IT WAS in the days when the new railroad was
pushing through the country of the plains Indians that a drunken
cowboy got on the train at a way station in Kansas. John Bender,
the conductor, asked him for his ticket. He had none, but he
pulled out a handful of gold pieces.
"I wantta--g-go to--h-hell," he
hiccoughed.
Bender did not hesitate an instant. "Get off
at Dodge. One dollar, please."
Dodge City did not get its name because so many of
its citizens were or had been, in the Texas phrase, on the dodge.
It came quite respectably by its cognomen. The town was laid out
by A. A. Robinson, chief engineer of the Atchison, Topeka &
Santa Fe, and it was called for Colonel Richard I. Dodge,
commander of the post at Fort Dodge and one of the founders of
the place. It is worth noting this, because it is one of the few
respectable facts in the early history of the cowboy capital.
Dodge was a wild and uncurried prairie wolf, and it howled every
night and all night long. It was gay and young and lawless. Its
sense of humour was exaggerated and worked overtime. The crack of
the six-shooter punctuated its hilarity ominously. Those who
dwelt there were the valiant vanguard of civilization. For good
or bad they were strong and forceful, many of them generous and
big-hearted in spite of their lurid lives. The town was a hive of
energy. One might justly use many adjectives about it, but the
word respectable is not among them.
There were three reasons why Dodge won the
reputation of being the wildest town the country had ever seen.
In 1872 it was the end of the track, the last Jumping-off spot
into the wilderness, and in the days when transcontinental
railroads were building across the desert the temporary terminus
was always a gathering place of roughs and scalawags. The payroll
was large, and gamblers, gunmen, and thugs gathered for the
pickings. This was true of Hays, Abilene, Ogalala, and Kit
Carson. It was true of Las Vegas and Albuquerque.
A second reason was that Dodge was the end of the
long trail drive from Texas. Every year hundreds of thousands of
longhorns were driven up from Texas by cowboys scarcely less wild
than the hill steers they herded. The great plains country was
being opened, and cattle were needed to stock a thousand ranches
as well as to supply the government at Indian reservations.
Scores of these trail herds were brought to Dodge for shipment,
and after the long, dangerous, drive the punchers were keen to
spend their money on such diversions as the town could offer. Out
of sheer high spirits they liked to shoot up the town, to buck
the tiger, to swagger from saloon to gambling hall, their persons
garnished with revolvers, the spurs on their high-heeled boots
jingling. In no spirit of malice they wanted it distinctly
understood that they owned the town. As one of them once put it,
he was born high up on the Guadaloupe, raised on prickly pear,
had palled with alligators and quarrelled with grizzlies.
Also, Dodge was the heart of the buffalo country.
Here the hunters were outfitted for the chase. From here great
quantities of hides were shipped back on the new railroad R. M.
Wright, one of the founders of the town and always one of its
leading citizens, says that his firm alone shipped two hundred
thousand hides in one season. He estimates the number of
buffaloes in the country at more than twenty-five million,
admitting that many as well informed as he put the figure at four
times as many. Many times he and others travelled through the
vast herds for days at a time without ever losing sight of them.
The killing of buffaloes was easy, because the animals were so
stupid. When one was shot they would mill round and round. Tom
Nickson killed 120 in forty minutes; in a little more than a
month he slaughtered 2,173 of them. With good luck a man could
earn a hundred dollars a day. If he had bad luck he lost his
scalp.
The buffalo was to the plains Indian food, fuel,
and shelter. As long as there were plenty of buffaloes he was in
Paradise. But he saw at once that this slaughter would soon
exterminate the supply. He hated the hunter and battled against
his encroachments. The buffalo hunter was an intrepid plainsman.
He fought Kiowas, Comanches, and the Staked Plain Apaches, as
well as the Sioux and the Arapahoe. Famous among these hunters
were Kirk Jordan Charles Rath, Emanuel Dubbs, Jack Bridges, and
Curly Walker. Others even better known were the two Buffalo Bills
(William Cody and William Mathewson) and Wild Bill.
These three factors then made Dodge: it was the
end of the railroad, the terminus of the cattle trail from Texas
the centre of the buffalo trade. Together they made it "the
beautiful bibulous Babylon of the frontier," in the words of
the editor of the Kingsley Graphic. There was to
come a time later when the bibulous Babylon fell on evil days and
its main source of income was old bones. They were buffalo-bones,
gathered in wagons, and piled beside the track for shipment,
hundreds and hundreds of carloads of them, to be used for
fertilizer. (I have seen great quantities of such bones as far
north as the Canadian Pacific line, corded for shipment to a
factory.) It used to be said by way of derision that buffalo
bones were legal tender in Dodge.
