fbpx
Wikipedia

Pat Garrett

Patrick Floyd Jarvis Garrett (June 5, 1850 – February 29, 1908) was an American Old West lawman, bartender and customs agent known for killing Billy the Kid. He was the sheriff of Lincoln County, New Mexico, as well as Doña Ana County, New Mexico.

Pat Garrett
Garrett c. 1903
Born
Patrick Floyd Jarvis Garrett

(1850-06-05)June 5, 1850
DiedFebruary 29, 1908(1908-02-29) (aged 57)
Cause of deathGunshot wound
Resting place
  • Masonic Cemetery
  • Las Cruces, New Mexico

32°18′4.118″N 106°47′7.908″W / 32.30114389°N 106.78553000°W / 32.30114389; -106.78553000 (Gravesite of Pat Garrett)
Known forKilling William H. Bonney (Billy the Kid)
Spouses
  • Juanita Martinez
    (m. 1879; died 1879)
  • Apolinaria Gutierrez
    (m. 1880)
Children8
Signature

Early years Edit

Patrick Floyd Jarvis Garrett was born on June 5, 1850, in Chambers County, Alabama. He was the second of five children born to John Lumpkin Garrett and his wife Elizabeth Ann Jarvis. Garrett's four siblings were Margaret, Elizabeth, John, and Alfred.[1] Garrett was of English ancestry, and his ancestors migrated to America from the English counties of Hertfordshire, Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire, Lincolnshire and Buckinghamshire.[2] When Pat was three years old his father purchased the John Greer plantation in Claiborne Parish, Louisiana. The Civil War, however, destroyed the Garrett family's finances. Their mother died at the age of 37 on March 25, 1867, when Garrett was 16. Then the following year, on February 5, 1868, his father died at age 45. The children were left with a plantation that was more than $30,000 in debt. The children were taken in by relatives. The 18-year-old Garrett headed west from Louisiana on January 25, 1869.[1]: 9 [3]: 28 

Buffalo hunter Edit

Garrett's whereabouts over the next seven years are obscure. By 1876 he was in Texas hunting buffalo. During this period Garrett killed his first man, another buffalo hunter named Joe Briscoe. Garrett surrendered to the authorities at Fort Griffin, Texas, but they declined to prosecute.[1]: 29–31  When the buffalo hunting declined, Garrett left Texas and rode to the New Mexico Territory.[3]: 267n, 293n  When Garrett arrived at Fort Sumner, New Mexico, he found work as a bartender, then as a cowboy for Pedro Menard "Pete" Maxwell.

Family life Edit

Garrett's first wife was Juanita Martinez, who died 15 days after their marriage.[4] The reference Leon C. Metz made about Juanita being the older sister of Pat's second wife Apolonia is unfounded. Apolonia only had a sister by the name of Celsa Gutierrez.[1] On January 14, 1880, Garrett married Apolinaria Gutierrez.[1]: 40–41 [3]: 94–96  Between 1881 and 1905 Apolinaria Garrett gave birth to eight children: Ida, Dudley, Elizabeth, Annie, Patrick, Pauline, Oscar, and Jarvis.

Pursuit of Billy the Kid Edit

 
Cover of Garrett's book

Billy the Kid, William Henry Bonney, Jr also known as William McCarty was wanted for murder in the aftermath of the Lincoln County War. On November 2, 1880, Garrett was elected sheriff of Lincoln County, New Mexico, having defeated the incumbent, Sheriff George Kimball, by a vote of 320 to 179.[5] Although Garrett's term would not begin until January 1, 1881, Sheriff Kimball appointed him a deputy sheriff for the remainder of Kimball's term. Garrett also obtained a deputy U.S. Marshal's commission, which allowed him to pursue the Kid across state lines. Garrett and his posse stormed the Dedrick ranch at Bosque Grande on November 30, 1880. They expected to find the Kid there, but only succeeded in capturing John Joshua Webb, who had been charged with murder, along with an accused horse thief named George Davis.[6] Garrett turned Webb and Davis over to the sheriff of San Miguel County a few days later, and moved on to the settlement of Puerto de Luna. There a local tough named Mariano Leiva picked a fight with Garrett and was shot in the shoulder.[7]

On December 19, 1880, Billy the Kid, Charlie Bowdre, Tom Pickett, Billy Wilson, Dave Rudabaugh, and Tom O'Folliard rode into Fort Sumner. Lying in wait were deputy Garrett and his posse. Mistaking O'Folliard for the Kid, Garrett's men opened fire and killed O'Folliard.[8] Billy and the others escaped unharmed. Three days later, Garrett's posse cornered Billy and his companions at a spot called Stinking Springs. They killed Bowdre and captured the others.[9] On April 15, 1881, Billy the Kid was sentenced to hang by Judge Warren Bristol, but escaped thirteen days later, killing two deputies.[10]

On July 14, 1881, Garrett visited Fort Sumner to question a friend of the Kid's about his whereabouts and learned he was staying with a mutual friend, Pedro Menard "Pete" Maxwell. Around midnight, Garrett went to Maxwell's house. The Kid was asleep in another part of the house, but woke up in the middle of the night and entered Maxwell's bedroom, where Garrett was standing in the shadows. The Kid did not recognize the man standing in the dark. He asked him, repeatedly, "¿Quién es?" ("Who is it?"), and Garrett replied by shooting at him twice.[11] The first shot hit the Kid in the chest just above the heart, while the second missed. Garrett’s account leaves it unclear whether Billy was killed instantly or took some time to die.[12]

Account of Billy the Kid Edit

He coauthored The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid with Ash Upson,[13] and for decades his book was deemed authoritative.[14]

Following Billy the Kid's death, writers quickly went to work producing books and articles that made a folk hero out of Billy the Kid, while making Garrett seem like an assassin. Although filled with many errors of fact, The Authentic Life served afterward as the main source for most books written about the Kid until the 1960s.[15][16][17] A failure when originally released, an original copy of the Pat Garrett-Ash Upson book became a rare commodity; in 1969 the original 1882 edition of the Garrett-Upson book was described by Ramon F. Adams as being "exceedingly rare."[18] Twentieth-century editions of Garrett's Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid (with alterations to the original title) appeared in 1927,[19] 1946[20] and 1964.[21]

