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He eventually found work as an itinerant ranch hand and shepherd in southeastern [[Arizona]]. In [[1877]] he became a civilian teamster at [[Camp Grant]] Army Post with the duty of hauling logs from a timber camp to a sawmill. The civilian blacksmith at the camp, Frank "Windy" Cahill, took pleasure in bullying young McCarty. On [[August 17]] Cahill attacked McCarty after a verbal exchange and threw him to the ground. McCarty retaliated by drawing his gun and shooting Cahill, who died the next day. Once again McCarty was in custody, this time in the Camp's guardhouse awaiting the arrival of the local marshal. Before the [[marshal]] could arrive, however, McCarty escaped. |
He eventually found work as an itinerant ranch hand and shepherd in southeastern [[Arizona]]. In [[1877]] he became a civilian teamster at [[Camp Grant]] Army Post with the duty of hauling logs from a timber camp to a sawmill. The civilian blacksmith at the camp, Frank "Windy" Cahill, took pleasure in bullying young McCarty. On [[August 17]] Cahill attacked McCarty after a verbal exchange and threw him to the ground. McCarty retaliated by drawing his gun and shooting Cahill, who died the next day. Once again McCarty was in custody, this time in the Camp's guardhouse awaiting the arrival of the local marshal. Before the [[marshal]] could arrive, however, McCarty escaped. |
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Again on the run, McCarty next turns up in the house of a Heiskell Jones in Pecos Valley, [[New Mexico]]. [[Apache Tribe|Apache]]s had stolen McCarty's horse which forced him to walk many miles to the nearest settlement, which was Mrs. Jones's house. She nursed the young man, who was near death, back to health. The Jones family developed a strong attachment to McCarty and gave him one of their horses. |
Again on the run, McCarty next turns up in the house of a Heiskell Jones in Pecos Valley, [[New Mexico]]. [[Apache Tribe|Apache]]s had stolen McCarty's horse which forced him to walk many miles to the nearest settlement, which was Mrs. Jones's house. She nursed the young man, who was near death, back to health. The Jones family developed a strong attachment to McCarty and gave him one of their horses. |
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=== Lincoln County War === |
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In the fall of [[1877]] McCarty moved to [[Lincoln County, New Mexico]] and was hired in as a cattle guard by [[John Tunstall]], an English cattle rancher, banker, and merchant. A conflict had begun between the established town merchants, a monopoly called "The House", and the ranchers. The ranchers had formed a group called "The Regulators" that were opposed to "The House". Tunstall was killed in February 18, [[1878]] by a sheriff "posse" who came to his land to enforce a debt after a court order by "The House". Tunstall was unarmed at the time and his killing enraged McCarty who joined "The Regulators". They hunted down two of the members of the posse that had killed Tunstall. They captured and then killed them on the way back to Lincoln, also killing one of their own members who opposed hurting the prisoners. Back in Lincoln they ambushed and killed Sheriff Brady in Lincoln. |
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In [[autumn]] [[1878]], retired Union General [[Lew Wallace]] became the new territorial governor of New Mexico. In order to restore peace to Lincoln County, Wallace proclaimed an amnesty for any man involved in the [[Lincoln County War]] that was not already under indictment. McCarty was, of course, under several indictments (some of which unrelated to the Lincoln County War) but Wallace was intrigued by rumors that McCarty was willing to surrender himself and testify against other combatants if amnesty could be extended to him. In [[March]] of [[1879]] Wallace and McCarty met to discuss the possibility of a deal. True to form, McCarty greeted the governor with a revolver in one hand and a [[Winchester rifle]] in the other. After several days to think the issue over, McCarty agreed to testify in return for an amnesty. |
In [[autumn]] [[1878]], retired Union General [[Lew Wallace]] became the new territorial governor of New Mexico. In order to restore peace to Lincoln County, Wallace proclaimed an amnesty for any man involved in the [[Lincoln County War]] that was not already under indictment. McCarty was, of course, under several indictments (some of which unrelated to the Lincoln County War) but Wallace was intrigued by rumors that McCarty was willing to surrender himself and testify against other combatants if amnesty could be extended to him. In [[March]] of [[1879]] Wallace and McCarty met to discuss the possibility of a deal. True to form, McCarty greeted the governor with a revolver in one hand and a [[Winchester rifle]] in the other. After several days to think the issue over, McCarty agreed to testify in return for an amnesty. |