But that was in the far future. In its early years
Dodge rode the wave of prosperity. Hays and Abilene and Ogalala
had their day, but Dodge had its day and its night, too. For
years it did a tremendous business. The streets were so blocked
that one could hardly get through. Hundreds of wagons were parked
in them, outfits belonging to freighters, hunters, cattlemen, and
the government. Scores of camps surrounded the town in every
direction. The yell of the cowboy and the weird oath of the
bullwhacker and the mule skinner were heard in the land. And for
a time there was no law nearer than Hays City, itself a burg not
given to undue quiet and peace.
Dodge was no sleepy village that could drowse
along without peace officers. Bob Wright has set it down that in
the first year of its history twenty-five men were killed and
twice as many wounded. The elements that made up the town were
too diverse for perfect harmony. The freighters did not like the
railroad graders. The soldiers at the fort fancied themselves as
scrappers. The cowboys and the buffalo hunters did not fraternize
a little bit. The result was that Boot Hill began to fill up. Its
inhabitants were buried with their boots on and without coffins.
There was another cemetery, for those who died in
their beds. The climate was so healthy that it would have been
very sparsely occupied those first years if it had not been for
the skunks. During the early months Dodge was a city of camps.
Every night the fires flamed up from the vicinity of hundreds of
wagons. Skunks were numerous. They crawled at night into the warm
blankets of the sleepers and bit the rightful owners when they
protested. A dozen men died from these bites. It was thought at
first that the animals were a special variety, known as the
hydrophobia skunk. In later years I have sat around Arizona camp
fires and heard this subject discussed heatedly. The Smithsonian
Institute, appealed to as referee, decided that there was no such
species and that deaths from the bites of skunks were probably
due to blood poisoning caused by the foul teeth of the animal.
In any case, the skunks were only one half as
venomous as the gunmen, judging by comparative statistics. Dodge
decided it had to have law in the community. Jack Bridges was
appointed first marshal.
Jack was a noted scout and buffalo hunter, the
sort of man who would have peace if he had to fight for it. He
did his sleeping in the afternoon, since this was the quiet time
of the day. Someone shook him out of slumber one day to tell him
that cowboys were riding up and down Front Street shooting the
windows out of buildings. Jack sallied out, old buffalo gun in
hand. The cowboys went whooping down the street across the bridge
toward their camp. The old hunter took a long shot at one of them
and dropped him. The cowboys buried the young fellow next day.
There was a good deal of excitement in the cow
camps. If the boys could not have a little fun without some old
donker, an old vinegaroon who couldn't take a joke, filling them
full of lead it was a pretty howdy-do. But Dodge stood pat. The
coroner's jury voted it justifiable homicide. In future the young
Texans were more discreet. In the early days whatever law there
was did not interfere with casualties due to personal differences
of opinion provided the affair had no unusually sinister aspect.
The first wholesale killing was at Tom Sherman's
dance hall. The affair was between soldiers and gamblers. It was
started by a trooper named Hennessey, who had a reputation as a
bad man and a bully. He was killed, as were several others. The
officers at the fort glossed over the matter, perhaps because
they felt the soldiers had been to blame.
One of the lawless characters who drifted into
Dodge the first year was Billy Brooks. He quickly established a
reputation as a killer. My old friend Emanuel Dubbs, a buffalo
hunter who "took the hides off'n" many a bison, is
authority for the statement that Brooks killed or wounded fifteen
men in less than a month after his arrival. Now Emanuel is a
preacher (if he is still in the land of the living; I saw him
last at Clarendon, Texas, ten years or so ago), but I cannot
quite swallow that "fifteen." Still, he had a man for
breakfast now and then and on one occasion four.
Brooks, by the way, was assistant marshal. It was
the policy of the officials of these wild frontier towns to elect
as marshal some conspicuous killer, on the theory that
desperadoes would respect his prowess or if they did not would
get the worst of the encounter.