 
Portrait of Pat Garrett (c. 1907) from The Story of the Outlaws[22]

Texas Ranger Edit

Garrett did not seek re-election as sheriff of Lincoln County in 1882. He moved to Texas, where he ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the state senate. Garrett became a captain with the Texas Rangers for less than a month, then returned to Roswell, New Mexico.[23]

Middle years Edit

Irrigation investments and move to Texas Edit

Garrett discovered a large reservoir of artesian water in the Roswell region and went into partnership with two men to organize the "Pecos Valley Irrigation and Investment Company" on July 18, 1885.[24] Garrett kept his irrigation schemes alive for several years, and on January 15, 1887, he purchased a one-third interest in the "Texas Irrigation Ditch Company", but the partners got rid of him. On August 15, 1887, he formed a partnership with William L. Holloman in the "Holloman and Garrett Ditch Company."[25] All of Garrett's forays into the irrigation field, however, resulted in failure.[citation needed] By 1892, Garrett had moved his large family to Uvalde, Texas, where he became a close friend of John Nance Garner (1868–1967), a future vice president of the United States.[26] Garrett might have lived out the remainder of his life in Uvalde, had it not been for a headline-making event back in New Mexico.

Disappearance of Albert Jennings Fountain Edit

On January 31, 1896, Colonel Albert Jennings Fountain and his eight-year-old son Henry disappeared at the edge of the White Sands area of southern New Mexico. Neither of the Fountains were ever seen again. The mystery was never officially solved, even with the efforts of Apache scouts, the Pinkertons, and an all-out push by the Republican Party.[27] In April 1896, Garrett was appointed sheriff of Doña Ana County, and two years later had gathered sufficient evidence to make arrests, asking a judge in Las Cruces for warrants to arrest Oliver M. Lee, William McNew, Bill Carr and James Gililland. Within hours, he had arrested McNew and Carr.[28]

During the early morning hours of July 12, 1898 Garrett and his posse confronted Oliver M. Lee and James Gililland at a spot called "Wildy Well" near Orogrande, New Mexico. Garrett had hoped to capture the fugitives while they were sleeping, but Lee and Gililland expected trouble and took their bedrolls up to the roof of the bunkhouse to avoid being taken by surprise. One of Garrett's deputies named Kearney heard footsteps on the roof, scaled a ladder, and was mortally wounded by the fugitives. A stray shot nicked Garrett. Due to his concern for his dying deputy, Garrett arranged a truce with the fugitives and withdrew while Kearney was lifted into a wagon. Kearney, however, died on the road to Las Cruces, and Lee and Gililland remained at large for another eight months, before they finally surrendered to Sheriff George Curry.[29] They were found not guilty in the Fountain killings, and the indictments for killing the deputy were also dismissed.[30]

Final kill Edit

Garrett killed his last offender in 1899, a fugitive named Norman Newman, who was wanted for murder in Greer County, Oklahoma. Newman was hiding out at the San Augustin Ranch in New Mexico. Sheriff George Blalock of Greer County went to New Mexico and asked Garrett for his assistance. The lawmen and Jose Espalin, one of Garrett's deputies, rode to the ranch, and on October 7, 1899, Newman was killed in a gunfight.[31]

Presidential appointment in El Paso Edit

On December 16, 1901, President Theodore Roosevelt nominated Garrett to the post of collector of customs in El Paso.[32] He also became one of President Roosevelt's three "White House Gunfighters" (Bat Masterson and Ben Daniels being the others).[33] Despite public outcry over his appointment, Garrett was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on January 2, 1902.[34] Garrett's tenure as El Paso's collector of customs was stormy from the start. On May 8, 1903, he got into a public fistfight with an employee named George Gaither. The following morning, both Garrett and Gaither paid five dollar fines for disturbing the peace.[35] Continued complaints about Garrett's alleged incompetence were sent to Washington.[36] Through it all, President Roosevelt stood by Garrett. As a show of his support, Roosevelt invited Garrett to attend a Rough Riders reunion being held in San Antonio during April 1905. Since Garrett had not been a member of that regiment, Roosevelt's invitation was taken as a snub at those critics who wanted Garrett replaced from his post. Garrett brought a guest of his own to the event named Tom Powers. Garrett introduced Powers to the president as "a prominent Texas cattleman." Garrett and Powers posed for two photographs with Roosevelt, first standing with him in a group and later seated with Roosevelt at dinner.[37] Garrett's enemies obtained copies of the photos and sent them to Roosevelt, informing the president that instead of being the "cattleman" that Garrett claimed, Powers was, in fact, the owner of a "notorious dive" in El Paso called the Coney Island Saloon. That was the final straw for Roosevelt, who replaced Garrett with a new collector of customs on January 2, 1906.[38]

Late years Edit

Financial problems Edit

Following his dismissal, Garrett returned with his family to New Mexico. Garrett was in deep financial difficulty. His ranch had been heavily mortgaged, and when he was unable to make payments, the county auctioned off all of Garrett's personal possessions to satisfy judgments against him. The total from the auction came to $650.[39] President Roosevelt had appointed Pat's friend George Curry as the territorial governor of New Mexico. Garrett met with Curry, who promised him the position of superintendent of the territorial prison at Santa Fe, once he was inaugurated. Since Curry's inauguration was still months away, the destitute Garrett left his family in New Mexico and returned to El Paso, where he found employment with the real estate firm of H.M. Maple and Company. During this period Garrett moved in with a woman known as "Mrs. Brown", who was described as an El Paso prostitute.[40] When Governor-elect Curry learned of his involvement with Brown, the promised appointment of prison superintendent was withdrawn.[41]

Last conflict and death Edit

 
Memorial marking spot where Garrett was killed

Dudley Poe Garrett, Pat's son, had signed a five-year lease for his Bear Canyon Ranch with Jesse Wayne Brazel.[42] Garrett and his son objected when Brazel began bringing in large herds of goats, which were anathema to cattlemen like Garrett. Garrett tried to break the lease when he learned that the money for Brazel's operation had been put up by his neighbor, W. W. "Bill" Cox. He was further angered when he learned that Archie Prentice "Print" Rhode was Brazel's partner in the huge goat herd.[43] When Brazel refused, the matter went to court. At this point James B. Miller met with Garrett to try to solve the problem. Miller met with Brazel, who agreed to cancel his lease with Garrett – provided a buyer could be found for his herd of 1,200 goats. Carl Adamson, who was related to Miller by marriage, agreed to buy the 1,200 goats. Just when the matter seemed resolved, Brazel claimed that he had "miscounted" his goat herd, claiming there were actually 1,800 – rather than his previous estimate of 1,200. Adamson refused to buy that many goats, but agreed to meet with Garrett and Brazel to see if they could reach some sort of agreement.

