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Lucien
Maxwell by a Santa Fe Trail Driver |
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Mr. Maxwell
came out to where I was busy with the coach and told me he wanted me to
carry a little package of money to Kansas City for him and deliver it to
the Wells-Fargo Express Company to express to
St. Louis.
I
told him I would take it, but I said, “How much do you want me to take?”
He told me he wanted me to take $52,000. I told him the company
would not like for me to put it in the safe unless it was expressed, but
he said he didn’t want to express it. “All right,” I said, “unless
we are held up and robbed I will deliver the money to Wells-Fargo Express
Company.” “Now,” I said, “in what shape is the money?” He pointed to
an old black satchel sitting on a chair and said, “There is the wallet.” I told him to wait until I went into dinner with the passengers, then for
him to go out there and take the satchel and put it in the front boot,
then pull a mail sack or two up over it and on top of that throw my
blankets and buffalo robes which lay on the seat on top of the mail sacks,
then go away and let it alone. Do not let any one see you do this.
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Maxwell
Statue in
Cimarron,
September, 2008, Kathy Weiser.
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Maxwell's
ranch was headquarters of the Ute agency which was established a long
time prior to my traveling through there. A company of cavalry
was detailed by the Government to camp there to impress the plains
tribes who roamed the
Santa
Fe Trail east of the Raton range. The Ute tribe was very
fond of
Maxwell and looked up to him as children look up to their father.
One old
Indian watched
Maxwell
put the money in the boot of the stage, and after he had left to obey
my instructions this old
Indian who would have gone through the “firy furnace” for
Lucien
Maxwell, stood guard over the stage. I did not know it at
that time, but the
Indian afterwards asked me how I made it in? When I came
back to the coach I laid the buffalo robes to one side, then I laid
the mail bags to one side and put the “wallet” as
Mr. Maxwell
called the old black satchel, right in the bottom of the boot and laid
one mail bag by the side and laid an old blanket over both these, then
piled on the balance of the mail bags and lastly my buffalo robes. I usually slept during the day after I took this money. My
driver did not even know I had it. At night I slept right there
under the driver’s seat in the boot of the coach. At night I
rode, before we quit driving for our rest, on the seat of the boot
with my brace of pistols between me and the driver.
Within about three miles of Willow
Springs,
Kansas,
a stage station, twenty-five miles west of Council Grove, I discovered
twenty-five horses hitched to the rack. There was no retreat, so
I had to drive right on in. Just as we drove up twenty-five men
came out of the settlers’ store and saloon and mounted.
One passenger on my coach was acquainted
with every man of them. They were, however, true to my
suspicions, a band of the notorious
Quantrill
gang, the very ones who had made the raid on
Lawrence
[Kansas]
and killed so many people after robbing them. My passenger
walked up to the gang and said, “Come on, boys, let’s all have a drink
before you go.” They all returned with my passenger and drank,
but I told the driver I did not want to leave the coach and for him to
grease it and I would fool around about that so as to dispel suspicion
that I was guarding my coach. Before we were through with the
coach the men came back and in my presence asked the passenger if he
believed the coach was worth robbing. “No,” he said, “I have not
seen a sign of money.”
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I
told the boys that it wasn’t worth robbing, that there was not more than
$10 in the safe and that it was mine. I told him I didn’t have much
of a haul in the safe, but I said, “Here’s the key, you can go through it
if you want to and satisfy yourself.” I laughed and talked with the
balance of the boys as if nothing unusual was taking place. One of
the gang took the little old iron safe, which was about eighteen inches
square and weighing about 150 to 200 pounds, and put it on the seat of the
coach and unlocked it. I had it literally stuffed full of way bills,
letters and such other plunder, together with a little wallet of mine
containing $10. The robber took out the ten dollars and held it up,
saying, “Is this what you referred to, conductor?” I told him that it was. “Well,” says he, “I will not take that, it is not tempting enough.” I thanked the accommodating robber in my nicest way for having left me
money to buy a few dinners with after I got to Kansas City, and they left
us. I was fairly bursting with satisfaction. No one on the
stage knew that I had saved the $52,000 of
Lucien
Maxwell's. However, boy like, just before we rolled into Kansas
City I told the passengers about the money.
When we at last had gained Kansas City one
of the passengers told Mr. Barnum about the escapade with the robbers and
my success in maintaining a “bold front” and the “gold dust.” Mr.
Barnum grunted and said, “Oh, well, Billy is one of our conductors that is
so stubborn that he has to have everything his own way.” Then, he
added, “Did you say he gave his safe keys to the robbers?” “Yes,” the
passenger said, “he did.” Barnum replied, “I’ll be dogged.” Then he told the passengers about my having deposited the mail in the
river to make a bridge so I could cross my coach and eventually to “reach
the other side.”
When I returned from the express office where I had been to take the
money, in fulfillment of my promise to
Mr. Maxwell,
old Tom Barnum and my passengers were still talking. Barnum
approached me, saying, “Been up to some more of your tricks, have you,
Billy?” I told him I had been taking “poker chips” to the express office,
if that was what he meant. They all had a good laugh; then Barnum
requested me to show him the receipt I gave
Maxwell for
the money. “Now, Billy,” said Barnum, “you’re a pretty bird, you
know we would not charge
Maxwell a
cent for express, for we never paid him a cent for board or for feeding
our mules—but never mind,”—then he laughed, “oh, that receipt!”
Added April, 2005
Also See:
Kit Carson
- Legend of the Southwest
My
Friend, Kit Carson by a Santa Fe Trail Driver
The Largest
Land Grant in History - Biography of Lucien Maxwell
Santa Fe
Trail - Highway to the Southwest
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Excerpted from the book,
The Second William Penn - A True Account of Incidents that Happened
Along the Old Santa Fe Trail, by William H. Ryus, 1913. (now in
the public domain.)
William "Billy". H. Ryus was better known as
“the Second William Penn” by passengers and old settlers of the
Santa Fe
Trail because of his rare and exceptional knowledge of
Indian
traits and characteristics and his ability to trade and treat with them so
tactfully. Ryus was one of the boy drivers of the a stage company
with U.S. Mail contracts, regularly running along the
Santa Fe
Trail. During this time, he routinely crossed the plains at a
time when the West was still looked upon as “wild and wooly,” and in
reality, was fraught with numerous, and oftentimes, murderous dangers.
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I WANT YOU GRINGO!!
To Submit Your Tales From the Past! |
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Great American Bars and Saloons
By
Kathy Weiser
Owner/Editor of Legends of America
Kathy Weiser's first venture into the publishing world takes you into the
many watering holes of America's past, particularly the numerous
saloons
that sprouted up during our nation's
Wild West
days. This great
photographic review displays hundreds of
vintage photographs from
California
to
Arizona, the mining camps of
Colorado, all the way to New
York and its turbulent days of
Prohibition.
Hardcover, 2006, 224 Pages.
Signed by the author!!
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American history is longer,
larger, more various, more beautiful, and more terrible than anything
anyone has ever said about it.
-- James Baldwin |
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