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Cimarron, New Mexico - Page 2 |
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"Cimarron is in the hands of a mob!"
--
The Santa Fe New Mexican
on
November 9, 1875.
When the Land
Grant Company discovered that Frenchman, Henri Lambert, who was at one
time, the personal chef to President Lincoln and General Ulysses S. Grant,
was operating a hotel and restaurant in
Elizabethtown,
they induced him to come to
Cimarron. The Lambert
Inn, as it was called at the time, started business in 1872.
Built during a time when law and order was non-existent, the
saloon
quickly gained a reputation as a place of violence, where it is said that
26 men were shot and killed within its adobe walls. The first
question usually asked around
Cimarron
in the morning was: "Who was killed at Lambert's last night?" Another favorite expression following a killing was: "It appears
Lambert had himself another man for breakfast." The Grant Company's
plan for cultivation had backfired
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The
Immaculate Conception Church was built in 1864 and still
provides services today. Photo in 1936, Frederick D. Nichols.
This image available for photographic prints
HERE. |
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Allison
and his cowboys frequented
Lambert's
Inn and their antics continued. Associated with
Clay
Allison during these escapades was young
Davy Crockett (not the
Davy Crockett of
Alamo fame
fame, but a nephew.) Both
Allison
and
Crockett
were natives of Tennessee and
Crockett
endeared himself
to
Allison because of his dislike against the black troopers
stationed at Fort Union.
By 1875,
Cimarron's reputation for lawlessness was at an all time high and
local war had broken out between the Land Grant Men and the area
settlers. The new owners of the
Maxwell
Land Grant were busy with their attempts at evicting the
squatters, settlers, and farmers. The settlers, having invested
their lives and money into homes and businesses, were not prepared to
leave. Sheriffs served eviction notices and retaliation
began. Grant pastures were set on fire, cattle rustling
increased, and officials were threatened at gun point. Grant
gang members made nighttime raids of area homes and ranches, with
threats of violence to encourage cooperation with the grant owners. The local war became known as the Colfax County War, where as many as
200 men lost their lives
Parson
Franklin J. Tolby came to
Cimarron
when it was in need of salvation. Enlisting with the Methodist
Circuit Riders, he delivered sermons in
Cimarron,
Elizabethtown,
Ute Park, and Ponil. Tolby loved
Cimarron,
planning on making it his home, and quickly sided with the settlers in
their opposition against the land grant men. He was very open
about his opposition, saying that he would do everything that he could
to stop the land grant owners. But, on September 14, 1875, the
33 year-old minister was found shot to death in
Cimarron
Canyon, midway between
Elizabethtown
and
Cimarron. The settlers immediately suspected the Grant men,
as robbery was obviously not the motive because the minister's horse
and belongings were not taken.
Rumors began to circulate that the new
Cimarron
Constable, Cruz Vega, was involved in the murder, and on the evening
of October 30, 1875 a masked mob, lead by
Clay
Allison, confronted Vega. Though the constable denied having
anything to do with the murder, the mob pummeled and hanged him by the
neck from a telegraph pole.
On November 1st, Francisco "Pancho" Griego,
Vega's uncle, along with Cruz's eighteen year old son, began making
threats to the townspeople in response to Vega's death. Looking for
trouble, they wandered into
Lambert's
Inn.
Allison
was in the
saloon and Griego accused him of being involved in the hanging of
Vega.
Griego began fanning himself with his hat, in an attempt to distract
Allison
while he drew his gun, but
Allison
was not fooled and quickly fired two bullets killing Griego. The
saloon was
closed until an inquiry could be held the next morning, where
Allison
was found to have shot in self-defense. According to local accounts
of the day, the
saloon closing was the most unfortunate aspect of the whole incident. |
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| The reign of terror in
Cimarron
continued and the town was out of control. Violence, lawlessness and
apprehension fed the residents and many packed their belongings and left. At one time, guards were posed at all entrances to
Cimarron
and no one was allowed to leave town without the anti-grant vigilante's
permission. By November 9, 1875 the Santa Fe New Mexican
informed the public that
Cimarron
was in the hands of a mob.
Supposedly,
Cimarron was under the control of Davy Crocket.
Crockett, along
with his ranch foreman, a mean customer named Gus Heffron, were regulars
at the bars and gambling halls. Though the 23 year-old
Crockett
was a
little arrogant, he was well liked until the night of March 24, 1876, when
he got drunk and turned deadly. According to the story,
Crockett, Heffron and a man named Henry Goodman had been making the rounds in
Cimarron
that evening. Ready to call it a night, they stopped at Lambert's to pick
up a bottle of whiskey for the road.
As
Crockett
started out of the
saloon, he
had trouble opening the door because someone was trying to open it from
the outside, which made the drunken
Crockett
angry. When he finally got
the door open he faced a soldier from the U.S. 9th Cavalry, the black
cavalry unit known as
Buffalo
Soldiers.
Crockett
was said to have pulled his gun and killed the man, then turned
his gun on three more black troopers at a card table in the bar, killing
two of them.
Crockett
and Heffron ran out of town on foot because
their horses were stabled in a barn where the
Buffalo
Soldiers
were
camped.
Crockett
insisted that putting uniforms on former slaves was
adding insult to injury. Appearing before the justice of the
peace,
Crockett
was acquitted of the murders because he was drunk, the
court fining him just $50 and court costs on a reduced charge of carrying
arms.
After having gotten away with the murders,
Crockett
became even more
arrogant and his antics intolerable. Over the next several months,
he and Heffron ran rough shod over
Cimarron
riding their horses into stores and
saloons,
firing their guns into the air and ceilings, and forcing people at
gunpoint to buy them drinks.
In a saloon
one day, the two forced
Cimarron's
Sheriff Rinehart to drink liquor until the lawman finally passed out. Tired of the two bullies antics, Sheriff Rinehart deputized Joseph
Holbrook, a
Cimarron-area rancher, and John McCullough, the town's postmaster, to
go after them.
On
the night of September 30, 1876, the three men, armed with double-barreled
shotguns, hid themselves near Schwenk's barn. About 9 p.m.,
Crockett
and Heffron approached the barn on horseback, at which time Holbrook
revealed himself and told the two to raise their hands.
Crockett just
laughed and told Holbrook to go ahead and shoot, and much to
Crockett's
surprise, Holbrook did just exactly that.
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Sheriff Rinehart and McCullough also fired blasts at the two men,
startling their horses, who bolted and galloped a quarter mile or so north
across the
Cimarron River. Heffron, who was not hurt badly, kept on riding
but
Crockett's
horse stopped on the other side of the river.
Crockett's
hands were locked in a death grip on the saddle horn and had to
be pried open.
A
short time later, Heffron was arrested but escaped on October 31, 1876 into
the Colorado
mountains, never to be seen again.
Continued Next
Page
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The Colfax County War, between
the Maxwell Land Grant Men and the
Area Settlers claimed as many
as 200 lives.
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Schwenk's Hall Today, September, 2008, Kathy Weiser.
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Schwenk's Hall in 1954, Jack D. Rittenhouse,
NMSU
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store

Legends of America's Ebay Store -
Check out our many products in our
Ebay Store. This is where we place
many of our closeout products, excess inventory, and other items that just
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