The American Wild West includes the history, folklore, people, and events of the mid-1800s to the beginning of the 20th century (though some people date it up to the 1920s). During this time of expansion from coast to coast, many people rose to fame through their exciting (and often illegal) lives. We still remember these men and women today and this list looks at ten of the most fascinating and memorable.
“Curly Bill” was so-called because of his head of thick, curly black hair. After the death of “Old Man” Clanton, he became the leader of the “Cowboys” gang of cattle rustlers in Tombstone, Arizona. He also worked for a while as a tax collector for Cochise County Sheriff John Behan. Curly Bill was a heavy drinker who became even more rambunctious when drunk. One night, while drinking with other Cowboys, he was asked by Marshal Fred White to give up his pistol. In handing the gun over to the Marshall, it accidentally discharged, hitting White. Fred White, who had been friendly with Curly Bill, made a statement on his deathbed that he believed the shooting was an accident and Brocius was acquitted. Wyatt Earp testified in his defense, but later shot and killed him in retaliation for the murder of his brother Morgan Earp.
Sam Bass started out an honest man. After running away from the abusive uncle who raised him, he went to work in a sawmill in Mississippi. His dream was to be a cowboy and he eventually made his way to Texas. After one season, he decided he didn’t like it. In 1876, Bass and a rough character named Joel Collins drove a herd of longhorns up north where the prices for cattle were higher. They were supposed to go back to Texas to pay off the owners of the herd, but instead they took the $8,000 profit for themselves. He and Collins wasted the money from the cattle drive on gambling in Deadwood. A few months later, he and Collins went into another venture- stagecoach robbery. After holding up seven stagecoaches, they didn’t make much money. They set their sights on bigger prizes and turned to train robbery. Bass and his gang robbed the Union Pacific gold train from San Francisco, netting over $60,000, which is to this day the largest single robbery of the Union Pacific. He was wounded by Texas Rangers on the way to rob a small bank in Round Rock, and died two days later on his 27th birthday.
Myra Maybelle Shirley was born in Carthage, Missouri. As a young lady, she attended the Carthage Female Academy where she excelled in all subjects and became an accomplished pianist. She grew up with Cole Younger and later befriended the James brothers. When the outlaws of the James-Younger gang needed to hide out, they often stayed at the Shirley family farm. It wasn’t long before Maybelle was introduced to a life of crime and earned the nickname “The Bandit Queen.” In 1866, Belle married Jim Reed, a former Confederate Army guerrilla. Jim Reed tried to live the honest life of a farmer, but when that didn’t pan out, he fell in with the Starrs, a Cherokee Indian family notorious for stealing horses. Along with his wife’s friends, the Jameses and Youngers, they planned and executed many daring heists. Jim was killed while trying to escape from the custody of a deputy sheriff who had arrested him for one such robbery. After the loss of her husband, Belle made her living organizing and planning robberies, as well as fencing stolen goods. When she was unable to bribe the law into looking the other way, she would seduce them to get what she wanted. She married Sam Starr in 1880, and two years later, both of them were convicted of stealing horses. They were released a year later and went right back into lawlessness. Belle was murdered on Feb. 3, 1889, two days before she was to turn 41. She was shot in the back while riding home from the general store. Her killer has never been identified.
Cole Younger’s life was forever changed when his father was murdered by Union Captain Walley. Mr. Younger had given Walley a severe beating for making advances on his daughter (Cole’s sister). Cole was already a member of Quantrill’s Raiders but after the murder of his father, he joined the Confederate Army. It is not for certain when he went into banditry, but the first time he was mentioned as a suspect was after the 1868 robbery of Nimrod Long & Co., a bank in Russellville, Kentucky. Cole and his brothers formed a gang with Jesse and Frank James. They robbed stagecoaches, trains, and banks in Missouri, Kentucky, Kansas, and West Virginia. Luck ran out for the Younger boys on September 7, 1876 during a botched bank robbery. Cole and his brothers Jim and Bob pled guilty to avoid the hangman’s noose. They were sentenced to life, but were paroled in 1901. Cole toured the nation with Frank James giving speeches about the Wild West. He later became a Christian and renounced his criminal past and died peacefully 4 years later, with 11 bullets still embedded in his body.