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Part of the agreement was for McCarty to submit to a show arrest and a short stay in jail until the conclusion of his courtroom testimony. Even though his testimony helped to indict one of the powerful House faction leaders, John Dolan, the district attorney, defied Wallace's order to set McCarty free after testifying. A skilled escape artist, McCarty slipped out of his [[handcuffs]] and fled. |
Part of the agreement was for McCarty to submit to a show arrest and a short stay in jail until the conclusion of his courtroom testimony. Even though his testimony helped to indict one of the powerful House faction leaders, John Dolan, the district attorney, defied Wallace's order to set McCarty free after testifying. A skilled escape artist, McCarty slipped out of his [[handcuffs]] and fled. |
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=== Pat Garrett === |
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For the next year he survived by stealing and rustling as he did before. He did hang around [[Fort Sumner, New Mexico|Fort Sumner]] on the [[Pecos River]] and developed a fateful friendship with a local bartender named [[Pat Garrett]] who was later elected sheriff of [[Lincoln County, New Mexico|Lincoln County]]. As sheriff, Garrett was charged with arresting his friend Henry McCarty, who by now was almost exclusively known as "Billy the Kid". |
For the next year he survived by stealing and rustling as he did before. He did hang around [[Fort Sumner, New Mexico|Fort Sumner]] on the [[Pecos River]] and developed a fateful friendship with a local bartender named [[Pat Garrett]] who was later elected sheriff of [[Lincoln County, New Mexico|Lincoln County]]. As sheriff, Garrett was charged with arresting his friend Henry McCarty, who by now was almost exclusively known as "Billy the Kid". |
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Garrett set up many traps and ambushes in an attempt to apprehend McCarty, but the Kid seemed to have an animal instinct that warned him of danger. However, McCarty's instinct failed him at an abandoned stone building located in a remote location called [[Stinking Springs]]. Garrett's men surrounded the building during the night and waited for sunrise. One of McCarty's companions named Charlie Bowdre had a hat similar to McCarty's and was shot dead by the posse after leaving the structure to feed his horse. Soon afterward somebody from within the building reached for the horse's halter rope but Garrett shot and killed the horse (the horse's body then blocked the only exit). Without transportation there wasn't any chance of escape, but the besieged and hungry group didn't surrender until later that day when the posse was cooking a meal. |
Garrett set up many traps and ambushes in an attempt to apprehend McCarty, but the Kid seemed to have an animal instinct that warned him of danger. However, McCarty's instinct failed him at an abandoned stone building located in a remote location called [[Stinking Springs]]. Garrett's men surrounded the building during the night and waited for sunrise. One of McCarty's companions named Charlie Bowdre had a hat similar to McCarty's and was shot dead by the posse after leaving the structure to feed his horse. Soon afterward somebody from within the building reached for the horse's halter rope but Garrett shot and killed the horse (the horse's body then blocked the only exit). Without transportation there wasn't any chance of escape, but the besieged and hungry group didn't surrender until later that day when the posse was cooking a meal. |
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=== Lincoln Escape === |
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[[Image:Billy_the_Kids'_grave_TX.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Billy the Kid's grave, Fort Sumner, New Mexico]] |
[[Image:Billy_the_Kids'_grave_TX.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Billy the Kid's grave, Fort Sumner, New Mexico]] |
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McCarty was jailed in the town of [[Mesilla]] while waiting for his [[April]] [[1881]] trial. Deliberation took exactly one day and McCarty was convicted of murdering Sheriff William Brady and on [[April 13]] he was sentenced by Judge Warren Bristol to [[hanging|hang]]. His execution was scheduled for [[May 13]] and he was sent to Lincoln to await this date. He was under guard by James Bell and Robert Ollinger on the top floor of the building formerly known as the House before and during the Lincoln County War. On [[April 28]] McCarty somehow escaped and killed both of his guards while Garrett was out of town. It is not known how McCarty was able to do this, but it is widely believed that a friend or [[Regulator]] sympathizer left a pistol in the privy that one of the guards escorted McCarty to daily. It is thought that McCarty shot Bell with the pistol when McCarty reached the top of a flight of stairs in the House. After that, the story goes, McCarty stole Ollinger's ten-gauge double barrel [[shotgun]] and waited for Ollinger by the window in the room he was being held in. From here McCarty is thought to have shot Ollinger as he paused from running across the street upon hearing "Hello Bob" from McCarty. |
