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OLD
WEST LEGENDS
"Dangerous Dan" Tucker - Lawman of
New Mexico |
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Lawman and gunfighter, Dan Tucker, was born in
Canada in 1849, but somewhere along the line, made his way to the American West,
where he would eventually earn the nickname "Dangerous Dan,” for his deadly
shooting skills. He first appeared in Grant County,
New Mexico
in the early 1870s. Though some were suspicious of the slight, soft spoken man,
who was rumored to have killed a man in
Colorado
before appearing in
New MexicoSheriff Harvey Whitehill,
took a liking to him and hired him on as a deputy sheriff in 1875.
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"Tucker was a better lawman, and more dangerous, than such redoubtable
characters
as
Wyatt Earp
and
Wild Bill Hickok”
--
Leon C. Metz, historian and author
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One of the first
incidents that Dan was involved in was when two Mexican men got into a
brawl inside Johnny Ward's Dance Hall, in Silver City in 1876. After one
of the men stabbed the other, he fled from the saloon as Dan Tucker was
approaching and the deputy shot him in the neck. The next year, Dan shot
and killed a drunken man who was standing on the street throwing rocks at
people as they passed by. No charges were filed against Tucker for the
shooting.
In 1878, Tucker was sent
to El Paso to assist in the chaos of the
Salt War and in April of that same year became the first town marshal
of Silver City, as well as continuing to serve as a deputy sheriff. He
soon put a stop to the discharging of firearms on the city streets. He
also killed a thief as he was trying to escape and was engaged in a
gunfight with three horse thieves inside a Silver City saloon, killing two
of them and wounding the third. In November, 1878, he was shot and wounded
during a shootout with a cowboy named Caprio Rodriguez when the man
resisted arrest. However, in the end, Rodriguez lay dead. That same month,
he resigned his position as City Marshal, but was reappointed the
following year, on May 2, 1879.
Having tamed much of
Silver’s City’s lawlessness, in January, 1880, he was more needed in the
mining boomtown of
Shakespeare,
New Mexico.
In May, he was dispatched to track down two thieves who had broken into a
prospector’s cabin. He returned two days later with all of the stolen
property and reported that he had killed the two thieves.
The
next year, Tucker became the City Marshal for
Shakespeare,
New Mexico,
and in September, shot and killed cattle rustler Jake Bond. November was a
busy month for the city marshal, as he killed a man who rode his horse
into a local hotel dining room and arrested outlaws
Sandy King
and "Russian
Bill" Tattenbaum, who were hanged by the town’s Vigilante Committee
inside the Grant House. Later that month, Tucker was sent to Deming,
New Mexico on
November 27, 1881, to calm down several outlaws who had basically taken
over the town. Upon his arrival, he began to patrol the streets with a
double barrel shotgun, and within three days, had shot and killed three
men and wounded two more.
All in all, Deputy Tucker was said to have
arrested some 13 desperadoes of a cowboy gang in 1881, killed several
more, and brought order to the wild town of
Shakespeare.
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By March, 1882, Tucker’s reputation had spread
to such a degree, that when
Doc Holliday
and
Wyatt Earp
made a hasty retreat from nearby
Tombstone ,
Arizona,
they avoided taking the train through Deming, choose to travel by
horseback and avoiding Tucker’s territory.
On August 25, 1882, Tucker became involved in
the most controversial shooting of his career. The night before in the
mining camp of Paschal,
New Mexico,
Deputy James D. Burns was drunk inside & Mills Saloon and began twirling
and flaunting his pistol. Though the town marshal, Glaudius W. Moore, and
another deputy tried to disarm Burns, he refused, stating that as a law
officer, he was entitled to retain his weapon. Burns continued to drink
throughout the night and into the next day, going from saloon to saloon.
By that afternoon he was in the Centennial Saloon, where once again
Marshal Moore ordered him to give up his weapon and come outside. Also in
the saloon was Dan Tucker. When Moore tried to arrest him; however, Burns
drew his pistol and fired, though he hit no one. Tucker reacted first,
hitting Burns in the ribcage and Moore also fired upon the drunken deputy.
Because Burns was a popular deputy with the local miners, there was a
public outcry for justice. Though both men were cleared, Moore was
dismissed as town marshal. Though Tucker’s reputation suffered, he
retained his position.
Later that year, on
December 14, 1882, Tucker was ambushed by a Mexican man as he entered a
brothel in Deming to investigate a complaint, which turned out to be
false. Though Tucker took a shot in the shoulder, he returned the fire,
killing one man and a prostitute who had helped the would-be assassin.
By 1884, Tucker had
opened a saloon across from the railroad depot in Deming,
New Mexico.
However, the following year, in October, he was appointed as a
U.S. Deputy Marshal
for the region. The next month he and another man were involved in a gun
battle with Apache warriors west of Deming and were able to drive them
off. On October 2, 1887, Tucker arrested a dangerous outlaw, Dave Thurman.
Described as "one of the
best peace officers Grant County ever had,” Tucker finally gave up his
lawman responsibilities, resigned his position in 1888, and moved to
California. The last time he was heard from was when he returned to Grant
County,
New Mexico
for a visit in May, 1892. However, the short 5’7” ex-lawman had put on so
much weight, his friends nearly didn’t recognize him. Where he went after
leaving
New Mexico,
is lost in history.
Recognized as one of the most dangerous and
underestimated gunmen in the history of the Old West, Tucker was thought
to have killed some 17 men during his lawman career.
©
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated January, 2010.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Native
American Photo Prints -
Vintage photographs of famous chiefs, heroes, and
Indian
life in the 19th century.
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