James Miller was also known as “Deacon Jim” because he went to church and did not smoke or drink. Despite his piousness, he was actually one of the deadliest guns in the Wild West. He openly stated that he would kill anyone for money, and his rate was reported at anywhere from $150 to $2,000. Miller’s usual method was to ambush his victims at night using a shotgun and wearing a black frock coat, making him hard to see in the darkness. His coat also concealed a steel plate he wore on his chest to protect him from opposing gunfire, an early version of a bullet-proof vest. He is known to have committed 14 murders, but rumors swelled that number to 50. He was arrested in Oklahoma, for the murder of A.A. “Gus” Bobbitt. Not wanting to leave it up to a jury, a lynch mob dragged Miller and three others out to an abandoned stable to be hanged. Before he died, he made two requests. He wanted his ring to be given to his wife (who was a cousin of John Wesley Hardin) and to be allowed to wear his hat while being hanged. He went out on his own terms, shouting “Let ‘er rip!” before he jumped off his box to his death. His body and the bodies of the other three men lynched that night were left hanging for hours until a photographer could be found to immortalize the event.
The Sundance Kid (Henry Longabaugh) earned his nickname when he was caught and convicted of horse thievery in Sundance, Wyoming. Despite his reputation as a gunfighter, he is not certain to have actually killed anyone. After his release from jail in 1896, he and Robert LeRoy Parker aka “Butch Cassidy” formed the gang known as the Wild Bunch. They were responsible for the longest string of successful train and bank robberies in American history. Due to the pressure of the Pinkerton Detective Agency on their trail, Sundance, Butch, and Etta Place left the United States for Argentina to let things cool down. He is believed to have been killed in a shootout in Bolivia, but several family members claim he actually returned to the states, changed his name to William Henry Long, and lived in the small town of Duchesne, Utah until 1936. As of this writing, Long’s body has been exhumed and is undergoing DNA testing to determine the truth.
In 1879, at the age of 13, Robert LeRoy Parker (Butch Cassidy) lived and worked with his family on the ranch of Jim Marshall in Circleville, Utah. It was there that he met his friend and mentor, Mike Cassidy who gave Bob his first gun and taught him how to shoot. Years later, Bob would take his last name, Cassidy, as a tribute. His first run-in with the law occurred when he rode into town to buy a new pair of overalls. The general store was closed, so Bob let himself in, found a pair that fit, and left a note promising that he would be back to pay later. The merchant reported him to the Sherriff, but he was acquitted of any crime. On June 24, 1889, he and three others robbed the San Miguel Valley Bank in Telluride, netting $21,000. With this money, he bought a ranch near the infamous “Hole-in-the-Wall” outlaw hideout. Parker, by this time “Butch Cassidy”, was never a very good rancher, and it is believed to have simply been a cover for his illegal activities. In 1896, he became the leader of the infamous group of criminals known as the Wild Bunch that included some of the most well-known outlaws of the Wild West. As with the Sundance Kid, it is unknown if he really died in Bolivia, or if, as some relatives claim, he returned to America.
The son of a Methodist preacher, he was named after the founder of the Methodist faith. When he was only 14 years old, he stabbed a boy for taunting him. A year later, he was playfully wrestling with an ex-slave named Mage. He scratched Mage’s face, and the next day, Mage hid on a path and attacked Hardin in retaliation. Hardin fired three warning shots, but when Mage didn’t back off, Hardin was forced to shoot him in self-defense. Mage died as a result. Since many of the Texas State Police were themselves former slaves, and Hardin was a “Johnny Reb”, he didn’t stand a chance of a fair trial. He went into hiding and was warned by his brother when the police found out where he was. He did not run, but stayed and fought instead. He killed all three policemen and evaded the law. Several arrests and escapes later, he ended up in Abilene, Kansas, where he befriended “Wild Bill” Hickok. While in Abilene, he stayed at the American House Hotel. When the stranger in the next room wouldn’t stop snoring, he fired a gun into the ceiling twice. The first shot woke the man up, and the second one killed him. Hardin made his escape out of the window and left for Texas. Many skirmishes with the law followed, and he was finally captured, convicted, and went to jail for seventeen years. During his time incarcerated, he finished his law degree and practiced as a lawyer upon his release. He died when he was shot in the back of the head while playing dice.
