory and was elected sheriff of Lincoln County. He was ordered by Governor Wallace (author of "Ben Hur") to bring Billy the Kid in. 1881 Pat Garrett shot and killed his old friend, Billy the Kid, in the bedroom of Pete Maxwell at Fort Sumner in New Mexico Territory. Pat Garrett was shot and killed by Wayne Brazil in Las Cruces, New Mexico in 1908. Pat Garrett was buried in Las Cruces, New Mexico.

Tom Horn: ( 21 November 1860 - November 1903)He was hung in Cheyenne, Wyoming for a murder. His guilt/innocence is still controversial. Buried in Boulder, Colorado - in the old Olympia Pioneer Cemetery.

William Bartholomew "Bat" Masterson: (1856-1921)

1856 William B. Masterson was born in Canada. Bartholomew was his given middle-name, although he also used Barclay. Bat Masterson was a buffalo hunter on the great plains, circa 1871. Bat took part in the Battle of Adobe Walls in which 19 hunters were attacked by 1000 Indians. 1878 Bat ran for Sheriff of Ford County, KS which he won at the age of 22. 1879/1881 Bat Masterson journeyed by horseback to Tombstone, Arizona since Wyatt Earp had sent for him to work in his new Oriental Saloon venture. Abt 1881 Bat Masterson left Tombstone, Arizona for Trinidad, Colorado. When? Bat was sheriff of Creede, Colorado for a time when it was a wild woolly mining town. 1883 Bat became a Peace Commissioner of Dodge City. 12 Jan 1889 ...a few of Ingalls's (Kansas) finest citizens, including Bat Masterson, decided to go after some county records that were still being held in Cimarron. The men, armed with Winchesters and six-shooters, slipped into Cimarron at 10:00 in the morning. They rushed into the county building, seized the records, and placed them in a wagon, but by this time the Cimarron men had gathered, and shooting began between the two factions. One Cimarron man, J. W. English, was killed, and two others were seriously wounded. After the fight was over, the raiding party returned to Ingalls with the county records and three wounded men. When he heard of the incident, Governor John Martin ordered two companies of militia to Cimarron to keep the peace. When? He accepted post of U.S. Marshal in New York State. 1891 He was putting his literary talents into practice as a New York City newspaper (New York Morning Telegraph) sports reporter. 1921 Bat Masterson (age 65) had a heart attack at his desk and died.

George Newcomb:

The Kansas Heritage Server would like to thank Donald R. Newcomb for submitting this information.

George Newcomb (Alias: "The Slaughter Kid" or "Bitter Creek Newcomb") b. ca. 1860, d. 2 May 1895, Dunn Ranch, Cimmaron R., OK. Mr. Newcomb was a cow-hand turned bank & train robber in association with the Dalton & Doolin gangs. Wellman states that he "was the son of a respected family which lived near Ft. Scott, KS but had not been home for a long, long time." Resided near Guthrie, OK, when not robbing banks.

Ed O'Kelley (a.k.a. Ed O. Kelly): (? - January 1904)

Ed O'Kelley shot and killed Robert Ford 8 June 1892 with a shotgun in a saloon Ford owned in Creede, Colorado. When he was arrested in June 1892, O'Kelly gave his name as   "Ed O'Kelley" but the policeman wrote it down as "Ed O. Kelly" in what was to be the source of many errors in frontier histories.  O'Kelley, was also known as Red O'Kelley due to his bright red hair, was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder in Canon City, CO. Released in 1902. Killed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 13 January 1904.


James "Jim" Riley: (1853 - ????)

The Kansas Heritage Server would like to thank Mark Smith (spook@surfari.net) for contributing this material.

On August 19, 1871, Riley is credited with the killing of four men (Patrick Lee, "Happy Jim" Martin, William "Billy" Garrett, Kearnes), and wounding three (Mr. Hickey, Hugh Anderson, Jim Wilkerson) during the "Newton's General Massacre" (also known as the Hyde Park Gunfight).

