| On
the trail of Billy the Kid
By Joann Mazzio
Billy the Kid In 1878, Billy the Kid was capturing headlines
across the American West. Three years later he was dead,
shot down by lawman Pat Garrett. Even before his brief
life played out, the Kid had become legendary, as either
brutish murderer or daring avenger. To this day, the
controversy continues. Was Billy the Kid simply living
up to the code of the frontier? Or was he a lethal hot-head
embellishing his own legend?
Visitors from all over the world come to New Mexico
to follow his trail, and perhaps to search for clues
to the truth about the young man turned outlaw.
Billy the Kid was born in the New York City slums, but
his mother steadily worked her way west with her small
family until they reached Silver City, New Mexico. There,
the boy, accused of receiving stolen clothes, was jailed
and escaped. Skipping to Arizona, he cowboyed, perhaps
ran with rustlers, and committed his first authenticated
killing. Billy fled Arizona. In 1876 or 1877, under
the name of William H. Bonney, the then 17-or-18-year-old
outlaw rode into Lincoln County, New Mexico.
After the Apaches and plains Indians had been subdued,
this 17 million-acre county had become the spoils in
a violent struggle for economic and political control.
Billy the Kid became notorious for his involvement in
this conflict, which became known as the Lincoln County
War.
Today, at the Lincoln County Courthouse, you might hear
a tourist with a French accent say, "I never thought
I would be standing in this very place." And it
is the very place. About 60 miles west of Roswell, the
small town of Lincoln straddles US Hwy. 380. Although
the road is paved, much else remains the same.
The historic Tunstall-McSween store still stands. From
beside it, the Kid and four others ambushed and killed
the sheriff and a deputy. Some say Billy's actions were
justified since the sheriff, who owed his appointment
to the stronger side in the Lincoln County War, was
not strictly impartial. Billy the Kid and his cohorts
were on the losing side.
Eventually Billy was captured and taken about 140 miles
southwest to Mesilla, where he was convicted of these
killings. The adobe building that served as courtroom
and jail stands on the southeast corner of Mesilla Plaza.
You can reach the plaza today by taking New Mexico Hwy.
28 south from Las Cruces.
Returned to Lincoln County to hang, the Kid was imprisoned
on the second floor of the courthouse. When prison guard,
Bob Olinger, took the other prisoners across the road
to the Wortley Hotel to eat, the Kid seized his chance
to escape. He asked the other guard to take him outside
to use the outhouse. On the trip back up the stairs,
Billy slipped his very small hands from the handcuffs,
over powered the guard, and took his gun.
If you climb the courthouse stairs, look for a hole
made by a bullet, either fired in the tussle, or when
Billy shot the guard. Then, as you look out the second-floor
window onto the quiet tree-lined street, imagine the
scene as Billy saw it, still shackled, but now holding
Olinger's double-barreled shotgun.
Listen carefully for the echo of Olinger's footsteps
running from the metal-roofed Wortley Hotel and the
shouts of, "Bob, the Kid has killed Bell."
It was the last thing the unfortunate guard heard before
the Kid shot him, too.
Before you leave Lincoln, you might like to try lunch
or dinner at the Wortley Hotel, once owned by Pat Garrett.
A stay in one of the hotel's eight rooms allows a guest
to soak up history.
Legend improbably says that Billy returned to the rightful
owner the horse on which he fled from Lincoln. The Kid
had many friends among the Hispanic settlers in Lincoln
County, and those who sheltered him after his escape
laughed that he carelessly tied the horse to a sotol
stalk. When the stalk broke, the horse returned to its
owner by itself.
Another recuerdo, or memory, of the kind that feeds
legend is that Billy was so heavily armed after his
escape that he had to lighten his load. He placed two
pistols and cartridge belts in the fork of an oak tree,
planning to return for them later. He never came back,
and, according to the story, somewhere in the Capitan
Mountains there grows an old oak tree with his weapons
in its heart.
Tourists on the trail of Billy the Kid have yet to find
the oak tree. But about 140 miles northeast of Lincoln,
they can find Fort Sumner, where Billy the Kid spent
his last days.
The fort had been abandoned a few years before Billy's
time and sold to one of New Mexico's wealthiest landowners.
From the officers' quarters was fashioned a 21-room
adobe house. It was in a bedroom of this house, on a
warm July night in 1881, that Pat Garrett gunned down
Billy the Kid. Garrett later met his own violent death
in an ambush. He is buried in the Masonic Cemetery in
Las Cruces.
The cemetery at Fort Sumner, in contrast, contains only
a few graves. The military dead were disinterred and
reburied in Santa Fe when the fort was decommissioned.
Billy the Kid's tombstone has been stolen twice and
is chained in place now. He and two compatriots are
buried in a fenced plot about ten feet square.
Or maybe not. Some think the Kid's body was moved to
Santa Fe along with the remains of the dead soldiers.
There is even a rumor that his head is missing. Others
believe he was not killed by Garrett at all, but lived
to an old age under another name.
Today, the places associated with Billy the Kid modestly
wear the patina of history, awaiting the many visitors
still fascinated by the legendary outlaw.
Courtesy
of http://southernnewmexico.com |