Jesse James was born in Missouri, and along with his brother, Frank, was a Confederate guerrilla fighter during the Civil War. After the war, the James boys joined the Younger brothers and formed the James-Younger Gang. Together, they robbed banks, stagecoaches, and trains. In 1869, the gang held up the Daviess County Savings Association in Gallatin, Missouri. Jesse shot and killed a clerk, believing him to be someone else. When he realized his terrible mistake, he began a correspondence with John Newman Edwards, editor and founder of the Kansas City Times. Edwards had fought for the Confederacy also, and was sympathetic to the James brothers. He ran many admiring articles about the gang and published Jesse Jame’s letters to the public, in which he declared his innocence. These articles raised his public profile and made him a kind of folk hero. Though he was famous while alive, he became even more so in death, when he was shot in the back of the head in his own home by trusted friend Robert Ford. His mother, Zerelda James chose this epitaph for her son : “In Loving Memory of my Beloved Son, Murdered by a Traitor and Coward Whose Name is not Worthy to Appear Here.”
There is no outlaw more legendary that Billy the Kid. Countless books, movies, and songs have been written about his life, but the reality was not quite as sensational. Often portrayed as a cold-blooded killer, he entered a life of crime out of necessity, not malice. People who knew him personally called him brave, resourceful honest, and full of laughter. Under different circumstances, he could have been a successful man. It has been said that he killed 21 people, one for each year of his life, but he was probably only responsible for four. In 1877, he went to work as a cattle guard for rancher, John Tunstall. Tunstall was embroiled in a bitter dispute with the local merchants Lawrence Murphy and James Dolan. On February 18, 1878, Tunstall was murdered by Murphy’s workers while herding his cattle in the open range. He was unarmed and alone. This event started what would be called The Lincoln County War. Enraged, the ranch hands, including Billy, were deputized and given the warrants to bring in the Murphy men. They called themselves the Regulators. Due to the corruption of the day, the governor sided with Murphy, and the Regulators became the enemy. After a daring escape from jail, and a few years on the run, he was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett while hiding out in a friend’s home. Over the years, several people have claimed to be Billy the Kid, but the chance that he survived and/or his body was misidentified are highly unlikely.






























ok, lets stick a few good quotes in here:
“I found him a loyal friend and good company. He was a dentist whom necessity had made a gambler; a gentleman whom disease had made a vagabond; a philosopher whom life had made a caustic wit; a long, lean blonde fellow nearly dead with consumption and at the same time the most skillful gambler and nerviest, speediest, deadliest man with a six-gun I ever knew.” – Wyatt Earp speaking of Doc Holliday.
“He has not one single redeeming feature, he is the only criminal I know of who does not have one single good point.” – William Pinkerton speaking of Kid Curry.
“I heard you’re going to kill me, Ike. Get out your gun and commence.” – Doc Holliday to Ike Clanton.
Nice.
Thieves, murderers and liars……yet seen by many as heroes. Makes you wonder.
Good quotes Lifeschool. I always admired the friendship between Doc Holiday and Wyatt Earp. Tombstone is by far my favorite western movie with Unforgiven right behind it.
Huh, I was just reading the “Died at 27″ list yesterday. Looks like #9 continued the tradition.
I was never interested in the wild west until I played Red Dead Revolver and watched Tombstone. What the hell was I thinking? Nice list.
Does anyone here remember that old comic strip “Rick O’Shay?” (I’m showing my age here.) Rick was an old west sheriff and he had a friend, Hipshot Percussion, who was an outlaw gone straight. Anyway, the Hipshot had a cat named Belle Starr. He also had a framed sampler above his bed that said, “Everything in Moderation,” and he would almost always be shown passed out on the floor with several empty whiskey bottles lying around him. I never knew who Belle Starr actually was until today, I just thought it was Hipshot’s cat!
Thanks, Nocosia, for an interesting list.
Make that Nicosia, sorry!
yeah america is cool
I may be kin to bad guys too. Loved your list.
Nice try on the list though the title is a bit misleading as some of these (including Belle Starr, Jesse James) were not Gunslingers in the accepted sense of the term.
The facts for John Wesley Hardin are also somewhat misleading or have succumbed to mythologizing over the years. Hardin did not leave Abilene for shooting someone snoring, but for shooting an attempted burglar in his hotel room. He then fled because despite the alleged friendship mentioned he suspected that Hickok might shoot first question later. (Source Triggernometry by Eugene Cunningham).
A couple of others that should have been on this list were Cullen Baker and another Bill, Bill Longley – recognised as the first fast draw.