Riley waited until his opponents had emptied all the chambers in their caps-and-balls pistols, locked the door to the saloon, and went to work with his own Colt's caps-and-balls pistols. Unfortunately, he killed only one real enemy, Garrett. Martin was Riley's friend, and Lee was a bystander. Who Riley was, or what ever happened to him, is still a mystery. After the gunfight, he left town and was never seen again. There are many written accounts of the gunfight, and Riley is mentioned in all of them. Here's what we do know:

He was 18 years-old at the time of the gunfight. He had advanced tuberculosis. Descriptions of Riley include the words "Emaciated", "Scarecrow", "Ragged", and "Guant". He was known as a quiet young man who spent most of his waking hours with Mike McCluskie, who was the cause of, and the first victim of the gunfight. It is thought that it was the sight of McCluskie being gunned down by the Texans that pushed Riley from being a quiet man to a killer of men.

James Riley Sources

Rosa, Joseph G. "The Gunfighter - Man or Myth", Copyright 1969 by the University of Oklahoma Press, Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 68-31378.

Drago, Harry Sinclair "Wild, Woolly & Wicked" Copyright 1960 by Harry Sinclair Drago. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 60-14428.

Miller, Nyle H. and Snell, Joseph W. "Great Gunfighters Of The Kansas Cowtowns 1867 - 1886" Copyright 1963 by Nyle H. Miller and Joseph W. Snell. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 63-63480.

Luke Short: (1854-1893)

1854 Luke Short was born in Texas. Started out as a trader with the Sioux Indians up around Nebraska Country. 1879/1881 Luke Short journeyed by horseback down to Tombstone, Arizona, since Wyatt Earp had sent for him to work as a dealer in his new Oriental Saloon venture. He went to Dodge City in the 1880's and bought an interest in the Long Branch Saloon. Peace Commissioners of Dodge City in 1883. Luke Short went on to Texas and bought out the White Elephant gambling hall. Shortly after he sold the White Elephant, he became desperately sick and died in bed in 1893 in Kansas City at age 39.

Ben Thompson: (1843-1884)

Ben Thompson was born in 1843 at Knottingley, England. Ben and Billy Thompson were two of the greatest gamblers and faro-bank fiends, also two of the most desperate men and sure shots. It is said that Ben and Billy Thompson shot down 25 men. Every year, without fail, they came to Dodge to meet the Texas drive. Bill Thompson killed Sheriff C. B. Whitney with a shotgun in the plaza at Ellsworth the first year of the cattle drive to that place. While Bill escaped, Ben Thompson stood off the town as he waved that double-barreled shotgun at the mayor and several deputies who were hiding out of sight behind buildings, doors and in halls. Wyatt Earp told Ben to either throw down the shotgun or he'd kill him. Ben Thompson later told Bat Masterson that he had a hunch that Wyatt meant to kill him, and so he did throw down the shotgun. Ben Thompson was fined $25.00 for disturbing the peace. Bill Thompson was acquitted when tried. Ben Thompson got the job as marshal for the city of Austin, but he killed one too many men and was let out. At San Antonio Ben shot down saloon owner Jack Harris. Ben was 41 years of age when he was cut down and had killed over 40 (?) men.


Henry Clay WHITE: (? - ?)

Henry Clay WHITE disappeared from Wayne County, Missouri in the 1870's after being accused of murdering a man. He reportedly went out west to the Tombstone, Arizona area. The story was that he redeemed himself for the Missouri murder through some heroic deed in Tombstone, Arizona. He later went to Salt Lake City after contracting tuberculosis. He was brought back to Arkansas, where his other relatives had settled, around 1900 and died shortly thereafter. Source: Barrett Bryant.

Kansas Gunfighters Sources

Breihan, Carl. "Lawmen and Robbers"

Dary, David. "More True Tales of Old-Time Kansas." University Press of Kansas. 1984.

