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KS 66285
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TEXAS LEGENDS
John M. Larn - Vigilante,
Outlaw, Lawman |
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So
respected as a
vigilante in the lawless settlement of
Fort Griffin,
Texas,
John M. Larn was elected sheriff, a mistake the town's population would not soon forget.
Born in Mobile, Alabama on March 1, 1849, Larn traveled to
Colorado as a
teenager where he found work as a ranch hand. However, after an argument
with his boss over a horse around 1869, he shot and killed him. Soon he
fled to
New Mexico ,
where he killed a local sheriff who he thought was trailing him.
Continuing on into to
Texas,
he settled in Fort Griffin,
where in 1871 he worked as a trail boss for a local rancher named Bill
Hays. While on a cattle drive to Trinidad,
Colorado,
he allegedly killed two Mexicans and a sheep herder. Somewhere along the
line, Larn married Mary Jane Matthews from the noted Matthews family and became a well known citizen
of Shackelford County.
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John M. Larn was a
vigilante, an
outlaw and a
lawman. |
| However, by 1873,
allegations began to surface that Larn was involved in cattle
rustling. Ironically, that same year, he got a warrant for the arrest
of every member of Bill Hays' cattle outfit for rustling. As he
accompanied a posse of thirteen soldiers from
Fort Griffin, the men ambushed and killed every member of the outfit
near Bush Knob,
Texas.
In 1874 he joined the
Tin Hat Brigade in Fort Griffin, a
vigilante group that worked swiftly bringing "justice"
to many a horse thief who was left hanging from a tree near the river.
As a member of the
Tin Hat Brigade, he gained so much respect, he was elected sheriff
of Fort Griffin in
April, 1876. That same month, the
Tin Hat Brigade
caught a man in the act of stealing a horse
and promptly hanged him to a pecan tree.
Leaving his body hanging there for all to see, they also left a pick
and shovel below his gruesome remains for anyone who might have wished
to remove the thief and bury him. In the next three months the
Fort Griffin
vigilantes shot two more horse thieves and hanged six others.
Shortly after taking the sheriff's
position, Larn entered into a private contract with the local
territorial garrison to deliver three steers of cattle per day.
However, Larn had different ideas and began to plan with longtime
friend and recently deputized
John Selman, to simply rustle the cattle from neighboring ranchers
rather than having to provide his own. Before long, he and
Selman, instead of controlling the area crime, were
controlling the
vigilantes,
rustling even more cattle and otherwise terrorizing the county.
However, suspicions were soon raised as a number of ranchers noticed
that while their herds were slowly shrinking, Larn's remained
unaffected. Obviously profitable, Larn soon built a house at
Camp Cooper Ranch on the Cedar Fork in Lambshead,
Texas
After serving less than a year as
sheriff, Larn resigned as sheriff on March 7, 1877 and was replaced by
his deputy,
William Cruger, a month later. Moving on to outright cattle
rustling, he and
Selman
continued to profit and in March, 1877 were appointed as deputy hide
inspectors for Shackelford County. Opportune positions for the cattle
thieves, they were to inspect all cattle
herds entering and leaving the county, as well as supervising the
butchers. Larn also continued to supply
Fort Griffin with its beef and
as more and more cattle went missing, the complaints grew louder and
louder. A number of violent acts were also being reported as a
band of men, allegedly led by Larn and
Selman, were bushwhacking area ranchers, driving off their cattle,
shooting horses, and firing potshots at the homes of terrified
citizens.
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It was at Shaunissy's Saloon in Fort Griffin that
Wyatt Earp
first met
Doc Holliday. Today, the saloon has been recreated
on
top of its old foundation. June, 2007, Kathy Weiser.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Finally, in February, 1878, a group of civilians secured a warrant to
search to river behind Larn's house. Looking for hides that didn't belong
to him, six were recovered from the river with brands other than Larn's
own. Though Larn was arrested, he was later released and violence
continued.
However, in June, 1878 a local rancher named Treadwell, who
had reportedly uncovered the cattle rustling, was wounded by Larn and the
Albany court issued a warrant for his arrest.
Sheriff William Cruger was then tasked with arresting his former boss,
which he did on June 22, 1878. After placing him in the jail, Cruger had
the local blacksmith shackle Larn to the floor of the cell to prevent a
breakout by Larn's supporters.
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Instead, the next night, the
Tin Hat Brigade, stormed the jail intending to hang Larn. When they
found they couldn't lynch the shackled man, they shot him in his cell. Afterwards, his body was returned to Camp
Cooper Ranch where he was buried beside his infant son.
After Larn was captured and killed,
Selman took off for lawless Lincoln County,
New Mexico,
where he started a vicious gang called
Selman's Scouts. For
two months these outlaws terrorized the area, stealing horses and cattle,
murdering innocent men and boys, and pillaging businesses and homes. They
were finally stopped when
Governor Lew
Wallace issued a proclamation threatening martial law. Selman returned to
Texas where he was captured by
Texas Rangers
in 1880 and taken to Shackelford County to stand trial for his previous crimes.
However, he soon escaped and made his way to Chihuahua, Mexico where he lived until
1888. The
Texas
charges were then dropped and he moved to El Paso where he remarried and
made his living primarily as a gambler and sometimes as a City Constable.
On April 5, 1894, he killed former
Texas Ranger
Baz (Bass) Outlaw during a fight in Tillie Howard's brothel.
The following year, on
August 19, 1895, he killed the famous gunman
John Wesley Hardin in the Acme Saloon. Though charged with murder, his
trial resulted in a hung jury. While out on bond, he ran into
Marshal George Scarborough and when talk elevated into a dispute, then to
gunplay, Scarborough shot
Selman four
times. Selman died on
April 6, 1896 and
Scarborough was acquitted of murder.
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, © July, 2006 |
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John Henry Selman, both an
outlaw and a
lawman,
killed
John Wesley Hardin.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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From the
Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West Books -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Old West
books for our frontier enthusiasts. For many of these, we have
only one available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
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