Garrett and Carl Adamson rode together, heading from Las Cruces, New Mexico, in Adamson's wagon. Brazel appeared on horseback along the way. Garrett was shot and killed, but exactly by whom remains the subject of controversy. Brazel and Adamson left the body by the side of the road and returned to Las Cruces, where Brazel surrendered to Deputy Sheriff Felipe Lucero. More than thirty years later, Lucero claimed that Brazel exclaimed, "Lock me up. I've just killed Pat Garrett!" Brazel then pointed to Adamson and said, "He saw the whole thing and knows that I shot in self-defense."[44] Lucero incarcerated Brazel, summoned a coroner's jury, and rode to Garrett's death site. Brazel's trial for Garrett's murder concluded on May 4, 1909.[45] Brazel was represented at his trial by attorney and future Secretary of the Interior Albert Bacon Fall. The only eyewitness to Garrett's murder, Adamson, never appeared at the trial, which lasted only one day and ended with an acquittal.[46][47][48]

Identity of the murderer Edit

The coroner's report on Garrett's death states that Brazel shot Garrett.[49] Brazel reportedly confessed, but was acquitted at trial. Four other suspects have been proposed: Adamson, Cox, Rhode, and Miller. In a book published in 1970, Glenn Shirley gave his reasons for naming Miller as the killer of Pat Garrett.[50] Leon C. Metz in his 1974 biography of Garrett related the claim of W.T. Moyers that "his investigations led him to believe that [W. W.] Cox himself ambushed and killed Garrett,"[51] but also wrote that "[t]he Garrett family believes that Carl Adamson pulled the trigger."[52] In his 2010 book on Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett, Mark Lee Gardner suggests that Archie Prentice "Print" Rhode killed Garrett.[53]

Death site Edit

 
Garrett family burial site

The site of Garrett's death is now commemorated by a historical marker south of U.S. Route 70, between Las Cruces, New Mexico and the San Augustin Pass.[54][55] The historical marker is located about 1.2 miles from where Garrett was murdered. In 1940 his son, Jarvis Garrett, marked the spot with a monument consisting of concrete laid around a stone with a cross carved in it. The cross is believed to be the work of Garrett's mother. Scratched in the concrete is "P. Garrett" and the date of his killing. The marker is located in the desert.[56] In 2020, the city of Las Cruces revealed plans for a development that would destroy the site. An organization called Friends of Pat Garrett has been formed to ensure that the city preserves the site and marker.[57][58]

Funeral and burial site Edit

At six feet five inches,[59][a] Garrett's body was too tall for any finished coffins available, so a special one had to be shipped in from El Paso. His funeral service was held March 5, 1908, and he was laid to rest next to his daughter, Ida, who had died in 1896 at the age of fifteen. Garrett's grave and the graves of his descendants are in the Masonic Cemetery, Las Cruces.[58]

Portrayals Edit

Garrett has been a character in many films and television shows, and has been portrayed by:

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Because of his height, during his early days in New Mexico, local Spanish speakers nicknamed Garrett "Juan Largo" (Long John.)[60]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman
  2. ^ Violence in Lincoln County, 1869–1881 A New Mexico Item by William Aloysius Keleher · 1982, p. 3
  3. ^ a b c Gardner, Mark Lee, To Hell on a Fast Horse.
  4. ^ 1879–1979 High Plains History East Century New Mexico Book page 41
  5. ^ Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, pp. 101–102
  6. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 62–64 and Gardner, Mark Lee, To Hell on a Fast Horse, p. 111
  7. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 64–65 and Gardner, Mark Lee, To Hell on a Fast Horse pp. 115–116, 279n
  8. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 72–75
  9. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 76–81 and Gardner, Mark Lee, To Hell on a Fast Horse, pp. 128–133.
  10. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 93–95 and Gardner, Mark Lee, To Hell on a Fast Horse, pp. 139–148.
  11. ^ "The Death Of Billy The Kid, 1881". EyeWitness to History. 2001.
  12. ^ "The Death Of Billy The Kid, 1881". Eyewitness to History/Ibis Communications. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  13. ^ LeMay, John and Stahl, Robert J. (2020). The Man Who Invented Billy the Kid: The Authentic Life of Ash Upson. Roswell, NM: Bicep Books. pp. 127–133. ISBN 978-1-953221-91-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Jon Tuska (1994). Billy the Kid, his life and legend. Greenwood Press. p. 119. ISBN 9780313285899.
  15. ^ Frederick Nolan (October 20, 2014). The Billy the Kid Reader. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 358. ISBN 978-0-8061-8254-4.
  16. ^ Stephen Tatum (January 1, 1982). Inventing Billy the Kid: Visions of the Outlaw in America, 1881-1981. University of New Mexico Press. pp. 123–124. ISBN 978-0-8263-0610-4.
  17. ^ Tuska 1994, p. 237
  18. ^ Adams, Ramon F. Six-Guns and Saddle Leather: A Bibliography of Books and Pamphlets on Western Outlaws and Gunman. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1969 p. 244.
  19. ^ Pat F. Garrett's Authentic Life of Billy the Kid, edited by Maurice Garland Fulton. New York: The Macmillan Co., 1927.
  20. ^ Authentic Life of Billy the Kid, by Pat F. Garrett, Greatest Sheriff of the Old Southwest. Foreword by John M. Scanland, and Eye Witness Reports. Edited by J. Brussel. New York: Atomic Books, Inc. 1946.
  21. ^ Pat F. Garrett, The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid, With a Biographical Foreword by Jarvis P. Garrett. Albuquerque, NM; horn and Wallace Publishers, Inc., 1964.
  22. ^ Hough, Emerson (1907). The Story of the Outlaw-A Study of the Western Desperado. New York: The Outing Publication Company. p. 198.
  23. ^ Metz, Leon C (November 12, 2019). "Garrett, Patrick Floyd Jarvis". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved June 27, 2020.
  24. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman – pp. 152–154.
  25. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman – p. 151.
  26. ^ Metz, Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, p. 160
  27. ^ Recko, Corey, Murder on the White Sands: The Disappearance of Albert and Henry Fountain University of North Texas Press, 2007[ISBN missing]
  28. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 203–204 and Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, p. 202.
  29. ^ Metz, Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 216–218
  30. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 227–232 and Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, p. 212
  31. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 236–37, 298, 301 and Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, pp. 213–215
  32. ^ El Paso Herald, December 16, 1901
  33. ^ DeMattos, Jack. Garrett and Roosevelt, College Station, TX: Creative Publishing Company, 1988. ISBN 0-932702-42-2
  34. ^ El Paso Herald, January 2, 1902
  35. ^ El Paso Evening News, May 8, 1903
  36. ^ DeMattos, Jack. Garrett and Roosevelt, pp. 79–88[ISBN missing]
  37. ^ Reproductions of these two photos can be viewed in Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, p. 196[ISBN missing] and DeMattos, Jack. Garrett and Roosevelt, pp. 72–73.[ISBN missing]
  38. ^ DeMattos, Garrett and Roosevelt, pp. 109–120.[ISBN missing]
  39. ^ DeMattos, Garrett and Roosevelt, p. 137
  40. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, p. 284
  41. ^ DeMattos, Jack. Garrett and Roosevelt, p. 141.
  42. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, pp. 285–286 and Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, p. 229
  43. ^ Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, p. 229
  44. ^ The Brazel quote as related by Lucero is from The New Mexico Sentinel, Santa Fe, April 23, 1939
  45. ^ El Paso Times, May 5, 1909.
  46. ^ Metz, Leon C. p. 295.
  47. ^ Long, Trish. "1908: Pat Garrett killed; Dies with boots on". El Paso Times. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  48. ^ Boardman, Mark (January 6, 2014). "The Assassination of Pat Garrett". True West Magazine. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  49. ^ Kolb, Joseph J. (May 23, 2017). "How did Billy the Kid's killer die? New doc may put to rest one of Wild West's biggest mysteries". Foxnews. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  50. ^ Shirley, Glenn. Shotgun For Hire: The Story of "Deacon" Jim Miller, Killer of Pat Garrett, pp. 74–89
  51. ^ Metz, Leon C.Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, p. 301
  52. ^ Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman, p. 292
  53. ^ Gardner, Mark Lee. To Hell on a Fast Horse, pp. 241–244.
  54. ^ New Mexico Historic Preservation Division, Dept. of Cultural Affairs. "Pat Garrett Murder Site Historical Marker".
  55. ^ The Historical Marker Database – Pat Garrett Murder Site
  56. ^ Note: Death marker coordinates: [32.366203, -106.717152]
  57. ^ Schurtz, Christopher, Friends of Pat Garrett
  58. ^ a b "Historians hope to preserve Pat Garrett murder site". Las Cruces Sun-News. December 11, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  59. ^ Jameson, W. C. (2016). Pat Garrett: The Man Behind the Badge. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-67036-104-2 – via Google Books.
  60. ^ Jameson, p. 16.
  61. ^ "Vincent D'Onofrio Taps 'Valarian's Dane DeHaan to Play Billy the Kid in Suretone Western". Deadline. July 19, 2017. Retrieved June 24, 2018.

Further reading Edit

  • DeMattos, Jack. "Gunfighters of the Real West: Pat Garrett." Real West, August 1982.
  • DeMattos, Jack. Garrett and Roosevelt. College Station, TX: Creative Publishing Company, 1988. ISBN 0-932702-42-2
  • Gardner, Mark Lee: To Hell on a Fast Horse: Billy the Kid, Pat Garrett and the Epic Chase to Justice in the Old West. New York: William Morrow, 2009. ISBN 978-0-06-136827-1
  • Garrett, Pat F. The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid, the Noted Desperado of the Southwest, Whose Deeds of Daring and Blood Made His Name a Terror in New Mexico, Arizona and Northern Mexico. Santa Fe: New Mexican Printing and Publishing Co., 1882. A facsimile edition was published by Time-Life in 1981 as one of their 31 volume "Classics of Old West" leather-bound series of books. ISBN 0-8094-3581-0
  • Hough, Emerson. The Story of the Outlaw. New York: Outing Publishers, 1907.
  • McCubbin, Robert G. "Pat Garrett at His Prime." NOLA Quarterly, Vol. XV, No. 2, April–June 1991.
  • McCubbin, Robert G. "The 100th Anniversary of Pat Garrett's Death." True West, January–February 2008.
  • Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1974. ISBN 0-8061-1067-8
  • Metz, Leon C. "My Search for Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid." True West, August 1983.
  • Metz, Leon C. "Researching the Conspiracy That Led to the Last Days of Pat Garrett." True West, September 1983.
  • O'Connor, Richard. Pat Garrett: A Biography of the Famous Marshal and the Killer of Billy the Kid. New York: Doubleday & Co., 1960.
  • Rickards, Colin. "Pat Garrett Tells 'How I Killed Billy the Kid.'" Real West, April 1971.
  • Shirley, Glenn. Shotgun for Hire: The Story of "Deacon" Jim Miller, Killer of Pat Garrett. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1970. ISBN 0-8061-0902-5
  • Weisner, Herman B. "Garrett's Death: Conspiracy or Double Cross?" True West, December 1979.

