From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
126 Years Ago:
Billy the Kid Claims His First Victim
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * August 13, 2003
One-hundred-twenty-six years ago this week, on August 17, 1877,
young William Henry McCarty became a killer and outlaw. Attacked
by a barroom bully in Arizona, the seventeen-year old killed the man with
his pistol and fled to nearby New Mexico where he tried to start a new
life as a ranch hand. But he would soon find himself embroiled in
a bitter and bloody rancher feud, a conflict that propelled him to national
infamy as “Billy the Kid,” the most notorious outlaw in the west.
Billy the Kid was born William Henry McCarty to Irish immigrant
parents Catherine and Michael McCarty in New York City on September 17,
1859. Like many of their fellow Irish immigrants, the McCarty’s lived
in poverty in a run down tenement on the Lower East Side. When Billy’s
father died soon after his birth, he and his mother headed west, eventually
landing in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
There in 1873 Billy’s mother married another Irishman, a miner named
William Antrim. Her death the next year from a long bout with tuberculosis
hit Billy hard and set him on a downward spiral. He accompanied his
step-father to a silver strike in Arizona, near a place called Globe City.
His step-father alternated between abusing and ignoring Billy, leaving
him to fall in with a rough crowd in the mining town. By age sixteen,
Billy was known as a violent and reckless young man who possessed little
regard for authority. Shortly after his arrest for stealing laundry,
he set out on his own, supporting himself as a ranch hand, cattle rustler,
and gambler.
Up to this point the 17-year old’s offenses were relatively minor, given
the rough and lawless character of life in the 1870s southwest. But
that changed one afternoon in August 1877 when Billy got into an altercation
with a fellow rowdy named Frank Cahill. “Windy” Cahill was a big man –
considerably larger than the slight Billy – who delighted in taunting others.
No one remembers what Billy said in response to one of the burly Irishman’s
barbs, but it prompted Cahill to attack. He threw Billy to the ground
and began to pummel him. Somehow Billy managed to pull his gun and
fired
into Cahill’s stomach. When Cahill died the next day, Billy was
long gone.
Now an outlaw, he headed for New Mexico and again fell in with cattle
rustlers and horse thieves. But as was common in the wilder days
of the west, men like Billy were often hired by ranchers (sometimes the
very ones they stole from) to protect their herds from other rustlers or
rival ranchers imposing on their grazing and watering areas. Billy
was hired by a wealthy English rancher named John Henry Tunstall, a man
then embroiled in a bitter struggle with an Irishman named James Dolan.
Dolan and his partner William Murphy held a monopoly on the local beef
market in Lincoln County and were notorious for paying prices for beef
that kept ranchers on the verge of ruin. When Tunstall, the largest
rancher in the county set out to break the monopoly, he found that Dolan
controlled all the local politicians, judges, and businessmen. Worse,
Dolan hired rustlers to harm Tunstall’s cattle and drive him out of business.
Tunstall’s response was to hire his own men, including Billy.
The simmering feud between Dolan and Tunstall erupted into a conflict
that came to be called the Lincoln County War when Dolan had his men assassinate
Tunstall on April 18, 1878. When the local sheriff, a man under the
thumb of Dolan, refused to arrest any suspects, Billy and a group of Tunstall’s
men took matters into their own hands. Only days after the assassination,
they hunted down and killed two of the suspects. Three weeks later
they killed Brady in an ambush. Another suspect was shot soon thereafter.
Dolan's men got revenge a few weeks later when they gunned down three men
in Billy's group and Tunstall's business partner. Billy narrowly
escaped.
The Lincoln County War cooled after that episode. Billy laid low
in Fort Sumner, New Mexico (not far from Lincoln) until arrested by a posse
sent by the governor of the New Mexico territory. Billy soon escaped
and rejoined his friends in the hills near Fort Sumner. In late December
1880 Sheriff Pat Garrett found them and arrested Billy, charging him with
the murder of Sheriff Barry. A jury found Billy guilty and sentenced
him to hang, but he again escaped the day before going to the gallows,
killing both his guards in the process.
By now Billy's exploits had become the stuff of sensational stories
in newspapers across the country. Journalists often exaggerated the
details and weaved in copious amounts of fiction into their dispatches,
turning Billy – a nondescript ranch hand caught in the midst of a brutal
range war – the nation's most famous outlaw. And for good measure,
they gave him a catchy nickname, "Billy the Kid," a moniker that derived
from Billy's youth (he was only 21) and boyish face.
Sheriff Garrett eventually caught up with Billy on July 14, 1881 and
killed him with a bullet in the heart. Garrett was heralded for ridding
the west, in the words of the New York Times, of "probably the most noted
desperado on the Pacific coast … [and] one of the most dangerous characters
this country has produced." That hyperbole indicated the myth making
yet to come as novels, ballads, movies, and oral tradition turned William
Henry McCarty into a national icon.
HIBERNIAN HISTORY WEEK
August 17, 1846: Prime Minister Lord John Russell’s administration announces
that it will not interfere with grain market in Ireland. As a result,
food prices soar in Ireland and grain is exported even as hundreds of thousands
face starvation during the Great Famine.
August 19, 1920: Lord Mayor of Cork, Terence MacSwiney, begins his hunger
strike in protest over his arrest by the Royal Irish Constabulary.
His death on October 25 dramatically boosts popular support for the War
of Independence being waged by the IRA.
August 22, 1791: United Irishmen founder Theobald Wolfe Tone publishes
“An Argument on Behalf of the Catholics of Ireland” calling for full equality
of Catholics in Ireland.
HIBERNIAN BIRTHDATES:
August 16, 1894: Labor leader George Meany, is born in New York City.
August 16, 1930: Pro football legend Frank Gifford, is born in Santa
Monica, CA.
August 17, 1786: Frontiersman and Alamo martyr Davy Crockett, is born
near present-day Rogersville, TN.
August 17, 1920: Actress Maureen O’Hara, in Milwall, is born near Dublin.
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2003
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