Lifeshool (61) I prefer “I’m your huckleberry” from Tombstone.
Re Westerns; Tombstone is very good but a long way from the Best Western Ever. Apart from TGTBATU, Shane and others mentioned here there are many classics from the Golden Era such as High Noon and my personal favourite The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.
Cheers
Lee
can someone please answer comment #18!!!
71: ok, you are looking for a list only six back…
http://listverse.com/people/top-10-people-rumored-to-be-alive-after-death/
Doc Holliday is also a fascinating read if you do a search for him on a dedicated site (probably NOT wiki). I love the name of his partner/wife “Big Nose Kate”.
“Deadwood” was the greatest television show ever produced. Check it out!
1. DiscHuker – “i love the wild west. it would be amazing to live during that time.”
The only way I would go back is if I could meet Mark Twain. If not, forget it. There was no air conditioning back then!
Good list. Was surprised not to see William “Longhair” Courtright on the list, but cutting down to 10 is hard. I agree with the poster above that not all 10 are “gunslingers”–perhaps the list should be titled “10 True Famous Wild West Characters.”
#17/91: Er, maybe the list “Top Ten People Rumored to Be Alive after Death” ?
http://listverse.com/people/top-10-people-rumored-to-be-alive-after-death/
Everyone on this list used guns to commit crimes. Perhaps “gun-brandishing” might be more literally pleasing to those who have nits to pick?
Also, John Wesley Hardin DID indeed fire two shots into the next room when the man inside wouldn’t stop snoring. You are correct, k1w1taxi, that he left town because Wild Bill would shoot first, ask questions later. However, I believe that you may be thinking of a separate incident when a thief tried to enter his room. That happened, too, but in a different town.
I’m sorry, but Tombstone is pretty far down on the list of the best westerns. Leone’s are better as someone said up thread, as well as, Stagecoach, The Searchers, The Wild Bunch, Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid, Unforgiven, High Noon, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The Ox-Bow Incident, Shane, Bad Day at Black Rock, The Magnificent Seven, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, High Plains Drifter, Pale Rider, Dead Man, Lonesome Dove, and many many more. Tombstone is too inaccurate for me to take seriously. Val Kilmer’s performance is really the only reason to watch Tombstone.
Great list Nicosia! And I´m not even into westerns…
I never understood the glorification of theives, bandits and murderers… Although I did enjoy the movie “The Murder of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” but that might have more to do with Brad Pitt than the whole western theme….
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callie_ (34):
HA! Can you imagine a movie where Zac Efron plays Billy the Kid and Vanessa whats-her-face plays Belle Star?
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Maggot (51):
Wasnt Murrieta the name of the character in the cheesy Zorro movie starring Antonio Banderas? Was that a real person??
GTT: Hmm I never saw that movie so I don’t know. Like others on this list, there’s allot of folklore out there about Joaquin Murrieta that embellishes his legend, but as far as I know he’s is a real person.
john dellinger and billy the kid was the wrong man at the right time he should not be on the list
Maggot:
Well, I cant really recommend that you watch it (it´s really, really bad and I used to be a fan of Zorro….) unless you want to see if there is any historical accuracy in the portrayal. If I remember correctly (in the movie), Joaquin Murrieta was the older brother who actually did get killed by the “bad guy ranger” who then stored his head in a jar. His younger brother, also a Murrieta though I forget his name, gets rescued by the old Zorro (who is now too old to fight) and is taught to fight, etc.
In any case, it´s interesting to note that the whole “head in a jar” thing was based on history.
I’m confused why people keep bringing up John Dillinger. Unless there is another earlier guy that I don’t know about, the Dillinger I’m thinking of was a depression era gangster. Not an “outlaw of the American West”.
GTT: the whole “head in a jar” thing was based on history.
Along with the head, his partner apparently was known for having a disfigured hand. Can’t recall the name of that guy, but he was called “Three-fingered Jack” or something like that. So there was also another jar with that hand it it as well!
Great list! The Wild West is always a fascinating subject. I loved Tombstone, I thought Unforgiven was rather boring, but I guess I’m just not into movies like that… whatever that kind of movie is suppose to be like.
When I saw Belle Starr’s picture, I thought she was pretty ugly too, but then I googled her. She was actually quite attractive when she was younger.
Dillenger was not a wild west outlaw. He drove cars around for christs sake!
Unforgiven was way better than Tombstone, any western with Clint Eastwood in it is great. Tombstone was not realistic enough.