Ensminger, Richard provided information about William Quantrill and Jesse James.

Horan, James D., "The Authentic Wild West - The Gunfighters." Crown Publishers, Inc. New York. 1976

Horan, James D., "The Authentic Wild West - The Outlaws." Crown Publishers, Inc. New York. 1977

McCarty, Lea Franklin. "The Gunfighters" Oakland: Mike Roberts Color Productions. 1988

O'Neal, Bill. "The Encyclopedia of Western Gunfighters"

Preece, Harold. "The Dalton Gang." New York: New American Library of World Literature, Inc. 1964

Rosa, Joseph G. "The Taming of the West - Age of the Gunfighter" Smithmark Publishers , Inc. New York. 1993

Time-Life Books. "The Old West Series - The Gunfighters." Time-Life Books, Alexandria, Virginia. 1974

Authors: Stephen Chinn, Kenneth Thomas and Kansas Heritage contributors

Wild West, Mystery Photo Part II, By Gene Stevens; A new Billy the Kid Photo Post Card from Dodge City Kansas


STATUS; UNDER INVESTIGATION

This card was found on ebay, by the author in March of 2024. The description at the top of the post card claims that this photo is of a Young Billy the Kid in western Kansas.  This particular card is useful, in that it tells us where the post card originated and who produced it. And that was Claud Hetzel. 

Claude Hetzel was the owner of Hetzel Printing in Dodge City and also owned a company that produced post cards.  He had connections with the movie theaters and took pictures when they brought movie stars to town.  He also he worked closely with the police department, taking crime scene photos.

*See the story below from;

The Augusta Chronicle, July 26th, 2012

Article written by Don Steele 

Photo collection documents life in Dodge City

" It's the e-mails out of the blue that make the job interesting."

   At least that's the case for Jan Stevens, director of the Dodge City Convention and Visitors Bureau.       Early in May, Stevens received an e-mail from a lady who was writing on behalf of a friend.  The friend was Jean Ann (Hetzel) Blasi.

 Blasi's father was Claude Hetzel who had a photography business in Dodge City. Blasi came into possession of a large collection of her father's photos upon his death and was interested in finding a home for the collection.  Stevens contacted Barb Vincent, director of the Kansas Heritage Center, and plans were made to archive the collection of nearly 1,000 photos.  The collection covers many aspects of life in Dodge City and southwest Kansas.

  Noel Ary, former director of the Heritage Center and now a volunteer helping to sort through the collection, said "There are photos of weddings, interiors and exteriors of churches, rodeo, parades, downtown buildings, aerial shots, motorcycles and that's just what we've seen so far in an initial look. There's even a photo of the KCKT-TV test pattern shown on an old Zenith television." The photographs will be carefully sorted and categorized, then an attempt will be made to identify as many locations and people as possible, then numbers will be assigned to each photo to facilitate future research, Stevens has contacted Carnegie Center for the Arts and a potential exhibit is in the works.  In addition, the Daily Globe has offered to publish selected photos to help in the identification effort.

Documenting Dodge; Claude Hetzel was the owner of Hetzel Printing in Dodge City and also owned a company that produced post cards.  He had connections with the movie theaters and took pictures when they brought movie stars to town.  He also he worked closely with the police department, taking crime scene photos. Hetzel's daughter, Jean, graduated from Dodge City High School and worked as a teller at Fidelity State Bank. She now lives in Arlington, Texas.

   "We're just so grateful to Jean for her generosity and so glad that this important collection has returned to the Dodge City community," Stevens said.  "It will be available for historians in the professional care of the staff of the Kansas Heritage Center.