Abilene, for instance, chose "Wild Bill"
Hickok. Austin had its Ben Thompson. According to Bat Masterson,
Thompson was the most dangerous man with a gun among all the bad
men he knew--and Bat knew them all. Ben was an Englishman who
struck Texas while still young. He fought as a Confederate under
Kirby Smith during the Civil War and under Shelby for Maximilian.
Later he was city marshal at Austin. Thompson was a man of the
most cool effrontery. On one occasion, during a cattlemen's
convention, a banquet was held at the leading hotel. The local
congressman, a friend of Thompson, was not invited. Ben took
exception to this and attended in person. By way of pleasantry he
shot the plates in front of the diners. Later one of those
present made humorous comment. "I always thought Ben was a
game man. But what did he do? Did he hold up the whole convention
of a thousand cattlemen? No, sir. He waited till he got forty or
fifty of us poor fellows alone before he turned loose his
wolf."
Of all the bad men and desperadoes produced by
Texas, not one of them, not even John Wesley Hardin himself, was
more feared than Ben Thompson. Sheriffs avoided serving warrants
of arrest on him. It is recorded that once, when the county court
was in session with a charge against him on the docket, Thompson
rode into the room on a mustang. He bowed pleasantly to the judge
and court officials.
"Here I am, gents, and I'll lay all I'm worth
that there's no charge against me. Am I right? Speak up, gents.
I'm a little deaf."
There was a dead silence until at last the clerk
of the court murmured, "No charge."
A story is told that on one occasion Ben Thompson
met his match in the person of a young English remittance man
playing cards with him. The remittance man thought he caught
Thompson cheating and indiscreetly said so. Instantly Thompson's
.44 covered him. For some unknown reason the gambler gave the lad
a chance to retract.
"Take it back--and quick," he said
grimly.
Every game in the house was suspended while all
eyes turned on the dare-devil boy and the hard-faced desperado.
The remittance man went white, half rose from his seat, and
shoved his head across the table toward the revolver.
"Shoot and be damned. I say you cheat,"
he cried hoarsely.
Thompson hesitated, laughed, shoved the revolver
back into its holster, and ordered the youngster out of the
house.
Perhaps the most amazing escape on record is that
when Thompson, fired at by Mark Wilson at a distance of ten feet
from a double-barrelled shotgun loaded with buckshot, whirled
instantly, killed him, and an instant later shot through the
forehead Wilson's friend Mathews, though the latter had ducked
behind the bar to get away. The second shot was guesswork plus
quick thinking and accurate aim. Ben was killed a little later,
in company with his friend King Fisher, another bad man, at the
Palace Theatre. A score of shots were poured into them by a dozen
men waiting in ambush. Both men had become so dangerous that
their enemies could not afford to let them live.
King Fisher was the humorous gentleman who put up
a signboard at the fork of a public road bearing the legend:
THIS IS KING FISHER'S ROAD. It is said that those travelling that way followed
his advice. The other road might be a mile or two farther, but
they were in no hurry. Another amusing little episode in King
Fisher's career is told. He had had some slight difficulty with a
certain bald-headed man. Fisher shot him and carelessly gave the
reason that he wanted to see whether a bullet would glance from a
shiny pate.
El Paso in its wild days chose Dallas Stoudenmire
for marshal, and after he had been killed, John Selman. Both of
them were noted killers. During Selman's régime John
Wesley Hardin came to town. Hardin had twenty-seven notches on
his gun and was the worst man killer Texas had ever produced. He
was at the bar of a saloon shaking dice when Selman shot him from
behind. One year later Deputy United States Marshal George
Scarborough killed Selman in a duel. Shortly after this
Scarborough was slain in a gun fight by "Kid" Curry, an
Arizona bandit.
What was true of these towns was true, too, of
Albuquerque and Las Vegas and Tombstone. Each of them chose for
peace officers men who were "sudden death" with a gun.
Dodge did exactly the same thing. Even a partial list of its
successive marshals reads like a fighting roster. In addition to
Bridges and Brooks may be named Ed and Bat Masterson, Wyatt Earp,
Billy Tilghman, Ben Daniels, Mysterious Dave Mathers, T. C.
Nixon, Luke Short, Charley Bassett, W. H. Harris, and the Sughrue
brothers, all of them famous as fighters in a day when courage
and proficiency with weapons were a matter of course. On one
occasion the superintendent of the Sante Fe suggested to the city
dads of Dodge that it might be a good thing to employ marshals
less notorious. Dodge begged leave to differ. It felt that the
best way to "settle the hash" of desperadoes was to pit
against them fighting machines more efficient, bad men more
deadly than themselves.