McCarty was jailed in the town of [[Mesilla]] while waiting for his [[April]] [[1881]] trial. Deliberation took exactly one day and McCarty was convicted of murdering Sheriff William Brady and on [[April 13]] he was sentenced by Judge Warren Bristol to [[hanging|hang]]. His execution was scheduled for [[May 13]] and he was sent to Lincoln to await this date. He was under guard by James Bell and Robert Ollinger on the top floor of the building formerly known as the House before and during the Lincoln County War. On [[April 28]] McCarty somehow escaped and killed both of his guards while Garrett was out of town. It is not known how McCarty was able to do this, but it is widely believed that a friend or [[Regulator]] sympathizer left a pistol in the privy that one of the guards escorted McCarty to daily. It is thought that McCarty shot Bell with the pistol when McCarty reached the top of a flight of stairs in the House. After that, the story goes, McCarty stole Ollinger's ten-gauge double barrel [[shotgun]] and waited for Ollinger by the window in the room he was being held in. From here McCarty is thought to have shot Ollinger as he paused from running across the street upon hearing "Hello Bob" from McCarty. |
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=== Death === |
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This would be, however, McCarty's last escape; according to [[Pat Garrett]] he and two of his remaining deputies were questioning McCarty's friend, Pete Maxwell on [[July 14]], 1881 in Maxwell's darkened bedroom in [[Old Fort Sumner]], when McCarty unexpectedly entered the room. The Kid didn't recognize Garrett in the poor lighting conditions and asked "¿Quien es? ¿Quien es?" ([[Spanish language|Spanish]] for "Who is it? Who is it?). Realizing his predicament and being unarmed, McCarty tried to flee when [[Garrett]] shot him twice. |
This would be, however, McCarty's last escape; according to [[Pat Garrett]] he and two of his remaining deputies were questioning McCarty's friend, Pete Maxwell on [[July 14]], 1881 in Maxwell's darkened bedroom in [[Old Fort Sumner]], when McCarty unexpectedly entered the room. The Kid didn't recognize Garrett in the poor lighting conditions and asked "¿Quien es? ¿Quien es?" ([[Spanish language|Spanish]] for "Who is it? Who is it?). Realizing his predicament and being unarmed, McCarty tried to flee when [[Garrett]] shot him twice. |
Revision as of 02:45, 24 December 2005
Henry McCarty (November 23, 1859 – July 14, 1881) better known as Billy the Kid but also known by the alias William Henry Bonney, was a 19th century American frontier outlaw and murderer who was a participant in the Lincoln County War. He is reputed to have killed 21 men, one for each year of his life, but the figure is probably closer to nine (four on his own and five with the help of others). McCarty had blue eyes, smooth cheeks, and was unusually friendly; traits that few other outlaws in the American West had at the time.
Biography
Little is known about McCarty's early childhood but he was probably born in New York City. The exact names of his parents, and thus McCarty's own surname, are not known for certain. Variations for his parents' names include: Catherine McCarty or Katherine McCarty Bonney for his mother and William Bonney or Patrick Henry McCarty for his father (who probably died around the end of the American Civil War). In 1873 his mother married William Antrim and the family moved to Silver City, New Mexico. His stepfather was a bartender and carpenter but soon became more interested in prospecting for fortune than in his wife and stepsons.
Faced with an indigent husband, McCarty's mother took in boarders in order to provide for her sons. She was by now afflicted with tuberculosis even though she was seen by her boarders and neighbors as "a jolly Irish lady, full of life and mischief". The following year, on 16 September, 1874, his mother died of her condition and at 14 McCarty was forced to find work in a hotel. The manager was impressed by the young boy, boasting that he was the only kid who ever worked for him that didn't steal anything. His school teachers thought that the young orphan was "no more of a problem than any other boy, always quite willing to help with chores around the schoolhouse".
On September 23, 1875 McCarty was arrested for hiding a bundle of stolen clothes for a man playing a prank on a Chinese laundryman. Two days after McCarty was thrown in jail, the scrawny teen escaped by worming his way up the jailhouse chimney. From that point onward McCarty would be a fugitive.
He eventually found work as an itinerant ranch hand and shepherd in southeastern Arizona. In 1877 he became a civilian teamster at Camp Grant Army Post with the duty of hauling logs from a timber camp to a sawmill. The civilian blacksmith at the camp, Frank "Windy" Cahill, took pleasure in bullying young McCarty. On August 17 Cahill attacked McCarty after a verbal exchange and threw him to the ground. McCarty retaliated by drawing his gun and shooting Cahill, who died the next day. Once again McCarty was in custody, this time in the Camp's guardhouse awaiting the arrival of the local marshal. Before the marshal could arrive, however, McCarty escaped.
