Charlie and Yoko Yoshida of Western Union, Tokyo, Japan |
You might be surprised, but Clay Allison killed his first
man on the side of the law. A man named James Kennedy, whose trial for murder
resulted in a hung jury, was locked in a butcher shop pending a new trial.
Allison and friends did not want a new trial, did not want Kennedy acquitted,
and so they broke into the butcher shop the night of October 7, 1870, and strung
Kennedy up to a nearby beam.
Allison then returned to his normal occupation of stealing
other people’s livestock. The very next year, in late April, Allison and a
couple more cowpokes ran off with a dozen government mules, which belonged to
General Gordon Granger. This was the very same General Granger who had been in
charge of reconstruction in Texas 1865-1870. Clay Allison became angered at his
policies and his presence in New Mexico may have made Allison so mad that he
balanced the scales a tad by taking the mules and selling them in Mexico.
Later in the year, he tried to partake of government stock
again. Everything went wrong, and he shot himself in the foot. He limped after
that until the day he died, and it made him harder to get along with than ever,
if that is possible.
Still, the first man Clay Allison killed with a sixgun was "Chunk" Colbert. In Colorado, a month before he met his demise, Colbert had
killed a man named George Waller in a dancehall somewhere near Trinidad.
Colbert met Allison in Otero, New Mexico, January 19, 1874. They ate together
and drank together, warily, it seems. They bought oysters, the story goes, and
while eating them, Colbert drew and fired a shot at Allison. But he was in such
a hurry that the gun’s barrel hit the table and the bullet missed. Allison shot
Colbert in the head. Sheriff John Turner, who was chasing Colbert, arrived in
Otero after he’d been dead just one hour.
Some days later, Charles Cooper, a friend of Colbert’s, who
may have known something about the killing that would put Allison in a bad
light, came up missing. They say Allision killed him. But no one will ever
know.
Clay Allison’s name is mixed up with the Colfax County War,
too. The reasons for the war have nothing to do with Allison, and about all
that needs to be said is that the Santa Fe Ring and the Colfax Ring both wanted
control of the Maxwell Grant. As the war heated up, the Santa Fe Ring brought
Clay Allison in. No one knows what the terms of the Santa Fe-Allison agreement
were, but right away, he and his cowboys started raiding ranches at night and
actively supporting the Santa Fe Ring’s three Republican nominees—Elkins for
reelection to Congress, Longwill for probate judge, and Mills for state
legislature—in the 1875 election.
The gunman we’re talking about once joined a cattleman’s
association. Despite being a cattleman’s association, its name was The
Industrial Association of New Mexico. Its president was Tom Stockton. Henry
Porter and Finis “Fine” Ernest, both of Denver in later days, were directors. Ernest
was set on running homesteaders off, and swore out warrants on 25 of them. He
jerked them around so badly that Allison got angry (as he was wont to do). He
accosted Ernest, tapped him on the hat, turned him around a couple of times,
and gave him a bit of advice. “. . . you dirty son of a bitch, don’t let the
sun set on your ass in this town.” Ernest moved back to Colorado the following
spring, taking his 7,000 head of cattle with him. No one knows why Allison
sided with the farmers on that occasion. But it seems that his decision to ride
for the Santa Fe Ring stemmed from personal spite, not some idealistic idea of
himself as a hero of the downtrodden.
Reverend Tolby |
A Methodist Ministry, Franklin J. Tolby, was killed in
Cimarron Canyon as he was returning from Elizabethtown. Ambushed, he was found
lying by the tributary that now bears his name. It was not robbery as his horse
and personal belongings were untouched. But he was anti-Santa Fe Ring and was
suspected of sending letters to the New York Sun exposing corrupt methods of
the Ring. Later, the Daily New Mexican of Santa Fe had an article that said,
“It is thought the murderer is a white man and paid for the job.” There was
also a rumor that it was Allison, and he did lie low for some time. Shortly thereafter,
Allison broke with the Santa Fe Ring.
Wow. The Clay Allison story winds onward. There is at least enough
for another blog. See ya next month (notice Clay has nothing to do with Wicked Wednesday).
Charlie, I am loving this saga of Clay Allison. He surely could have been the subject of a month's worth of Wicked Wednesdays, couldn't he? Very interesting stuff!
ReplyDeleteCheryl
Interesting post, Charlie. Keep it coming.
ReplyDeleteKeith
Love it. Thanks, Charlie.
ReplyDeleteGood post, Charlie. Clay Allison, most of all, was a short-tempered gunman given to violent mood swings.
ReplyDeleteWhen you say that, Tom, smile.
ReplyDeleteFascinating! Doris
ReplyDeleteMarvelous post, Charlie. Enjoyed that,
ReplyDelete