The word "bad" does not necessarily
imply evil. One who held the epithet was known as one dangerous
to oppose. He was unafraid, deadly with a gun, and hard as nails.
He might be evil, callous, treacherous, revengeful as an Apache.
Dave Mathers fitted this description. He might be a good man,
kindly, gentle, never taking more than his fighting chance. This
was Billy Tilghman to a T.
We are keeping Billy Brooks waiting. But let that
go. Let us look first at "Mysterious Dave." Bob Wright
has set it down that Mathers had more dead men to his credit than
any other man in the West. He slew seven by actual count in one
night, in one house, according to Wright. Mathers had a very bad
reputation. But his courage could blaze up magnificently. While
he was deputy marshal word came that the Henry gang of
desperadoes were terrorizing a dance hall. Into that hall walked
Dave, beside his chief Tom Carson. Five minutes later out reeled
Carson, both arms broken, his body shot through and through, a
man with only minutes to live. When the smoke in the hall cleared
away Mathers might have been seen beside two handcuffed
prisoners, one of them wounded. In a circle round him were four
dead cowpunchers of the Henry outfit.
"Uncle" Billy Tilghman died the other
day at Cromwell, Oklahoma, a victim of his own fearlessness. He
was shot to death while taking a revolver from a drunken
prohibition agent. If he had been like many other bad men he
would have shot the fellow down at the first sign of danger. But
that was never Tilghman's way. It was his habit to make arrests
without drawing a gun. He cleaned up Dodge during the three years
while he was marshal. He broke up the Doolin gang, killing Bill
Raidler and "Little" Dick in personal duels and
capturing Bill Doolin the leader. Bat Masterson said that during
Tilghman's terms as sheriff of Lincoln County, Oklahoma, he
killed, captured, or drove from the country more criminals than
any other official that section ever had. Yet "Uncle"
Billy never used a gun except reluctantly. Time and again he gave
the criminal first shot, hoping the man would surrender rather
than fight. Of all the old frontier sheriffs none holds a higher
place than Billy Tilghman.
After which diversion we return to Billy Brooks, a
"gent" of an impatient temperament, not used to
waiting, and notably quick on the trigger. Mr. Dubbs records that
late one evening in the winter of '72-'73 he returned to Dodge
with two loads of buffalo meat. He finished his business, ate
supper, and started to smoke a postprandial pipe. The sound of a
fusillade in an adjoining dance hall interested him since he had
been deprived of the pleasures of metropolitan life for some time
and had had to depend upon Indians for excitement. (Incidentally,
it may be mentioned that they furnished him a reasonable amount.
Not long after this three of his men were caught, spread-eagled,
and tortured by Indians. Dubbs escaped after a hair-raising ride
and arrived at Adobe Walls in time to take part in the historic
defence of that post by a handful of buffalo hunters against many
hundred tribesmen.) From the building burst four men. They
started across the railroad track to another dance hall, one
frequented by Brooks. Dubbs heard the men mention the name of
Brooks, coupling it with an oath. Another buffalo hunter named
Fred Singer joined Dubbs. They followed the strangers, and just
before the four reached the dance hall Singer shouted a warning
to the marshal. This annoyed the unknown four, and they promptly
exchanged shots with the buffalo hunters. What then took place
was startling in the sudden drama of it.
Billy Brooks stood in bold relief in the doorway,
a revolver in each hand. He fired so fast that Dubbs says the
sound was like a company discharging weapons. When the smoke
cleared Brooks still stood in the same place. Two of the
strangers were dead and two mortally wounded. They were brothers.
They had come from Hays City to avenge the death of a fifth
brother shot down by Brooks some time before.
Mr. Brooks had a fondness for the fair sex. He and
Browney, the yard master, took a fancy to the same girl. Captain
Drew, she was called, and she preferred Browney. Whereupon Brooks
naturally shot him in the head. Perversely, to the surprise of
everybody, Browney recovered and was soon back at his old job.
Brooks seems to have held no grudge at him for
making light of his markmanship in this manner. At any rate, his
next affair was with Kirk Jordan, the buffalo hunter.