Again on the run, McCarty next turns up in the house of a Heiskell Jones in Pecos Valley, New Mexico. Apaches had stolen McCarty's horse which forced him to walk many miles to the nearest settlement, which was Mrs. Jones's house. She nursed the young man, who was near death, back to health. The Jones family developed a strong attachment to McCarty and gave him one of their horses.
Lincoln County War
In the fall of 1877 McCarty moved to Lincoln County, New Mexico and was hired in as a cattle guard by John Tunstall, an English cattle rancher, banker, and merchant. A conflict had begun between the established town merchants, a monopoly called "The House", and the ranchers. The ranchers had formed a group called "The Regulators" that were opposed to "The House". Tunstall was killed in February 18, 1878 by a sheriff "posse" who came to his land to enforce a debt after a court order by "The House". Tunstall was unarmed at the time and his killing enraged McCarty who joined "The Regulators". They hunted down two of the members of the posse that had killed Tunstall. They captured and then killed them on the way back to Lincoln, also killing one of their own members who opposed hurting the prisoners. Back in Lincoln they ambushed and killed Sheriff Brady in Lincoln.
In autumn 1878, retired Union General Lew Wallace became the new territorial governor of New Mexico. In order to restore peace to Lincoln County, Wallace proclaimed an amnesty for any man involved in the Lincoln County War that was not already under indictment. McCarty was, of course, under several indictments (some of which unrelated to the Lincoln County War) but Wallace was intrigued by rumors that McCarty was willing to surrender himself and testify against other combatants if amnesty could be extended to him. In March of 1879 Wallace and McCarty met to discuss the possibility of a deal. True to form, McCarty greeted the governor with a revolver in one hand and a Winchester rifle in the other. After several days to think the issue over, McCarty agreed to testify in return for an amnesty.
Part of the agreement was for McCarty to submit to a show arrest and a short stay in jail until the conclusion of his courtroom testimony. Even though his testimony helped to indict one of the powerful House faction leaders, John Dolan, the district attorney, defied Wallace's order to set McCarty free after testifying. A skilled escape artist, McCarty slipped out of his handcuffs and fled.
Pat Garrett
For the next year he survived by stealing and rustling as he did before. He did hang around Fort Sumner on the Pecos River and developed a fateful friendship with a local bartender named Pat Garrett who was later elected sheriff of Lincoln County. As sheriff, Garrett was charged with arresting his friend Henry McCarty, who by now was almost exclusively known as "Billy the Kid".
Garrett set up many traps and ambushes in an attempt to apprehend McCarty, but the Kid seemed to have an animal instinct that warned him of danger. However, McCarty's instinct failed him at an abandoned stone building located in a remote location called Stinking Springs. Garrett's men surrounded the building during the night and waited for sunrise. One of McCarty's companions named Charlie Bowdre had a hat similar to McCarty's and was shot dead by the posse after leaving the structure to feed his horse. Soon afterward somebody from within the building reached for the horse's halter rope but Garrett shot and killed the horse (the horse's body then blocked the only exit). Without transportation there wasn't any chance of escape, but the besieged and hungry group didn't surrender until later that day when the posse was cooking a meal.
Lincoln Escape
McCarty was jailed in the town of Mesilla while waiting for his April 1881 trial. Deliberation took exactly one day and McCarty was convicted of murdering Sheriff William Brady and on April 13 he was sentenced by Judge Warren Bristol to hang. His execution was scheduled for May 13 and he was sent to Lincoln to await this date. He was under guard by James Bell and Robert Ollinger on the top floor of the building formerly known as the House before and during the Lincoln County War. On April 28 McCarty somehow escaped and killed both of his guards while Garrett was out of town. It is not known how McCarty was able to do this, but it is widely believed that a friend or Regulator sympathizer left a pistol in the privy that one of the guards escorted McCarty to daily. It is thought that McCarty shot Bell with the pistol when McCarty reached the top of a flight of stairs in the House. After that, the story goes, McCarty stole Ollinger's ten-gauge double barrel shotgun and waited for Ollinger by the window in the room he was being held in. From here McCarty is thought to have shot Ollinger as he paused from running across the street upon hearing "Hello Bob" from McCarty.
Death
This would be, however, McCarty's last escape; according to Pat Garrett he and two of his remaining deputies were questioning McCarty's friend, Pete Maxwell on July 14, 1881 in Maxwell's darkened bedroom in Old Fort Sumner, when McCarty unexpectedly entered the room. The Kid didn't recognize Garrett in the poor lighting conditions and asked "¿Quien es? ¿Quien es?" (Spanish for "Who is it? Who is it?). Realizing his predicament and being unarmed, McCarty tried to flee when Garrett shot him twice.