INVESTIGATION CONTINUED



Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Western History; Historic Photographic Investigations, Part III, The Luke Short Hearing Photo By; Gene Stevens

 This is the third in a series of articles that will cover the photos that I have come across during various phases of writing articles and participating in conversations with other museum curators and other amateur historians. (Also see article On the Trail of WyattTHE LUKE SHORT INQUEST 

 Copyright 2024 (c)

 This photo was brought to my attention by Dan Oelrich 

Sometime in late February of 2024, I connected with Dan Oelrich via social media, this was due to my posting a photo and making comments about a tintype photo that I am personally in possession of. Dan reached out to me, then sent me the above photo. This photo is a total mystery. It appeared on the internet, was downloaded by Dan, and then disappeared completely from the internet. Both Dan and I have spent many hours searching for the photo but to no avail, we have been unable to relocate the photo.  The photo can be classified as" unknown at this time". 

But as we began to look at the photo and do research independently of each other,( Dan resides in Colorado and I reside in central Iowa. We were comparing notes via email on a daily basis.) We started to realize that we recognized people in the photo, and we began to analyze and make photo comparisons. As our investigations progressed. We both came across some fairly interesting information which seemed to fit together with the photo. But this photo, while having no provenance at this time, was worth looking into. It was fun working with Dan, who is also in the process of  writing his own article about the photo for the Cochise County Arizona

  FINDINGS-

      The story starts with the gunfight 
                            With 
                     Charlie Storms

Short first met Wyatt Earp, William H. Harris, and Bat Masterson in Tombstone. Based on their previous friendship, Harris had no problem convincing his partners to engage Earp as a faro dealer at their Oriental Saloon in Tombstone. On Friday, February 25, 1881, Short was serving as the lookout, seated next to the dealer at a faro game in the Oriental, when he was involved in what became a well-known gunfight. His opponent was Charlie Storms. Bat Masterson, who was in Tombstone at the time, described what happened in a magazine article he wrote in 1907:

Storms did not know Short, and like the bad man (from a previous shooting) in Leadville, had sized him up as an insignificant-looking fellow, whom he could slap in the face without expecting a return. Both were about to pull their pistols when I jumped between them and grabbed Storms, at the same time requesting Luke not to shoot, a request I knew he would respect if it was possible without endangering his own life too much. I had no trouble in getting Storms out of the house, as he knew me to be his friend . I was just explaining to Luke that Storms was a very decent sort of man when, lo and behold!, there he stood before us, without saying a word, he took hold of Luke's arm and pulled him off the sidewalk, where he had been standing, at the same time pulling his pistol, a Colt's cut-off, 45 calibre, single action; but like the Leadvillian, he was too slow, although he succeeded in getting his pistol out. Luke stuck the muzzle of his pistol against Storm's heart and pulled the trigger. The bullet tore the heart asunder, and as he was falling, Luke shot him again. Storms was dead when he hit the ground.

- From Bat Mastersons book

 Two Articles located on             Newspaperarchive.com



LUKE SHORTS TESTIMONY FROM THE DEADWOOD PIONEER NUGGET
March 13, 1881







Storms' body was taken to the undertaker, where the coroner's jury was convened and testimony was heard. The jury reached a verdict that Storms died from three pistol wounds at the hands of Short, and that Short's actions were justifiable. Short was free to go, as no further legal action was taken.

Five days after Storms died, the Leadville Democrat wrote about the shooting. It said that Storms approached Short and "catching him by the ear", demanded an apology. According to the account, Storms grabbed Short's ear with his left hand and his right hand contained a pistol aimed at Short. Short drew his weapon and shot Storms, who returned fire, but missed. Short then put two more bullets into "the sinking soul of Storms.
-Wikipedia
 
Who Could Possibly Be in this Photo?
Dan Oelrich and I started to do a systematic search of the internet, books and known photos of various people who may have been present in Tombstone Arizona when the Luke Short hearing took place.. These are some possibilities;

                              
                              BEN SIPPY
Tombstone city Marshal Ben Sippy arrested Short for killing Storms. During the preliminary hearing, Masterson testified that Short acted in self-defense, and Short was released. The Arizona Weekly reported that Storms was around 60 years old and survived by a widow in San Francisco.
ref   Oriental Saloon Gunfight in Tombstone, Arizona – Legends of America Ben Sippy arrested Luke Short and Wyatt Earp was also involved.