This was a very different business. Jordan had
been in a hundred tight holes. He had fought Indians time and
again. Professional killers had no terror for him. He threw down
his big buffalo gun on Brooks, and the latter took cover. Barrels
of water had been placed along the principal streets for fire
protection. These had saved several lives during shooting
scrapes. Brooks ducked behind one, and the ball from Jordan's gun
plunged into it. The marshal dodged into a store, out of the rear
door, and into a livery stable. He was hidden under a bed. Alas!
for a large reputation gone glimmering. Mr. Brooks fled to the
fort, took the train from the siding, and shook forever the dust
of Dodge from his feet. Whither he departed deponent sayeth not.
How do I explain this? I don't. I record a fact.
Many gunmen were at one time or another subject to these panics
during which the yellow streak showed. Not all of them by any
means, but a very considerable percentage. They swaggered boldly,
killed recklessly. Then one day some quiet little man with a cold
gray eye called the turn on them, after which they oozed out of
the surrounding scenery.
Owen P. White gives it on the authority of Charlie
Siringo that Bat Masterson sang small when Clay Allison of the
Panhandle, he of the well-notched gun, drifted into Dodge and
inquired for the city marshal. But the old-timers at Dodge do not
bear this out. Bat was at the Adobe Walls fight, one of fourteen
men who stood off five hundred bucks of the Cheyenne, Comanche,
and Kiowa tribes. He scouted for Miles. He was elected sheriff of
Ford County, with headquarters at Dodge when only twenty-two
years of age It was a tough assignment, and Bat executed it to
the satisfaction of all concerned except the element he cowed.
Personally, I never met Bat until his killing days
were past. He was dealing faro at a gambling house in Denver when
I, a young reporter, first had the pleasure of looking into his
cold blue eyes. It was a notable fact that all the frontier bad
men had eyes either gray or blue, often a faded blue,
expressionless, hard as jade.
It is only fair to Bat to say that the old-timers
of Dodge do not accept the Siringo point of view about him Wright
said of him that he was absolutely fearless and no trouble
hunter. "Bat is a gentleman by instinct, of pleasant
manners, good address, and mild until aroused, and then, for
God's sake, look out. He is a leader of men, has much natural
ability, and good hard common sense. There is nothing low about
him. He is high-toned and broad-minded, cool and brave." I
give this opinion for what it is worth.
In any case, he was a most efficient sheriff. Dave
Rudabaugh, later associated with Billy the Kid in New Mexico,
staged a train robbery at Kinsley, Kansas, a territory not in Bat
s jurisdiction. However, Bat set out in pursuit with a posse. A
near-blizzard was sweeping the country. Bat made for Lovell's
cattle camp, on the chance that the bandits would be forced to
take shelter there. It was a good guess. Rudabaugh's outfit rode
in, stiff and half frozen, and Bat captured the robbers without
firing a shot. This was one of many captures Bat made.
He had a deep sense of loyalty to his friends. On
two separate occasions he returned to Dodge, after having left
the town, to straighten out difficulties for his friends or to
avenge them. The first time was when Luke Short, who ran a
gambling house in Dodge, had a difficulty with Mayor Webster and
his official family. Luke appears to have held the opinion that
the cards were stacked against him and that this was a trouble
out of which he could not shoot himself. He wired Bat Masterson
and Wyatt Earp to come to Dodge. They did, accompanied by another
friend or two. The mayor made peace on terms dictated by Short.
Bat's second return to Dodge was caused by a wire
from his brother James, who ran a dance hall in partnership with
a man named Peacock. Masterson wanted to discharge the bartender,
Al Updegraph, a brother-in-law of the other partner. A serious
difficulty loomed in the offing. Wherefore James called for help.
Bat arrived at eleven one sunny morning, another gunman at heel.
At three o'clock he entrained for Tombstone, Arizona, James
beside him. The interval had been a busy one. On the way up from
the station (always known then as the depot), the two men met
Peacock and Updegraph. No amenities were exchanged. It was
strictly business. Bullets began to sing at once. The men stood
across the street from each other and emptied their weapons.
Oddly enough, Updegraph was the only one wounded. This little
matter attended to, Bat surrendered himself, was fined three
dollars for carrying concealed weapons, and released. He ate
dinner, disposed of his brother's interest in the saloon, and
returned to the station.
Bat Masterson was a friend of Theodore Roosevelt,
who was given to admiring men with "guts," such men as
Pat Garrett, Ben Daniels, and Billy Tilghman. Mr. Roosevelt
offered Masterson a place as United States Marshal of Arizona.
