30 April 2014

Ten more myths about Tom Horn


True West has an article by Larry D. Ball about Tom Horn:
Tom Horn (photo, top) occupies a prominent, if controversial, place in frontier annals. While he had a varied career in his forty-three years— miner, cowpuncher, pioneer rodeo star, and lawman— his most enduring legacy was as a civilian packer and scout for the Army in the Apache campaigns of the 1880s, as a Pinkerton operative, and, finally, as a Wyoming range detective. As a means to leave his version of his life for posterity, Horn wrote his autobiography while awaiting execution in a Cheyenne, Wyoming jail. Although he concluded his life story nearly ten years before his death, the autobiography has had much to do with the creation of his legend. Horn’s exaggerations, especially in his account of the Apache campaigns, are glaring and untrustworthy. This book, when combined with tales that later circulated about Horn’s activities as a “hit man” for Wyoming cattle barons, has had the effect of making the real Tom Horn difficult to discern.
1. Estranged from His FamilyHorn asserted that his father, a fervent Disciples of Christ follower, was such a strict disciplinarian that he chased his son away from home at the age of fourteen. This was partly true. He was probably several years older when he left, and he maintained contact with his family. In the late 1870s, he and his older brother, Charles, ran their father’s livery stable in Burrton, Kansas. When he became a Pinkerton operative in Denver, Colorado, in 1890, his sister Maude served as his housekeeper.
2.  Chief of ScoutsHorn told readers that Al Sieber, the most noted civilian scout in the Apache Wars, hired him as an assistant in 1876, and that Horn immediately became a scout. However, Horn did not arrive in the Arizona Territory until 1881. Army quartermaster records indicate Horn was first employed in September of 1881 as a teamster at Whipple Barracks, near Prescott, Arizona. He soon moved to the pack train service and remained there until 1885, when the Army began to use him as a scout. Only in the fall of that year did he become a chief of scouts, a position he held until October of 1886.
3. Apache FluencyOne of Horn’s most outrageous assertions was his fluency in the Apache language. The Missourian did not speak the Apache tongue well enough to interpret in formal negotiations. Horn did learn the border Spanish that prevailed in the Southwest well enough to serve as an Army interpreter in that lingo.
4. Geronimo's InterpreterHorn declared that Apache war leader Geronimo insisted only Horn could serve as his interpreter. As a chief of scouts (several were always at work during campaigns), Horn was present in the final pursuit of Geronimo in the summer of 1886, but he was never Geronimo’s interpreter, and certainly not for the formal surrender in Arizona in September of 1886. Horn did personally escort Geronimo to the train at Bowie Station that transported the captives into exile in Florida.
5. Horn's Apache WifeWhile Horn did not admit in his autobiography that he took an Apache girl as his common-law wife on the San Carlos Reservation, Sawn, whom he called his “housekeeper,” may have been his wife.  In the Apache language, Sawn meant “my wife” or “my old lady.” Furthermore, she may have given birth to one, possibly two, children by Horn. He reportedly deserted his family when he joined the Pinkerton National Detective Agency in 1890.
6. A Pinkerton HeroHorn’s performance as a Pinkerton operative was spotty. He won applause for helping catch the robbers who held up a train in Cotopaxi, Colorado, in August of 1891, but he failed in another high profile case in Oregon. He was not only unsuccessful in locating the felons who had wrecked a train near Salem, but also, in an abrupt turn of events, was arrested for robbing a casino in Reno, Nevada! Two trials, and the influence of his employer, William Pinkerton, were required to gain an acquittal. While the citizens of Reno remained convinced of his guilt, Pinkerton asserted bandit Frank Shercliffe did the deed.
7. Mankiller, or Not?In May of 1892, the Pinkerton agency sent Horn to Johnson County in the aftermath of the Cattlemen’s Invasion. Horn left the Pinkertons and gained employment with the Wyoming Stock Growers Association and, later, entered the service of individual range barons. While Horn was never convicted in a court of law of assassinating an alleged livestock thief, by 1895 he had the reputation of being a killer-for-hire. He may have shot and killed at least four men, but the story that he killed seventeen men in Colorado alone is pure myth.
8. Horn the GunfighterHorn’s contemporaries never regarded him as a gunfighter. As a consequence, he failed to gain a place in the popular mind or in Hollywood equal to Wyatt Earp or Billy the Kid. (His reputation as a man who shot his victims from ambush diminished his appeal.) Nor was he an accomplished brawler. In spite of his impressive physique— six feet two at 180-200 pounds— Horn was ineffective with his fists and shunned the use of a knife.
9. Veteran of the War with SpainWhen war erupted with Spain in April of 1898, Nelson Miles, commanding general of the Army, sought out Horn for the civilian pack train. With the Fifth Corps in Cuba, chief packer Horn supervised eight pack trains. In spite of the foul weather, enemy guerilla activity, and chronic illnesses among his packers, Horn persevered and won applause. Yet the War Department rebuffed him when he sought a position as pack master in the Philippines.
10. The Fake Confession?This is the unknowable myth. Horn’s supporters claimed Deputy U.S. Marshal Joe LeFors employed underhanded means to extract a confession that the range detective had killed fourteen-year-old Willie Nickell. Whether the confession was true or not, it sealed the fate of Horn, who was executed in November of 1903.
Rico says that the Steve McQueen (photo, bottom) movie was good...

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