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Index     << Previous  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  Next >>

 

John Calhoun Pinckney "Pink" Higgens (1848-1914) - Pink was born in Georgia but moved with his family to Texas when he was just a boy. They first settled near Austin before establishing a ranch in Lampasas County in 1857. When he grew up, he worked at a variety of occupations including owning a meat market and saloon. During this time he also honed his shooting skills fighting Indians and was briefly an officer in the Ku Klux Klan. By the early 1870s he was driving herds of cattle to the Kansas railheads and on at least one occasion, combined his herd with that of the Horrell brothers, who ranched nearby. In March, 1873 the Horrells were involved in a saloon shootout with Texas State police in Lampasas, in which three law officers were killed. Also killed was Pink's son-in-law and soon a vicious feud between the two families erupted, referred to as the Horrell-Higgins Feud. Over a several year period, several shooting scrapes occurred, finally culminating in a shoot-out in the Lampasas town square on June 14, 1877 in which several men were killed. A few more skirmishes occurred before the feud was said and done. Around the turn of the century, Higgins moved his ranch south of Spur, Texas . He continued his gunfighting ways and was said to have killed between 14-18 men during his lifetime. He died at his ranch of a heart attack on December 18, 1914.

 

Tuck Hoover (18??-1894?) - A South Texas rancher, Hoover obviously was difficult to get along with as he was in and out of trouble over the years. One of his first recorded gunfights occurred in 1878 when he was with one of his best friends, gunfighter and lawman, Dallas Stoudenmire. When the pair and several of their friends encountered a party of rival cattlemen near Alleytown, Texas, a small village near Eagle Lake, an argument erupted. The rival party, led by the Sparks brothers of Eagle Lake, were disputing the ownership of a herd of cattle. The argument soon led to gunfire and two members of the Sparks faction were killed and another wounded.

 

Some years later, Hoover got into an argument with saloon owner, Jake Burtshell. On April 30, 1894, Hoover confronted him inside the saloon with a cocked pistol, at which point Burtshell went for his gun and Hoover shot him.  When the smoke cleared, the saloon owner was dead. Hoover surrendered to the sheriff in Eagle Lake, was tried for murder, convicted and given a 20 year prison sentence. However, the sentence was overturned and Hoover was released pending a retrial. However, before Hoover would be retried, he was approached by a local hard case by the name of Jim Coleman, who drew a gun and shot Hoover to death.

 

 

 

 

Tom Horn, aka: James Hicks (1860-1903) - Born in Memphis, Missouri on November 21, 1861, Horn's father was a strict disciplinarian and Tom ran away at the age of 14, heading west. By the time he was 15 he was an army scout and involved in many campaigns for more than a decade, including Geronimo's surrender in 1886. He then wandered through the gold fields and became a ranch hand. In 1890, he joined the Pinkerton Agency and using his gun with lethal effectiveness tracked down dozens of outlaws and killed 17 men. In 1894, he had made his way to Wyoming as was working as a cattle detective for the beef barons, who were engulfed in what is known as the Johnson County War. It was at this time that he began to offer out his services as a hired gunslinger. For each cattle rustler he shot, he charged $500-$600 and quickly proved to be a methodical man hunter and ruthless killer. Changing tracks in 1898, he joined the cavalry in support of the Spanish-American War, where he was in charge of Teddy Roosevelt's pack trains. Afterwards, Horn returned to his murdering ways and when he was hired to kill a sheepherder, he killed his 14-year old son instead. This time, Horn didn't get away with it -- he was arrested and hanged on November 20, 1903. 