The ex-sheriff declined it. "If I took it," he
explained, "inside of a year I'd have to kill some fool boy
who wanted to get a reputation by killing me." The President
then offered Bat a place as Deputy United States Marshal of New
York, and this was accepted. From that time Masterson became a
citizen of the Empire State. For seventeen years he worked on a
newspaper there and died a few years since with a pen in his
hand. He was respected by the entire newspaper fraternity.
Owing to the pleasant habit of the cowboys of
shooting up the town they were required, when entering the city
limits, to hand over their weapons to the marshal. The guns were
deposited at Wright & Beverly's store, in a rack built for
the purpose, and receipts given for them. Sometimes a hundred
six-shooters would be there at once. These were never returned to
their owners unless the cowboys were sober.
To be a marshal of one of these fighting frontier
towns was no post to be sought for by a supple politician. The
place called for a chilled iron nerve and an uncanny skill with
the Colt. Tom Smith, one of the gamest men and best officers who
ever wore a star on the frontier, was killed in the performance
of his duty. Colonel Breakenridge says that Smith, marshal of
Abilene before "Wild Bill," was the gamest man he ever
knew. He was a powerful, athletic man who would arrest, himself
unarmed, the most desperate characters. He once told Breakenridge
that anyone could bring in a dead man but it took a good officer
to take lawbreakers while they were alive. In this he differed
from Hickok who did not take chances. He brought his men in dead.
Nixon, assistant marshal at Dodge, was murdered by
"Mysterious Dave" Mathers, who himself once held the
same post. Ed Masterson, after displaying conspicuous courage
many times, was mortally wounded April 9, 1878, by two desperate
men, Jack Wagner and Alf Walker, who were terrorizing Front
Street. Bat reached the scene a few minutes later and heard the
story. As soon as his brother had died Bat went after the
desperadoes, met them, and killed them both. The death of Ed
Masterson shocked the town. Civic organizations passed
resolutions of respect. During the funeral, which was the largest
ever held in Dodge, all business houses were closed. It is not on
record that anybody regretted the demise of the marshal's
assassins.
Among those who came to Dodge each season to meet
the Texas cattle drive were Ben and Bill Thompson, gamblers who
ran a faro bank. Previously they had been accustomed to go to
Ellsworth, while that point was the terminus of the drive. Here
they had ruled with a high hand, killed the sheriff, and made
their getaway safely. Bill got into a shooting affray at Ogalala.
He was badly wounded and was carried to the hotel. It was
announced openly that he would never leave town alive. Ben did
not dare to go to Ogalala, for his record there had outlawed him.
He came to Bat Masterson.
Bat knew Bill's nurse and arranged a plan for
campaign. A sham battle was staged at the big dance hall, during
the excitement of which Bat and the nurse carried the wounded man
to the train, got him to a sleeper, and into a bed. Buffalo Bill
met them next day at North Platte. He had relays of teams
stationed on the road, and he and Bat guarded the sick man during
the long ride, bringing him safely to Dodge.
Emanuel Dubbs ran a roadhouse not far from Dodge
about this time. He was practising with his six-shooter one day
when a splendidly built young six-footer rode up to his place.
The stranger watched him as he fired at the tin cans he had put
on fence posts. Presently the young fellow suggested he throw a
couple of the cans up in the air. Dubbs did so. Out flashed the
stranger's revolvers. There was a roar of exploding shots. Dubbs
picked up the cans. Four shots had been fired. Two bullets had
drilled through each can.
"Better not carry a six-shooter till you
learn to shoot," Bill Cody suggested, as he put his guns
back into their holsters. "You'll be a living temptation to
some bad man." Buffalo Bill was on his way back to North
Platte
Life at Dodge was not all tragic. The six-shooter
roared in the land a good deal, but there were very many citizens
who went quietly about their business and took no part in the
night life of the town. It was entirely optional with the
individual. The little city had its legitimate theatres as well
as its hurdy-gurdy houses and gambling dens. There was the Lady
Gay, for instance, a popular vaudeville resort. There were
well-attended churches. But Dodge boiled so with exuberant young
life, often inflamed by bad liquor, that both theatre and church
were likely to be the scenes of unexpected explosions.
A drunken cowboy became annoyed at Eddie Foy.