PT – Thanx Nicosia you clearly have a great deal of sympathy for all the characters mentioned here (Your not a part time bank robber are you?)It’s notable that the only ones to reach any age are the one’s who spent time in prison
LOL You figured me out! Maybe not so much sympathy as curiosity… And I FREAKIN’ LOVE Tombstone!
84. Maggot
You´re kidding! He was actually another character in the same movie! Huh! Imagine that! And here I was thinking that they made all this up! Well, it´s still a sucky movie but I´ll give them props for the historical references!
GTT: Well rest assured, I had been talking from memory of stuff I’d heard or read about years ago, in my grade-school days, not from this more recent movie.
Discussing him here with you now though got me curious to look online for more info just for the fun of it. Plenty of info out there if you are interested (besides just the dreaded wiki that we all know and love), though admittedly it piques my own interest mostly because it’s right in my own backyard.
Ever since I read Karl May’s Winnetou and Old Shatterhand, I have been fascinated with Wild West. Try those books, you will love them.
Absolutely love this stuff. Just watched Tombstone and Unforgiven last night and am watching Deadwood.
For being the wildest of the wild wild west, Billy the Kid sure does look like scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz.
@26….
You’re right, she is one scary looking “woman.” The funny thing is, in the 1941 movie about her “Belle Starr,” the pick one of the most classically beautiful actresses to play her…Gene Tierney.
http://dirtyharrysplace.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/281075xdfc_w.jpg
Don’t worry, it’s safe for work. Man, she is stunning.
@ Logar (Comment #26)
You’re right, she is one scary looking “woman.” The funny thing is, in the 1941 movie about her “Belle Starr,” the pick one of the most classically beautiful actresses to play her…Gene Tierney.
http://dirtyharrysplace.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/281075xdfc_w.jpg
Don’t worry, it’s safe for work. Man, she is stunning.
The wild west is so romanticized in movies and books, it’s easy to forget that it was a hard life that ended early for many regular people. Disease and injury that could easily be cured today resulted in many early deaths. Food could be scarce. In certain areas, you had the fear of wild fires, Indians, outlaws, poverty, and illness. Communication was nothing like we have today and the certainly didn’t make top ten lists of their favorite movies, lol. So before you say you’d like to live then, consider what you’d be giving up from now.
If you like paunchy, overweight, grey-haired heroes, fine. You fellows have forgotten Shane and Warlock, especially Warlock.
Doc holiday is an American hero
VERY good list! So accurate to what their lives were like as well. My cousins were the James’ and the Youngers’ so our family stories are pretty great lol. There were many hidden factors of corruption during that time and alot of the crime was to fight back and bring attention to it.
Again, great list!
“Treasure of the Sierra Madre” is hardly a western (in the true sense of the word). Now…as far as “best western movie”…”The Outlaw Josey Wales” or “El Dorado”. Dang…every time I see that one, I want to…ride, boldy ride…the John Ford cavalry trilogy, too.
Funny, I don’t recall Clint Eastwood ever looking “paunchy” or “overweight”…
Funny, I don’t recall Clint Eastwood ever looking “paunchy” or “overweight”…
Clint Eastwood looks like a badass at any age.
Interesting ones you left off the list: the Reno Gang, Wild Bill Hickok, Jack Slade, the Daltons and Bill Doolin, Clay Allison, the Ketchums (when they hanged Black Jack his head came off because they’d never hanged anyone in that county before and set the drop for about twelve feet), and the Montana Vigilantes. The best one is the stagecoach robber Black Bart, who robbed two dozen coaches, never hurt anybody, and turned out to be an educated little man from San Francisco. Bart even wrote bad poetry, fifty years before Bonnie Parker.
Then, of course, there were the guys who were sort of on both sides of the law: the Earps, Doc Holliday, Bat Masterson.
The Starr family was a longtime producer of Oklahoma outlaws and general undesirables. The last criminal of that lot, Henry Starr, got killed in 1924 while trying to escape by car from a bank robbery in Arkansas.
i gotta represent for rhe vigilantes and henry plummer and his gang. 3-7-77
I loved reading the Lonesome Dove books. I have always been a fan of westerns. Weather Western Movies, or Western books, I’ve most likely read them.