External links Edit

  • Works by or about Pat Garrett at Internet Archive
  • Amazon Kindle link to The Story of the Outlaw: A Study of the Western Desperado
  • Pat Garrett, Lawman Who Killed Billy the Kid, Visits Washington and Teddy Roosevelt
Police appointments
Preceded by
George Kimball
Sheriff of Lincoln County, New Mexico
1881–1882
Succeeded by
John William Poe
Preceded by
Numa Edward Reymond
Sheriff of Doña Ana County, New Mexico
1896–1900
Succeeded by
Jose R. Lucero
Civic offices
Preceded by
H. M. Dillon
U.S. Collector of Customs in El Paso, Texas
1902–1906
Succeeded by
A. L. Sharpe

garrett, patrick, floyd, jarvis, garrett, june, 1850, february, 1908, american, west, lawman, bartender, customs, agent, known, killing, billy, sheriff, lincoln, county, mexico, well, doña, county, mexico, garrett, 1903bornpatrick, floyd, jarvis, garrett, 1850. Patrick Floyd Jarvis Garrett June 5 1850 February 29 1908 was an American Old West lawman bartender and customs agent known for killing Billy the Kid He was the sheriff of Lincoln County New Mexico as well as Dona Ana County New Mexico Pat GarrettGarrett c 1903BornPatrick Floyd Jarvis Garrett 1850 06 05 June 5 1850Chambers County AlabamaDiedFebruary 29 1908 1908 02 29 aged 57 Las Cruces New MexicoCause of deathGunshot woundResting placeMasonic CemeteryLas Cruces New Mexico32 18 4 118 N 106 47 7 908 W 32 30114389 N 106 78553000 W 32 30114389 106 78553000 Gravesite of Pat Garrett Known forKilling William H Bonney Billy the Kid SpousesJuanita Martinez m 1879 died 1879 wbr Apolinaria Gutierrez m 1880 wbr Children8Signature Contents 1 Early years 1 1 Buffalo hunter 1 2 Family life 1 3 Pursuit of Billy the Kid 1 4 Account of Billy the Kid 1 5 Texas Ranger 2 Middle years 2 1 Irrigation investments and move to Texas 2 2 Disappearance of Albert Jennings Fountain 2 3 Final kill 2 4 Presidential appointment in El Paso 3 Late years 3 1 Financial problems 3 2 Last conflict and death 3 3 Identity of the murderer 3 4 Death site 3 5 Funeral and burial site 4 Portrayals 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly years EditPatrick Floyd Jarvis Garrett was born on June 5 1850 in Chambers County Alabama He was the second of five children born to John Lumpkin Garrett and his wife Elizabeth Ann Jarvis Garrett s four siblings were Margaret Elizabeth John and Alfred 1 Garrett was of English ancestry and his ancestors migrated to America from the English counties of Hertfordshire Northamptonshire Bedfordshire Lincolnshire and Buckinghamshire 2 When Pat was three years old his father purchased the John Greer plantation in Claiborne Parish Louisiana The Civil War however destroyed the Garrett family s finances Their mother died at the age of 37 on March 25 1867 when Garrett was 16 Then the following year on February 5 1868 his father died at age 45 The children were left with a plantation that was more than 30 000 in debt The children were taken in by relatives The 18 year old Garrett headed west from Louisiana on January 25 1869 1 9 3 28 Buffalo hunter Edit Garrett s whereabouts over the next seven years are obscure By 1876 he was in Texas hunting buffalo During this period Garrett killed his first man another buffalo hunter named Joe Briscoe Garrett surrendered to the authorities at Fort Griffin Texas but they declined to prosecute 1 29 31 When the buffalo hunting declined Garrett left Texas and rode to the New Mexico Territory 3 267n 293n When Garrett arrived at Fort Sumner New Mexico he found work as a bartender then as a cowboy for Pedro Menard Pete Maxwell Family life Edit Garrett s first wife was Juanita Martinez who died 15 days after their marriage 4 The reference Leon C Metz made about Juanita being the older sister of Pat s second wife Apolonia is unfounded Apolonia only had a sister by the name of Celsa Gutierrez 1 On January 14 1880 Garrett married Apolinaria Gutierrez 1 40 41 3 94 96 Between 1881 and 1905 Apolinaria Garrett gave birth to eight children Ida Dudley Elizabeth Annie Patrick Pauline Oscar and Jarvis Pursuit of Billy the Kid Edit nbsp Cover of Garrett s bookBilly the Kid William Henry Bonney Jr also known as William McCarty was wanted for murder in the aftermath of the Lincoln County War On November 2 1880 Garrett was elected sheriff of Lincoln County New Mexico having defeated the incumbent Sheriff George Kimball by a vote of 320 to 179 5 Although Garrett s term would not begin until January 1 1881 Sheriff Kimball appointed him a deputy sheriff for the remainder of Kimball s term Garrett also obtained a deputy U S Marshal s commission which allowed him to pursue the Kid across state lines Garrett and his posse stormed the Dedrick ranch at Bosque Grande on November 30 1880 They expected to find the Kid there but only succeeded in capturing John Joshua Webb who had been charged with murder along with an accused horse thief named George Davis 6 Garrett turned Webb and Davis over to the sheriff of San Miguel County a few days later and moved on to the settlement of Puerto de Luna There a local tough named Mariano Leiva picked a fight with Garrett and was shot in the shoulder 7 On December 19 1880 Billy the Kid Charlie Bowdre Tom Pickett Billy Wilson Dave Rudabaugh and Tom O Folliard rode into Fort Sumner Lying in wait were deputy Garrett and his posse Mistaking O Folliard for the Kid Garrett s men opened fire and killed O Folliard 8 Billy and the others escaped unharmed Three days later Garrett s posse cornered Billy and his companions at a spot called Stinking Springs They killed Bowdre and captured the others 9 On April 15 1881 Billy the Kid was sentenced to hang by Judge Warren Bristol but escaped thirteen days later killing two deputies 10 On July 14 1881 Garrett visited Fort Sumner to question a friend of the Kid s about his whereabouts and learned he was staying with a mutual friend Pedro Menard Pete Maxwell Around midnight Garrett went to Maxwell s house The Kid was asleep in another part of the house but woke up in the middle of the night and entered Maxwell s bedroom where Garrett was standing in the shadows The Kid did not recognize the man standing in the dark He asked him repeatedly Quien es Who is it and Garrett replied by shooting at him twice 11 The first shot hit the Kid in the chest just above the heart while the second missed Garrett s account leaves it unclear whether Billy was killed instantly or took some time to die 12 Account of Billy the Kid Edit He coauthored The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid with Ash Upson 13 and for decades his book was deemed authoritative 14 Following Billy the Kid s death writers