While the comedian was reciting "Kalamazoo in Michigan"
the puncher began bombarding the frail walls from outside with a
.45 Colt's revolver. Eddie made a swift strategic retreat. A
deputy marshal was standing near the cowpuncher, who was astride
a plunging horse. The deputy fired twice. The first shot missed.
The second brought the rider down. He was dead before he hit the
ground. The deputy apologized later for his marksmanship, but he
added by way of explanation, "The bronc sure was sunfishin'
plenty."
The killing of Miss Dora Hand, a young actress of
much promise, was regretted by everybody in Dodge. A young fellow
named Kennedy, the son of a rich cattleman, shot her
unintentionally while he was trying to murder James Kelly. He
fled. A posse composed of Sheriff Masterson, William Tilghman,
Wyatt Earp, and Charles Bassett took the trail. They captured the
man after wounding him desperately. He was brought back to Dodge,
recovered, and escaped. His pistol arm was useless, but he used
the other well enough to slay several other victims before
someone made an end of him.
The gay good spirits of Dodge found continual
expression in practical jokes. The wilder these were the better
pleased was the town. "Mysterious Dave" was the central
figure in one. An evangelist was conducting a series of meetings.
He made a powerful magnetic appeal, and many were the hard
characters who walked the sawdust trail. The preacher set his
heart on converting Dave Mathers, the worst of bad men and a
notorious scoffer. The meetings prospered. The church grew too
small for the crowds and adjourned to a dance hall. Dave became
interested. He went to hear Brother Johnson preach. He went a
second time and a third. "He certainly preaches like the
Watsons an goes for sin all spraddled out," Dave conceded.
Brother Johnson grew hopeful. It seemed possible that this brand
could be snatched from the burning. He preached directly at Dave,
and Dave buried his head in his hands and sobbed. The preacher
said he was willing to die if he could convert this one vile
sinner. Others of the deacons agreed that they, too, would not
object to going straight to heaven with the knowledge that Dave
had been saved.
"They were right excited an' didn't know
straight up," an old-timer explained. "Dave, he looked so
whipped his ears flopped. Finally he rose, an' said, 'I've got
yore company, friends. Now, while we're all saved I reckon we
better start straight for heaven. First off, the preacher; then
the deacons; me last.' Then Dave whips out a whoppin' big gun and
starts shootin'. The preacher went right through a window an'
took it with him. He was sure in some hurry. The deacons hunted
cover. Seemed like they was willin' to postpone taking that
through ticket to heaven. After that they never did worry any
more about Dave's soul."
Many rustlers gathered around Dodge in those days.
The most notorious of these was a gang of more than thirty under
the leadership of Dutch Henry and Tom Owens, two of the most
desperate outlaws ever known in Kansas A posse was organized to
run down this gang under the leadership of Dubbs, who had lost
some of his stock. Before starting, the posse telephoned Hays
City to organize a company to head off the rustlers. Twenty miles
west of Hays the posse overtook the rustlers. A bloody battle
ensued, during which Owens and several other outlaws were killed
and Dutch Henry wounded six times. Several of the posse were also
shot. The story has a curious sequel. Many years later, when
Emanuel Dubbs was county judge of Wheeler County, Texas, Dutch
Henry came to his house and stayed there several days. He was a
thoroughly reformed man. Not many years ago Dutch Henry died in
Colorado. He was a man with many good qualities. Even in his
outlaw days he had many friends among the law-abiding citizens.
After the battle with the Henry-Owens gang
rustlers operated much more quietly, but they did not cease
stealing. One night three men were hanged to a cottonwood on Saw
Log Creek, ten or twelve miles from Dodge. One of these was a
young man of a good family who had drifted into rustling and had
been carried away by the excitement of it. Another of the three
was the son of Tom Owens. To this day the place is known as Horse
Thief Cañon. During its years of prosperity many eminent
men visited Dodge including Generals Sherman and Sheridan,
President Hayes and General Miles. Its reputation had extended
far and wide. It was the wild and woolly cowboy capital of the
Southwest, a place to quicken the blood of any man. Nearly all
that gay, hard-riding company of cowpunchers, buffalo hunters,
bad men, and pioneers have vanished into yesterday's seven
thousand years. But certainly Dodge once had its day and its
night of glory. No more rip-roaring town ever bucked the tiger.
(End.)
A Story of the Old Hell-raising Trail's End, Where the Colt Was King.
TAKE THE OTHER