Henry McCarty, the infamous "Billy the Kid", was buried in a plot in-between his dead friends Tom O'Folliard and Charlie Bowdre the next day at Fort Sumner's cemetery.
New Mexico governor Bill Richardson is considering pardoning McCarty as of June 2004, stating "I have to decide whether to pardon him. But not right away - after the investigation, after the state gets more publicity."
Left-handed or right-handed?
For most of the 20th century, it was widely assumed that Billy the Kid was left-handed. This belief came from the fact that the only known photograph of Billy, an undated ferrotype, shows him with a Model 1873 Winchester rifle in his right hand and a gun belt with a holster on his left side, where a left handed person would typically wear a pistol. The belief became so entrenched that in 1958, a biographical film was made about Billy the Kid called The Left Handed Gun starring Paul Newman.
It wasn't until late in the 20th century when it became general knowledge that the familiar ferrotype was actually a reverse image. This version shows Billy's Model 1873 Winchester with the loading port on the left side. All Model 1873s had the loading port on the right side proving the image was a negative and that Billy was in fact wearing his pistol on his right hip. Even though the image has been proven to be a negative, the idea of a left handed Billy the Kid continues to widely circulate.
Another idea that is going around is that Billy the Kid was not only right-handed, but left-handed as well, making him ambidextrous. Many believe this, mostly because so many heard that he was left-handed, and so many also heard that he was right-handed. Many of those who disagree think that it is just a rumor to stop all the arguments, and it may be, even though a majority of Billy the Kid sites do say that he was ambidextrous.
Brushy Bill
In 1950, a lawyer named William Morrison located a man named Ollie P. Roberts, nick-named Brushy Bill, who claimed to be the actual Billy the Kid, and that he indeed had not been shot and killed by Pat Garrett in 1881. Although generally rejected, it is still a very heated debate, with very convincing evidence leading either way. Some say Brushy was actually born in 1868, others say he was born in 1879, but he himself claimed to be born on December 31, 1859.
Another claimant, known to be a hoax, was John Miller, who claimed to be Billy the Kid in 1938.
Photographic tests show that Brushy Bill did resemble Billy the Kid. A photograph of Roberts matched to the only known tintype of Billy showed a near perfect match lending more credence to the fact that Roberts was who he said he was. The town of Hico, Texas (Brushy Bill's residence) has capitalized on the Kid's infamy by opening the Billy The Kid Museum, where visitors can review the evidence and decide for themselves.
In film, literature, and music
Billy the Kid has been the subject or inspiration for many works of art, including:
- Michael Ondaatje's 1970 book of poetry The Collected Works of Billy the Kid
- Sam Peckinpah's 1973 motion picture Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid
- Howard Hughes' 1943 motion picture The Outlaw
- Billy the Kid (1930) - directed by King Vidor and starring Johnny Mack Brown
- Christopher Cain's 1988 motion picture Young Guns
- 1988 film, Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure (portrayed by Dan Shor)
- Geoff Murphy's 1990 motion picture Young Guns II
- Aaron Copland's 1938 ballet, Billy the Kid
- N. Scott Momaday's novel The Ancient Child
- Chris LeDoux's song, Billy the Kid
- Billy Joel's song, The Ballad of Billy The Kid
- Billy Dean's song, "Billy the Kid"
- Jon Bon Jovi's album Blaze of Glory
- German Heavy Metal veterans Running Wild (band)'s song, Billy the Kid
- Pat Garrett's book The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid
- Jack Spicer's 1958 serial poem Billy The Kid
- Chisum, 1970 movie staring John Wayne as John Chisum dealing with Billy the Kid's involvement in the Lincoln County War. Portrayed by Geoffrey Deuel.
- Joseph Santley - 1906 Broadway play co-written by Santley in which he also starred
See also
References
- The Old West: The Gunfighters, Paul Trachtman, Time Life Books, 1974.
- The Saga of Billy the Kid, Walter Noble Burns.
- DesertUSA: "The Desert's Baddest Boy"
- The Last Escape of Billy the Kid
External links
- Findagrave: Billy the Kid
- About Billy the Kid
- Billy the Kid: Outlaw Legend
- Billy the Kid and Posse?
- Billy's gravestone
- Court TV's Crime Library: Billy the Kid