I recently finished James D. Best’s latest book called The Shopkeeper. I think this book will help revive the Western genre.
http://www.stevedancy.com/stevedancy_002.htm
Very cool list. I love that you have John Wesley Harden so high up, right below the 2 most famous outlaws ever. I have read once that Wild Bill Hickock, who wasn’t afraid of anybody, was afraid of John Wesley Harden.
i have always wondered why don’t the talk about cowgirls back then?
One of the best Westerns is Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
its very possible that garret shot billy barlow(i think thats his name) they buried him the next day very unusual..heres some insight…
# The most basic evidence of Billy’s having survived are the numerous claims made by people who knew the Kid and said they saw him after July 14, 1881. For example, Mrs. J. H. Wood, of Seven Rivers, claimed she served Billy a dinner on July 17, 1881. Mrs. Syd Boykin, of Lincoln, also claimed Billy visited her after he was supposedly killed. Manuel Taylor, a boyhood friend of Billy’s from Silver City, claimed he ran into Billy at a bullfight in Guadalajara, Mexico in 1914. Ben Harbert, of Taos, New Mexico, who also knew the Kid, claimed he saw him in Taos after July 14, 1881. Jesse Cox, a wagon driver from New Mexico, claimed he had seen and spoken to Billy numerous times after 1881.
# Several of Billy’s friends, who didn’t actually report seeing him, also claimed they didn’t believe the story of his death. Yginio Salazar, ex-Regulator and close friend of Billy’s, claimed he received a letter written by the Kid, detailing how he escaped from Fort Sumner on the night of July 14. Frank Coe, another former Regulator, claimed he never believed the Kid was dead and spent a great deal of his time researching sightings and reports of the Kid’s current whereabouts.
# John Graham, alias John Collins, who rode with the Kid in the Rustlers and was a resident of Fort Sumner, claimed he helped dig the grave for the man Garrett killed, and that the corpse was not that of Billy the Kid.
# In total, at least 26 different newspaper articles that claimed the Kid survived appeared after July 14.
# On July 18, 1881, the Grant County Herald published an article entitled “Exit the Kid,” written by S. M. Ashenfelter. In the article, Billy is described as having “allowed his beard to grow and has stained his skin brown to look like a Mexican.” If this is true, it directly contradicts the description of Billy that was reported by J. H. Koogler of the Las Vegas Gazette six months earlier, which reported Billy as having “the traditional silky fuzz on his upper lip.” If Billy still had “silky fuzz” on his upper lip in late December 1880, it would be a biological impossibility for him to have grown a beard by July 1881, as reported by Dr. J. M. Tanner in his book “Growth at Adolescence.”
# In 1983, Elizabeth Garrett, last surviving daughter of Pat Garrett, claimed to interviewer Paul Cain that her father did not kill Billy the Kid.
# On Dec. 20, 1882, San Miguel County issued an arrest warrant for the Kid. This was again issued on Mar. 5, 1883. However, both times the warrant was returned as “not found in county.”
Interestingly, in 1983 Elizabeth Garrett, daughter of Pat Garrett, stated that her father did not kill Billy the Kid.
No Dave Mather? No Clay Allison (who coined the term “shootist”)? Frank James was the deadlier of the Jame’s.
Regarding John Wesley Hardin, I read somewhere that an inquest was held into the facts of his shooting by lawman John Selman. Selman claimed to have been facing Hardin when he shot him, but it appeared that Hardin had been shot in the back of the head, though there remained some doubt. The finding of the court of inquest was that, if Hardin was shot from the front, it was good marksmanship, and if he as shot in the back, it was good judgement. Hardin must have been a real terror with a gun.
My great grandfather, Jenks willingham, stated that one night Billy the Kid rode into his camp and told him that Pat Garrett had shot the town drunk two weeks before to get him off the hook.
I am Billy the kid
My great grandfather, “Jenks” Willingham stated to members of the family that one night a cowboy rode into his camp and that it was Billy the Kid. According to my ancestor, Billy said, “Two weeks ago Pat Garrett shot the town drunk in order to get me off the hook.”
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You might want to research Ben Thompson and Harvey “Kid Curry” Logan. They were the real deal – shootists with a long list of victims; while Butch and Sundance were famous bandits, they were not known as Shootists. Certainly James B. Hickok should be on the list, as perhaps the most deadly shootist in the Old West. Belle Starr is from nearby my home town, and although she was a shady character, not really a deadly person.
billy the kid
FIRST
hey this is a cool
coolz
hey how come hulk hogans not on that list,~?