quickly went to work producing books and articles that made a folk hero out of Billy the Kid while making Garrett seem like an assassin Although filled with many errors of fact The Authentic Life served afterward as the main source for most books written about the Kid until the 1960s 15 16 17 A failure when originally released an original copy of the Pat Garrett Ash Upson book became a rare commodity in 1969 the original 1882 edition of the Garrett Upson book was described by Ramon F Adams as being exceedingly rare 18 Twentieth century editions of Garrett s Authentic Life of Billy the Kid with alterations to the original title appeared in 1927 19 1946 20 and 1964 21 nbsp Portrait of Pat Garrett c 1907 from The Story of the Outlaws 22 Texas Ranger Edit Garrett did not seek re election as sheriff of Lincoln County in 1882 He moved to Texas where he ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the state senate Garrett became a captain with the Texas Rangers for less than a month then returned to Roswell New Mexico 23 Middle years EditIrrigation investments and move to Texas Edit Garrett discovered a large reservoir of artesian water in the Roswell region and went into partnership with two men to organize the Pecos Valley Irrigation and Investment Company on July 18 1885 24 Garrett kept his irrigation schemes alive for several years and on January 15 1887 he purchased a one third interest in the Texas Irrigation Ditch Company but the partners got rid of him On August 15 1887 he formed a partnership with William L Holloman in the Holloman and Garrett Ditch Company 25 All of Garrett s forays into the irrigation field however resulted in failure citation needed By 1892 Garrett had moved his large family to Uvalde Texas where he became a close friend of John Nance Garner 1868 1967 a future vice president of the United States 26 Garrett might have lived out the remainder of his life in Uvalde had it not been for a headline making event back in New Mexico Disappearance of Albert Jennings Fountain Edit On January 31 1896 Colonel Albert Jennings Fountain and his eight year old son Henry disappeared at the edge of the White Sands area of southern New Mexico Neither of the Fountains were ever seen again The mystery was never officially solved even with the efforts of Apache scouts the Pinkertons and an all out push by the Republican Party 27 In April 1896 Garrett was appointed sheriff of Dona Ana County and two years later had gathered sufficient evidence to make arrests asking a judge in Las Cruces for warrants to arrest Oliver M Lee William McNew Bill Carr and James Gililland Within hours he had arrested McNew and Carr 28 During the early morning hours of July 12 1898 Garrett and his posse confronted Oliver M Lee and James Gililland at a spot called Wildy Well near Orogrande New Mexico Garrett had hoped to capture the fugitives while they were sleeping but Lee and Gililland expected trouble and took their bedrolls up to the roof of the bunkhouse to avoid being taken by surprise One of Garrett s deputies named Kearney heard footsteps on the roof scaled a ladder and was mortally wounded by the fugitives A stray shot nicked Garrett Due to his concern for his dying deputy Garrett arranged a truce with the fugitives and withdrew while Kearney was lifted into a wagon Kearney however died on the road to Las Cruces and Lee and Gililland remained at large for another eight months before they finally surrendered to Sheriff George Curry 29 They were found not guilty in the Fountain killings and the indictments for killing the deputy were also dismissed 30 Final kill Edit Garrett killed his last offender in 1899 a fugitive named Norman Newman who was wanted for murder in Greer County Oklahoma Newman was hiding out at the San Augustin Ranch in New Mexico Sheriff George Blalock of Greer County went to New Mexico and asked Garrett for his assistance The lawmen and Jose Espalin one of Garrett s deputies rode to the ranch and on October 7 1899 Newman was killed in a gunfight 31 Presidential appointment in El Paso Edit On December 16 1901 President Theodore Roosevelt nominated Garrett to the post of collector of customs in El Paso 32 He also became one of President Roosevelt s three White House Gunfighters Bat Masterson and Ben Daniels being the others 33 Despite public outcry over his appointment Garrett was confirmed by the U S Senate on January 2 1902 34 Garrett s tenure as El Paso s collector of customs was stormy from the start On May 8 1903 he got into a public fistfight with an employee named George Gaither The following morning both Garrett and Gaither paid five dollar fines for disturbing the peace 35 Continued complaints about Garrett s alleged incompetence were sent to Washington 36 Through it all President Roosevelt stood by Garrett As a show of his support Roosevelt invited Garrett to attend a Rough Riders reunion being held in San Antonio during April 1905 Since Garrett had not been a member of that regiment Roosevelt s invitation was taken as a snub at those critics who wanted Garrett replaced from his post Garrett brought a guest of his own to the event named Tom Powers Garrett introduced Powers to the president as a prominent Texas cattleman Garrett and Powers posed for two photographs with Roosevelt first standing with him in a group and later seated with Roosevelt at dinner 37 Garrett s enemies obtained copies of the photos and sent them to Roosevelt informing the president that instead of being the cattleman that Garrett claimed Powers was in fact the owner of a notorious dive in El Paso called the Coney Island Saloon That was the final straw for Roosevelt who replaced Garrett with a new collector of customs on January 2 1906 38 Late years EditFinancial problems Edit Following his dismissal Garrett returned with his family to New Mexico Garrett was in deep financial difficulty His ranch had been heavily mortgaged and when he was unable to make payments the county auctioned off all of Garrett s personal possessions to satisfy judgments against him The total from the auction came to 650 39 President Roosevelt had appointed Pat s friend George Curry as the territorial governor of New Mexico Garrett met with Curry who promised him the position of superintendent of the territorial prison at Santa Fe once he was inaugurated Since Curry s inauguration was still months away the destitute Garrett left his family in New Mexico and returned to El Paso where he found employment with the real estate firm of H M Maple and Company During this period Garrett moved in with a woman known as Mrs Brown who was described