Likeness                               Known photo

Tombstone City Marshal Ben Sippy 
"A total of 688 votes were  for City Marshal, The candidates were Ben Sippy and Howard Lee. Sippy was our candidate.
-Mayor John Clum

On February 28, 1881, at the Oriental Hotel, gamblers Luke Short and Charlie Storms had a verbal altercation which was deescalated by Bat Masterson, who was also an acquaintance of Storms as well. Storms later returned to the scene and walked up, said nothing and pulled a gun, On Storms, a cut-off Colt .45 pistol, but Short was quicker. Short shot Storms twice before he hit the ground; the first shot fired was so close that it set fire to Storms' shirt. Short was said to have then turned to Bat Masterson and stated: "You sure pick some of the damnedest friends, Bat." Ben Sippy arrested Short, but the shooting was determined to have been made in self-defense.



Wyatt Earp
Wyatt Earp would later say
that he helped to carry the body of Charlie
Storms back to the San Jose rooming house
where the now-deceased gambler and Lyons
had been staying, so that a post mortem could
be performed by Dr. Goodfellow.
-Peter Brand 2015
"The Killing of Charlie Storms by Luke Short"

Virgil Earp
"According to most sources, he, Wyatt, James and their wives arrived in December 1879 and immediately engaged in mining and gambling ventures. “The Earp boys spent thousands of hours in saloons, yet there was never any indication that Virgil or Wyatt loved the bottle,” writes Chaput in Virgil Earp: Western Peace Officer. “They thrived on the atmosphere, enjoyed the talk and were both inveterate gamblers.”
-History Net

Bat Masterson
Bat Masterson Claimed that he was a direct witness of the shooting, 
This claim is most likely correct.

   

John Clum?




Luke Short
In the Spring of 1881, Luke Short was dealing Faro at the Oriental Saloon in Tombstone Arizona which was managed by Wyatt Earp. There was an incident between Luke Short and Charlie Storms over a gambling issue and guns came into play.. Bat Masterson was present and intervened in the disagreement and initially deescalated the situation. Masterson managed to cool things down, and escorted Storms to his room. Bat Masterson was friends with both Charlie Storms and Luke short. But storms and Short did know one another Masterson walked back over to Short a was trying explain to Short that he thought Storms was a decent guy, when as Bat stated " When lo and behold, there he stood before us." Storms said nothing but started to pull his pistol. Unfortunately Luke Short was faster, pulled his gun, stuck the muzzle of the gun to Storms heart, and pulled the trigger. He probably died instantly. Bat Masterson tells us in his book that Luke was given a quick hearing in front of a Magistrate and was quickly exonerated .Bat Masterson was present in Tombstone and attended the hearing
-Famous Gunfighters of the Western Frontier.
W.B. (Bat) Masterson
Luke Short


Photo of Charlie Storms from the Cantey (Myers) Collection 

This unique image of Charlie Storm came in a group of personal items pertaining to Luke Short sold by his relatives. Luke Short and Charlie Storm were involved in a gun fight in Tombstone, Arizona in 1881. Short had never met Storms and was acting as the lookout for Wyatt Earp’s Faro game in the Oriental Saloon.  Bat Masterson wrote that he got between Luke Short and Storms in a potential confrontation. Luke and Masterson went outside on the boardwalk. At this point Storms grabbed Short and dragged him off the boardwalk into the street.  Stupid move. Although Storms drew his 45 Colt first, he was too slow. Short shot him through the heart. Short then shot him a second time on the way down. Storms hit the ground dead. Subsequent jury reached a verdict that Short acted in self defense.
This image may well be the ONLY image known of Charlie Storms

A well known photo of the Dodge City Peace Commision.









Was Jesse James Robin Hood?

  Jess James, From the authors collection Story by G.C. Stevens (c) 2024 Frank and Jesse James were products of their environment. They were...