Benjamin Horrell (18??-1873) - A gunman and one of five rowdy Horrell brothers of Lampasas County, Texas, Ben and his brothers worked as cowboys on their ranch, but were also known for being a rowdy bunch that were quick to find trouble and prone to shooting up the town during their drinking escapades. The first gunfight Ben was known to have been involved in was in March, 1873 after his brother Mart had been arrested for his participation in the Lampasas Saloon Gunfight. Jailed in Georgetown, Texas, Benjamin and his brothers stormed the jail, fought fiercely with local citizens and got Mart and his friends out of jail. The Horrell brothers then fled to Lincoln County, New Mexico, where they continued their rowdy ways. On December 1, 1873, Ben Horrell, along with former Lincoln County Sheriff Jack Gylam, and a man named Dave Warner rode into Lincoln  and after carousing a number of saloons and brothels, the drunken men began to shoot off their guns. When Constable Juan Martinez demanded that they surrender their weapons they compliantly handed them over. However, they soon procured more weapons and were shooting up another  brothel. When confronted again by Constable Martinez and four other officers, Dave Warner, who had a long standing grudge with Martinez, pulled his pistol and shot and killed the constable. The lawmen returned the fire, killing Warner, but Ben Horrell and Jack Gylam fled. The lawmen  aggressively pursued the pair and when they caught up with the two hell-raisers, they pumped their bullets into them, shooting Horrell nine times and Gylam 13 times. Ben's brothers soon retaliated, killing some 13 Hispanic citizens in what has become known as the Horrell War of Lincoln County.

 

Martin "Mart” Horrell (18??-1878) - Cattleman and gunman, Mart was one of the five violent Horrell brothers who created chaos in Texas and New Mexico. During the Civil War, he served in Terry's Texas Rangers, afterwards returning to the family ranch in Lampasas, Texas. On March 19, 1873, he was involved in the Lampasas Saloon Gunfight, in which four Texas State police officers were killed and Mart was wounded. He was soon arrested and held in the Georgetown, Texas jail. However, he and his friends were busted out of jail by his brothers and they soon fled to Lincoln County, New Mexico. After brother Benjamin was killed on December 1, 1873 while resisting arrest, the brothers realitated in what has become known as Horrell War of Lincoln County. Mart and his remaining brothers returned to Texas in early 1874 where they became embroiled in the Horrell-Higgins Feud in 1877. The following year, he and his brother, Tom, were jailed in Meridian, Texas as suspects for a robbery/murder. On December 15, 1878, the jail was besieged by a vigilante mob who shot and killed both brothers.

 

Merritt Horrell (18??-1877) - Yet another of the five violent Horrell brothers, Merritt was present at the Lampasas Saloon Gunfight and when they broke brother Mart out of jail in Georgetown, Texas. With his other brothers, he fled to Lincoln County, New Mexico, where he was also involved in the Horrell War. After the brothers return to Texas, Pink Higgins filed an official complaint in May, 1876, accusing Merritt of taking one of his calves. Though the case went to trial, Merritt was found not guilty, and Higgins promised Merritt  that he would settle the matter later with his gun. Pink's threat was not an idle one. On January 22, 1877, while Merritt was in a Lampasas saloon, Higgins slipped in through a back door and shot Merritt, who fell to the floor. Though wounded, Merritt stood up, and Higgins shot him again. Once more on the floor, Higgens pumped two more shots into the dying man.

Samuel "Sam” Horrell (18??-1836) - Another of the five rowdy Horrell brothers, Sam was a farmer and not as disposed to violence as his other brothers. H served in Terry's Texas Rangers during the Civil War. Though he was not present at the Lampasas Saloon Gunfight, he did help to bust is brother out of jail and accompanied the rest of them to Lincoln County, New Mexico. When the clan returned to Texas, he was involved in the Horrell-Higgins Feud and was present on June 14, 1877 during the  Lampasas Square Shoot Out. He was the only brother to survive. He moved his family to Oregon in 1882 and died in California in 1936.

Thomas W. Horrell (18??-1878) - One of the five violent Horrell brothers, Tom was involved in virtually every conflict of the rowdy clan. After serving with brothers Sam and Mart in Terry's Texas Rangers during the Civil War he returned to Lampasas. He got into his first dispute with Pink Higgens during a joint cattle drive to Abilene in 1872. In Abilene, the pair got into a dispute that very nearly erupted in gunfire. He was present at the Lampasas Saloon Gunfight and when they broke brother Mart out of jail in Georgetown, Texas. With his other brothers, he fled to Lincoln County, New Mexico, where he was also involved in the Horrell War. After returning the Lampasas, he was actively involved in the Horrell-Higgins Feud and the Lampasas Square Shoot Out. In 1878, he and brother, Mart, were jailed in Meridian, Texas as suspects for a robbery/murder. The jail was besieged by a vigilante mob who shot and killed both brothers.

 

Continued Next Page

 

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