|
 
Legends Home
Site Map
What's New!!
Content Categories:
American History
Destinations-States
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
Old West
Route 66
Travel Center
Treasure Tales
Legends Of America's

Old West Mercantile
Route 66 Emporium
TeePee Trading Post
Book Shelf
DVDs
Postcard Rack
Tin Signs
and
Much More!

Legends Of
America's Photo Print Shop

Ghost Town Prints
Native American
Prints
Old West Prints
Route 66 Prints
and
Much More!!

About Us
Advertising
Article/Photo
Use
Copyright
Information
Blog
Forum
Guestbook
Links
Newsletter
Privacy Policy
Writing Credits
We welcome corrections
and feedback!
Contact Us
| |
| |
|
Gunfighter
Index - E-G
|
|

|
|
Index:
A B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J K L
M N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
|
|
E
-
William "Bill" Earhart
(18??-1896) - A gunfighter,
Earhart fought with
Oliver Lee in the Lee-Good feud in Tularosa,
New Mexico.
He was also a friend and cohort of such men as
Killin' Jim Miller
and
John
Wesley Hardin.
He was killed in Pecos,
Texas by
gunfighter Barney Riggs in 1896.
-
Wyatt Earp
(1848-1929) - Lamar,
Missouri
Constable; Ellsworth,
Kansas
Marshal; Wichita,
Kansas
Deputy Policeman;
Dodge City;
Kansas
Assistant Marshal; Pima County,
Arizona
Deputy Sheriff;
Tombstone,
Arizona
Deputy Policeman/Assistant Marshal;
Dodge City
Peace Commissioner,
U.S. Deputy Marshal in
Arizona
Territory. Died a natural death in
California in
1929.
-
James Elliott - A gunman who shot and killed James Fay
on February 1884 in Lake Valley,
New Mexico.
-
William Ellis - A gunman who shot and killed J.S. McAlpin
on April 18, 1886 in La Luz,
New Mexico.
-
Jack Enbree - A gunman, Enbree shot and wounded E.M. Dixon
in Laramie,
Wyoming and
was imprisoned for two years. After his release he returned, threatened
Dixon and was killed on January 23, 1889.
-
Jose Espolin - A gunman accused of murdering Mescalero,
New Mexico
merchant A.H. Howe in 1886.
-
Tranquellano Estabo - A gunman, he shot up Phoenix,
Arizona in
1895 and was arrested by Sheriff Cicero Stewart and Dee Harkey.
F
-
Albert Fall - A gunman, lawyer, congressman, and rancher in
New Mexico,
he fought Ben Williams on September 15, 1895 on the streets of Las Cruces.
-
Charles Fallon - A cowboy and gunman who, with companion
Long-Haired Owens, fought one of the fiercest gun battles known in the West on
July 4, 1884, at Lewistown,
Montana
against the Stuart cowboy-vigilantes.
Fallon was shot nine times and killed.
-
Henry Ferris - A
Colorado
gunman and lawyer, he was killed in Sterling in 1873.
|
|
-
Tom Finnessy - A gunman and friend of Martin McRose.
-
John King Fisher (1854-1884) - A gunman,
outlaw and
lawman,
Fisher gave up his
outlaw ways
and became the sheriff in Uvalde County,
Texas in
1881. Three years later, both he and friend,
Ben Thompson, were killed in an ambush in
San Antonio,
Texas.
-
Joseph Foster - A gunfighter and gambler, he was
shot and killed by King Fisher in San Antonio,
Texas
in 1884 when Fisher and Ben Thompson were shot by unknown gunmen.
-
Albert Jennings Fountain - A gunman, soldier,
editor, and lawyer, he killed B.F. Williams on December 7, 1870 in EI
Paso,
Texas, and defended
Billy the Kid in his first trial in Mesilla,
New Mexico. He disappeared in the White Sands area on January 31, 1896.
-
Joel Fowler (1849-1884) - A gunman, gambler, and
rancher, he killed over twenty men, and was lynched on January
21, 1884, in Socorro,
New Mexico.
-
Frank Freeman - A
New Mexico
gunman who fought in the
Lincoln
County War, he was killed in Cimarron in
late 1876.
-
D.B. Frink - A gunman and member of the Truckee,
California
Committee of 601, he was accidentally killed in November 1874.
G
-
Thomas Gaffney - A member of the
Seven Rivers Warriors who
fought in
New Mexico's
Lincoln
County War. Afterwards, he disappeared.
-
J.G.
Gallagher - A gunman, he shot and killed Alberto Martinez in January 1883
in the Steeple Rock District of
New Mexico.
-
Jose Trujillo
Gallegos - A gunfighter, he killed Miguel Montano in March, 1885 at Pederval,
New Mexico.
-
Pantaeleon
Gallegos - A gunman in the
Lincoln
County War
of
New Mexico,
