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Complete
List of Old West Gunfights |
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Gunfighters in the 1870's.
This image available for
photographic
prints and downloads
HERE!
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"A simple
genre-fiction validation is the hero's winning the high-noon
gunfight and being embraced by the schoolmarm while the bad guy is
carried off to Boot Hill."
-- John M. Ford
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Blackwell, Oklahoma Gunfight
(1896) - On December 4, 1896, a heavily armed posse of six men
surrounded a shack near Bert Benjamin's ranch outside of Blackwell,
Oklahoma.
Intending on capturing a gang of bank robbers, Deputy Sheriff Alfred Lund
called to the men inside the cabin: "Throw up your hands!" Instead, the
outlaws
inside answered with a burst of gunfire. At this, three of the posse
immediately turned and ran. However, Lund and two other men stayed,
returning fire and killing one of the men inside. When the dust settled,
the posse had killed one of the robbers and wounded another. Lund
initially thought he had "bagged" a much wanted
outlaw by
the name of
"Dynamite" Dick Clifton who was wanted for bank robbery and had a
$3,500 reward on his head. Instead, the dead man inside the cabin, who was
missing a finger, just like
Clifton, was a petty thief named Buck McGregg, aka: Dick Ainsley. The
second wounded
outlaw,
Ben Cravens, was a rustler and murderer. The posse took him into custody,
but he later escaped.
Cherokee Courtroom Shoot-out
(1872) - In what is now Adair County,
Oklahoma, a
Cherokee Indian by the name of Zeke Proctor and a white settler named
Jim Kesterson had long been feuding. When Proctor found Kesterson at the
Hildbrand Mill on February 13, 1872, the two began to argue. When the pair
went for their guns, Polly Beck Hildebrand threw herself between the two
trying to stop the fight. However, Proctor's bullet sailed into her chest.
Kesterson ran for his life as Proctor shot at him two more times, hitting
nothing more than his coat-tail. In the meantime, Polly Hildebrand
lay dead. Though Proctor claimed it was an accident, this did little
to satisfy the Beck family, who were also
Cherokee,
and immediately wanted vengeance upon the man. Tensions built in Indian
Territory as Proctor was brought into custody and the location of the
trial was debated. Finally, Proctor's trial was scheduled for April 15th
at the Cherokee
schoolhouse in Whitmore,
Oklahoma,
where the Beck family was sure they would not get justice.
On the day of the trial, the makeshift courthouse was
jammed with people, many of them, Proctor supporters armed to the teeth.
Outside was another crowd, eager to hear the proceedings, among them a
number of similarly armed Beck supporters. Shortly after the proceedings
began, a federal posse arrived, led by
Deputy U.S. Marshals J.G. Peavy and J.G. Owens, and included some of
the toughest of the Beck family and their supporters.
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As the posse began to push its way into the make-shift
courthouse, all hell broke loose as shot after shot was fired. After the
smoke had cleared, seven posse men were killed, including Deputy Owens. A
number of others were injured. The following day, the worst of the Beck
family's fears was realized, when the Zeke Proctor was acquitted.
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The bodies of
Bill Power,
Bob Dalton,
Grattan Dalton
and
Dick Broadwell .
This image available for
photographic prints
and downloads
HERE! |
Dalton Gang at Coffeyville, Kansas (1892) - Obviously over
confident, the
Dalton Gang planned what they believed to be one of the biggest
bank heists ever, when they thought they could hold up two of them at
a time in Coffeyville,
Kansas.
About 9:00 a.m. on morning of October 5, 1892,
brothers
Bob,
Grat
and
Emmett Dalton,
along with
Bill Power and
Dick Broadwell
rode into Coffeyville to find the city's streets filled with people. Tying their horses in an alley across from the banks, they dismounted
and marched down the alley, three in front and two in the rear. The
outlaws, disguised with false beards, divided into two groups,
with
Grat,
Power and
Broadwell
entering the C.M. Condon & Co. Bank, and
Bob
and
Emmett
crossing the plaza to enter the First National Bank.
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However, what
they hadn't counted on, was disguise or no, one of them was recognized by
a Coffeyville citizen who quickly sent out an alert. In no time, bullets
began to punch through the windows of the banks as Coffeyville citizens
fought back. Immediately, it turned out to be an all out gun battle
between the town citizens and the
outlaws.
Less than fifteen minutes after the
robbers had entered the banks, eight men were
dead and three were wounded. Of the
Dalton Gang,
Bob and
Grat Dalton,
Bill Power and
Dick Broadwell were killed. The local men that
were killed were Marshal Charles Connelly,
Lucius Baldwin,
George Cubine, and Charles Brown.
Emmett Dalton, the only
outlaw
to survive, spent the next 15 years in prison.
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El Paso Gunfight (1881)
- Sometimes referred to as the
"Four Dead
in Five Seconds Gunfight" or the "Battle of Keating's Saloon," this
gunfight
occurred on April 14, 1881. The whole affair began when the Manning
Brothers had stolen a herd of of about 30 head of cattle in Mexico and
drove them into
Texas
to sell. When
Texas Ranger
Ed Fitch and two Mexican farmhands by the names of Sanchez and
Juarique investigated, the two Mexican men where killed. This led to a
Mexican posse of more than 75 men to cross into
Texas
seeking an investigation.
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El Paso,
Texas
street scene, 1888.
This image available for
photographic prints and
downloads
HERE! |
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At the request of the Mexican posse, Gus
Krempkau, an El Paso constable, accompanied the posse to the ranch of
Johnny Hale, a local ranch owner and known cattle rustler. There, they
found the bodies of the two Mexican farmhands. The El Paso Court soon held
an inquest into the deaths of the two men, with Krempkau acting as an
interpreter.
Afterwards, Constable Krempkau went next
door to Keating's Saloon, one of the worst pestholes in El Paso,
Texas.
There, a confrontation erupted between Krempkau and ex-City Marshal,
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