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OLD
WEST LEGENDS
The Lee Gang - Murder & Thievery on
the Texas Border
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In the mid 1880’s, Cooke
County,
Texas,
on the northern border of the
Lone Star State,
and the Chickasaw Nation just north in
Indian
Territory, were plagued by a gang of horse and livestock thieves led
by James Lee and his brothers, Tom and Pink.
James Lee was married to a Chickasaw woman
which gave him the "right” to ranch in the Chickasaw Nation. Brothers, Tom and Pink helped him with the ranch, located on the Red
River near Delaware Bend and just east of Thackerville. But, the Lee
Brothers weren’t really in the mood to do any "real” ranching; rather,
they would confiscate the herds of their neighbors, especially the large
ranch of the Roff Brothers in the Arbuckle Mountains about two miles east
of Berwyn. The Lee Ranch, located about twenty miles south of the Roff Brothers, soon became a safe haven for bandits and
outlaws
traveling between the Chickasaw Nation and
Texas.
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The Lee Gang operated in Cooke County,
Texas
and north into the Chickasaw Nation.
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The Lee Brothers and
their cohorts, who became known as the Lee Gang, didn’t limit
their rustling to just the ranch of the Roffs’, they were stealing
cattle and horses from local ranches throughout Cooke County and the
Chickasaw Nation.
In the meantime, Ed
Stein, the Lees’ brother-in-law, owned a store across the Red River in
Texas,
who peddled the majority of liquor into the Chickasaw Nation, a crime,
in and of itself.
Both the white
settlers and the
Indians were up in arms about this lawlessness, and
plead for help from the authorities; however, the area was rampant with
outlaws
committing numerous crimes and there was no immediate response. The thievery continued.
In late April, 1885,
when Jim Roff was checking his cattle, he noticed a group of several
men rounding up a small herd. As he rode toward them, the men
fled, leaving a cloud of dust behind them. Roth found that the
cattle were marked with a number of brands from neighboring ranches. Deciding to investigate further, Roff hid in a nearby ravine, and
before long, the rustlers returned and herded the cattle south.
Roff wasted no time
telling the story to his neighbors, who, along with U.S. Marshal James
Guy, went after the culprits. On May 1, 1885, a five man posse
made up of Marshal Guy, Bill Kirsksey, Frances Mathes, and Andy and
James Roff, followed the cattle trail to Delaware Bend, right up
to the Lee Ranch.
As the posse carefully approached the log
cabin, they noted that gun portholes had been cut into the side of the
building and called out to the occupants. Ed Stein, Lees’
brother-in-law, responded by directing them to the rear of the cabin. But, it was a trap. The posse men were ambushed as a hail of
lead came forth from the cabin, killing Jim Roff and Bill Kirksey
instantly, both having two bullets through their body. Andy Roff,
badly wounded, made his way to a nearby tree where he sat down and
leaned against it. Later, it was found that two more shots were
blasted into the injured man – one through his chest and the other,
into the lower part of his body.
The other members of the posse were able
to escape to tell of the ambush, saying they believed there were ten
to twelve men in the cabin. Thought to be hiding inside were Jim, Tom,
and Pink Lee, Ed Stein, Tom Cole, Jim Copeland, Della Humby and the Dyer brothers. Two days after the ambush, a mob converged on the Lee Ranch and burned
every building. The Dyer brothers were soon tracked down and lynched
by a vigilante group. Rewards totaling some $7,000 were posted for
the Lee Brothers and Ed Steine, dead or alive and the hunt for the killers
was on.
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The Arbuckle Mountains of southern
Oklahoma
provided
the Lee Gang with lots of hiding places. |
Tom Lee and Ed Stein were tracked down in
Denison,
Texas
where they surrendered and were sent to
Ft. Smith,
Arkansas
for trial. However, the pair were acquitted. Stein returned
to his bootlegging activities and drank himself to death a short time
later. Tom Lee was arrested on a charge of larceny and was sent to
prison.
The leaders of the Lee
Gang – Jim and Pink, remained at large until September 7, 1885. Legendary
lawman,
Heck Thomas had been doggedly trailing the pair and upon receiving a
tip, he tracked them to the John Washington Ranch near Delaware Bend on
the banks of Lake Texoma.
Thomas,
along with Jim Taylor, and a posse, caught the pair off-guard, surrounded
them and ordered the fugitives to surrender. Instead, the Lee boys
answered with their Winchesters and the inevitable shoot-out ensued. When the smoke cleared, the brothers lay dead. No one in the posse
was wounded.
The bodies were loaded
into a wagon and taken to Gainesville,
Texas
where Thomas and Taylor collected the reward.
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The
next day, the newspapers proclaimed: "The Lee brothers, the most notorious
desperadoes in
Texas finally go down with their boots on.” The press also
attributed at least forty murders to the Lee Gang, but this has never been
verified.
©
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated July, 2010.
Newspaper Account
Special Dispatch of the
Globe-Democrat, the Cherokee Advocate,
Fort Smith,
Arkansas,
September 11, 1885
A Nice Gang Of
Assassins - September 1- Five prisoners of considerable notoriety
arrived here today, three of them being Tom Lee, Ed Stein and Davidson,
members of the notorious Lee gang, who a few months since murdered
Indian
Policeman J. H. Guy, Andy and Jim Roff, in Delaware Bend, Chickasaw
Nation.
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Henry Andrew
"Heck" Thomas tracked down the leaders
of the Lee Gang.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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These three were arrested shortly after the murders occurred but
Jim and Pink Lee for whom there is a reward of $5,000 are still at large.
The other two are Jim and Jake Tobler, the two Negroes who murdered Frank
Cass and Goodykooniz. These latter two were brought in by Deputy Marshal
W. F. Jones, and on the way down they gave the officer a full account of
the horrible deed. The confession made to the officer does not differ
materially from that made to the citizens of Vinita, except that it is
more full. Jake Tobler says he killed Goodykoontz by shooting him twice,
while Joe killed Cass by shooting him one time, and then killed the dog.
They claim to have only gotten $4 in money. They took clothing of their
victims, a watch worth $20, a shotgun, rings, underclothing, etc., all of
which were found in possession of the Negroes when arrested, together with
the horses. The murderers were wearing the clothing. The murder was
committed about 3 o'clock in the morning, and at daylight the murderers
were only five miles from the scene. They know the murdered man well and
expected to get a large sum of money, as they had heard Cass say some time
previous that he and Goodykoontz were going West to buy cattle. They
expect to be hung, and have given up all hopes of life.
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