he rode in the posse that killed John Tunstall on
February 18, 1878.
-
John Galvin - A member of the
Seven Rivers Warriors
who fought in
New Mexico's
Lincoln
County War. He was killed by
Regulators
in Lincoln,
New Mexico on
April 30, 1878.
-
Catarino Garza -
A rebel gunman, Garza organized a gang of over 300 men, crossed the border
into Mexico,
and fought against Diaz. He was defeated and arrested for violating
International Laws. He was later killed in
Cuba
during a revolution.
-
Joe German - A
gunman, German was killed by Frank Leslie in Eureka,
New Mexico
on June 22, 1881.
-
James Gibbons - A
gunman, he was charged with murder in 1891 at Clayton,
New Mexico.
-
Volney Gibson - A
gunman, Gibson shot and killed Kyle Terry in 1889 at the courthouse in
Galveston,
Texas
for killing L.E. Gibson.
-
Fine Gilliland -
A cowboy and gunman, Fine shot and killed Henry Harrison Powe on a roundup.
He, himself, was later shot and killed by lawmen.
-
Chris Gilson - A
gunman, he participated in the Newton, Kansas gunfight in 1867 which left
fourteen gunmen dead.
-
George Gladden -
A gunman in the
Mason County
War in
Texas,
he was arrested on charges that included a jail break. Convicted, he received
a 99-year sentence, but was later pardoned.
-
John Joel Glanton
- A gunman, he was outlawed by Sam Houston when he fought on both sides in the
Regulator-Moderator War in East
Texas.
He was arrested, escaped, and led a gang of scalp hunters. He was later killed
by Indians in 1850 at
Yuma,
Arizona.
-
John Golden - A
gambler and gunman, he was lynched by a mob in 1876 outside Fort Griffin,
Texas.
-
Francisco Gomez -
Fought with the
Regulators in the
Lincoln
County War of
New Mexico
. He survived the conflict and
died in July, 1946 at his home in
New Mexico.
-
Gabriel Gonzolez
- A
New Mexico
gunman, he killed Adolf Harmon in Springer,
New Mexico
in August 1, 1907, an act that started a feud.
-
Ignacio Gonzales -
Fought with the
Regulators in the
Lincoln
County War of
New Mexico
.
Afterwards he disappeared.
-
John H. Good - A
gunman and rancher, Good, along with others, shot and killed Charles Dawson
on December 8, 1885, in La Luz,
New Mexico;
was later involved in the feud with Oliver Lee.
-
Walter Good - A
gunman and son of John Good, he started the Good-Lee feud by ambushing George
McDonald on
June 13, 1888.
He was found dead in the White Sands area of
New Mexico.
-
Bill Goodlet -
Lawman turned gunman, Goodlet was a member of the
Dodge City Gang
in
Las Vegas,
New Mexico.
-
Mike Gordon - A
gunman, Gordon was shot in
Las Vegas,
New Mexico
on July 19, 1879.
-
Dolly Graham, aka: George Davis - A member of
Jesse Evans Gang during
New Mexico's
Lincoln
County War . He was killed by
Texas Rangers
in the Chinati Mountains,
Texas
on July 3, 1880.
-
John Do Graham -
A gunman in the
Pleasant Valley War
of
Arizona,
he was killed in Holbrook,
Arizona
in September 1887.
-
Thomas Ho Graham
- A gunman in the
Pleasant Valley War
of
Arizona
and brother of John, he was ambushed and killed at Tempe,
Arizona
in August 1892.
-
Joe Grant - A
gunman and bounty hunter, he attempted to bring in
Billy the Kid.
However, the Kid shot him and he died on
January 10, 1880.
-
Mit Graves - A
Texas
gunman, he allegedly killed two members of the Truitt family in connection
with a feud in Hood County,
Texas
in 1874.
-
Thomas Green -
A member of the
Seven Rivers Warriors
who fought in
New Mexico's
Lincoln
County War . He was killed, probably by
Regulators
in Lincoln,
New Mexico
on April 30, 1878.
-
Francisco
"Pancho” Griego - A
gunfighter
and former city marshal of
Santa Fe,
New Mexico, Griego was killed by Clay Allison
on November 1, 1875 at
Cimarron,
New Mexico.
-
George
Griffin - A
Texas
and
New Mexico
gunman, he was given to shooting up a town while drunk
Continued Next Page |
|
Index:
A B
C
D E F
G H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West and Cowboy Bumper Stickers - Great
Old West
and
Cowboy
bumper stickers for yourself or for your friends. Made of durable
vinyl and measuring a generous 10" x 3" these stickers are made for adding
style to any surface. Printed using UV resistant inks means no fading in
the sun or bleeding in the rain.
|
| |
|