as an El Paso prostitute 40 When Governor elect Curry learned of his involvement with Brown the promised appointment of prison superintendent was withdrawn 41 Last conflict and death Edit nbsp Memorial marking spot where Garrett was killedDudley Poe Garrett Pat s son had signed a five year lease for his Bear Canyon Ranch with Jesse Wayne Brazel 42 Garrett and his son objected when Brazel began bringing in large herds of goats which were anathema to cattlemen like Garrett Garrett tried to break the lease when he learned that the money for Brazel s operation had been put up by his neighbor W W Bill Cox He was further angered when he learned that Archie Prentice Print Rhode was Brazel s partner in the huge goat herd 43 When Brazel refused the matter went to court At this point James B Miller met with Garrett to try to solve the problem Miller met with Brazel who agreed to cancel his lease with Garrett provided a buyer could be found for his herd of 1 200 goats Carl Adamson who was related to Miller by marriage agreed to buy the 1 200 goats Just when the matter seemed resolved Brazel claimed that he had miscounted his goat herd claiming there were actually 1 800 rather than his previous estimate of 1 200 Adamson refused to buy that many goats but agreed to meet with Garrett and Brazel to see if they could reach some sort of agreement Garrett and Carl Adamson rode together heading from Las Cruces New Mexico in Adamson s wagon Brazel appeared on horseback along the way Garrett was shot and killed but exactly by whom remains the subject of controversy Brazel and Adamson left the body by the side of the road and returned to Las Cruces where Brazel surrendered to Deputy Sheriff Felipe Lucero More than thirty years later Lucero claimed that Brazel exclaimed Lock me up I ve just killed Pat Garrett Brazel then pointed to Adamson and said He saw the whole thing and knows that I shot in self defense 44 Lucero incarcerated Brazel summoned a coroner s jury and rode to Garrett s death site Brazel s trial for Garrett s murder concluded on May 4 1909 45 Brazel was represented at his trial by attorney and future Secretary of the Interior Albert Bacon Fall The only eyewitness to Garrett s murder Adamson never appeared at the trial which lasted only one day and ended with an acquittal 46 47 48 Identity of the murderer Edit The coroner s report on Garrett s death states that Brazel shot Garrett 49 Brazel reportedly confessed but was acquitted at trial Four other suspects have been proposed Adamson Cox Rhode and Miller In a book published in 1970 Glenn Shirley gave his reasons for naming Miller as the killer of Pat Garrett 50 Leon C Metz in his 1974 biography of Garrett related the claim of W T Moyers that his investigations led him to believe that W W Cox himself ambushed and killed Garrett 51 but also wrote that t he Garrett family believes that Carl Adamson pulled the trigger 52 In his 2010 book on Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett Mark Lee Gardner suggests that Archie Prentice Print Rhode killed Garrett 53 Death site Edit nbsp Garrett family burial siteThe site of Garrett s death is now commemorated by a historical marker south of U S Route 70 between Las Cruces New Mexico and the San Augustin Pass 54 55 The historical marker is located about 1 2 miles from where Garrett was murdered In 1940 his son Jarvis Garrett marked the spot with a monument consisting of concrete laid around a stone with a cross carved in it The cross is believed to be the work of Garrett s mother Scratched in the concrete is P Garrett and the date of his killing The marker is located in the desert 56 In 2020 the city of Las Cruces revealed plans for a development that would destroy the site An organization called Friends of Pat Garrett has been formed to ensure that the city preserves the site and marker 57 58 Funeral and burial site Edit At six feet five inches 59 a Garrett s body was too tall for any finished coffins available so a special one had to be shipped in from El Paso His funeral service was held March 5 1908 and he was laid to rest next to his daughter Ida who had died in 1896 at the age of fifteen Garrett s grave and the graves of his descendants are in the Masonic Cemetery Las Cruces 58 Portrayals EditGarrett has been a character in many films and television shows and has been portrayed by Wallace Beery in Billy the Kid 1930 Wade Boteler in Billy the Kid Returns 1938 Brian Donlevy in Billy the Kid 1941 Thomas Mitchell in The Outlaw 1943 Charles Bickford in Four Faces West 1948 Monte Hale in Outcasts of the Trail 1949 Robert Lowery in I Shot Billy the Kid 1950 Frank Wilcox in The Kid from Texas 1950 Scott Douglas in the NBC TV series Omnibus 1952 1 episode James Griffith in The Law vs Billy the Kid 1954 Richard Travis in the syndicated half hour TV series Stories of the Century 1954 Keith Richards in the syndicated half hour TV series Buffalo Bill Jr 1955 1 episode Bob Duncan in The Parson and the Outlaw 1957 John Dehner in The Left Handed Gun 1958 George Montgomery in Badman s Country 1958 Rhodes Reason in the ABC TV series Bronco 1958 1 episode Walter Sande in the half hour CBS series Wanted Dead or Alive 1958 episode 26 The Eager Man Wayne Heffley in the half hour ABC TV series Colt 45 1959 episode entitled Amnesty Barry Sullivan 1960 in the half hour NBC TV series The Tall Man co starring Clu Gulager as Billy the Kid Rod Cameron in Le pistole non discutono it 1964 Allen Case in the ABC series The Time Tunnel 1966 1 episode Fausto Tozzi in El hombre que mato a Billy el Nino 1967 Glenn Corbett in Chisum 1970 Rod Cameron in The Last Movie 1971 James Coburn in Pat Garrett amp Billy the Kid 1973 Patrick Wayne in Young Guns 1988 Duncan Regehr in Gore Vidal s Billy the Kid 1989 William Petersen in Young Guns II 1990 Joe Zimmerman in the TV documentary series Unsolved History 2002 1 episode and in the Discovery Channel s cable documentary Discovery Quest Billy the Kid Unmasked 2004 Michael Pare in Bloodrayne 2 Deliverance 2007 Bruce Greenwood in I m Not There 2007 Michael A Martinez in The Scarlet Worm 2011 Christopher Marrone in Abraham Lincoln vs Zombies 2012 Ric Maddox in AMC s The American West 2016 Ethan Hawke in The Kid 2019 61 See also EditList of unsolved murdersNotes Edit Because of his height during his early days in New Mexico local Spanish speakers nicknamed Garrett Juan Largo Long John 60 References Edit a b c d e Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman Violence in Lincoln County 1869 1881 A New Mexico Item by William Aloysius Keleher 1982 p 3 a b c Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse 1879 1979 High Plains History East Century New Mexico Book page 41 Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse pp 101 102 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 62 64 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse p 111 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 64 65 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse pp 115 116 279n Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 72 75 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 76 81 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse pp 128 133 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 93 95 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse pp 139 148 The Death Of Billy The Kid 1881 EyeWitness to History 2001 The Death Of Billy The Kid 1881 Eyewitness to History Ibis Communications Retrieved February 18 2020 LeMay John and Stahl Robert J 2020 The Man Who Invented Billy the Kid The Authentic Life of Ash Upson Roswell NM Bicep Books pp 127 133 ISBN 978 1 953221 91 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jon Tuska 1994 Billy the Kid his life and legend Greenwood Press p 119 ISBN 9780313285899 Frederick Nolan October 20 2014 The Billy the Kid Reader University of Oklahoma Press p 358 ISBN 978 0 8061 8254 4 Stephen Tatum January 1 1982 Inventing Billy the Kid Visions of the Outlaw in America 1881 1981 University of New Mexico Press pp 123 124 ISBN 978 0 8263 0610 4 Tuska 1994 p 237 Adams Ramon F Six Guns and Saddle Leather A Bibliography of Books and Pamphlets on Western Outlaws and Gunman Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 1969 p 244 Pat F Garrett s Authentic Life of Billy the Kid edited by Maurice Garland Fulton New York The Macmillan Co 1927 Authentic Life of Billy the Kid by Pat F Garrett Greatest Sheriff of the Old Southwest Foreword by John M Scanland and Eye Witness Reports Edited by J Brussel New York Atomic Books Inc 1946 Pat F Garrett The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid With a Biographical Foreword by Jarvis P Garrett Albuquerque NM horn and Wallace Publishers Inc 1964 Hough Emerson 1907 The Story of the Outlaw A Study of the Western Desperado New York The Outing Publication Company p 198 Metz Leon C November 12 2019 Garrett Patrick Floyd Jarvis Texas State Historical Association Retrieved June 27 2020 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 152 154 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman p 151 Metz Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman p 160 Recko Corey Murder on the White Sands The Disappearance of Albert and Henry Fountain University of North Texas Press 2007 ISBN missing Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 203 204 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse p 202 Metz Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 216 218 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 227 232 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse p 212 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 236 37 298 301 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse pp 213 215 El Paso Herald December 16 1901 DeMattos Jack Garrett and Roosevelt College Station TX Creative Publishing Company 1988 ISBN 0 932702 42 2 El Paso Herald January 2 1902 El Paso Evening News May 8 1903 DeMattos Jack Garrett and Roosevelt pp 79 88 ISBN missing Reproductions of these two photos can be viewed in Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman p 196 ISBN missing and DeMattos Jack Garrett and Roosevelt pp 72 73 ISBN missing DeMattos Garrett and Roosevelt pp 109 120 ISBN missing DeMattos Garrett and Roosevelt p 137 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman p 284 DeMattos Jack Garrett and Roosevelt p 141 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman pp 285 286 and Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse p 229 Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse p 229 The Brazel quote as related by Lucero is from The New Mexico Sentinel Santa Fe April 23 1939 El Paso Times May 5 1909 Metz Leon C p 295 Long Trish 1908 Pat Garrett killed Dies with boots on El Paso Times Retrieved February 28 2020 Boardman Mark January 6 2014 The Assassination of Pat Garrett True West Magazine Retrieved January 2 2023 Kolb Joseph J May 23 2017 How did Billy the Kid s killer die New doc may put to rest one of Wild West s biggest mysteries Foxnews Retrieved May 23 2017 Shirley Glenn Shotgun For Hire The Story of Deacon Jim Miller Killer of Pat Garrett pp 74 89 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman p 301 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman p 292 Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse pp 241 244 New Mexico Historic Preservation Division Dept of Cultural Affairs Pat Garrett Murder Site Historical Marker The Historical Marker Database Pat Garrett Murder Site Note Death marker coordinates 32 366203 106 717152 Schurtz Christopher Friends of Pat Garrett a b Historians hope to preserve Pat Garrett murder site Las Cruces Sun News December 11 2010 permanent dead link Jameson W C 2016 Pat Garrett The Man Behind the Badge Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 12 ISBN 978 1 67036 104 2 via Google Books Jameson p 16 Vincent D Onofrio Taps Valarian s Dane DeHaan to Play Billy the Kid in Suretone Western Deadline July 19 2017 Retrieved June 24 2018 Further reading EditDeMattos Jack Gunfighters of the Real West Pat Garrett Real West August 1982 DeMattos Jack Garrett and Roosevelt College Station TX Creative Publishing Company 1988 ISBN 0 932702 42 2 Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse Billy the Kid Pat Garrett and the Epic Chase to Justice in the Old West New York William Morrow 2009 ISBN 978 0 06 136827 1 Garrett Pat F The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid the Noted Desperado of the Southwest Whose Deeds of Daring and Blood Made His Name a Terror in New Mexico Arizona and Northern Mexico Santa Fe New Mexican Printing and Publishing Co 1882 A facsimile edition was published by Time Life in 1981 as one of their 31 volume Classics of Old West leather bound series of books ISBN 0 8094 3581 0 Hough Emerson The Story of the Outlaw New York Outing Publishers 1907 McCubbin Robert G Pat Garrett at His Prime NOLA Quarterly Vol XV No 2 April June 1991 McCubbin Robert G The 100th Anniversary of Pat Garrett s Death True West January February 2008 Metz Leon C Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 1974 ISBN 0 8061 1067 8 Metz Leon C My Search for Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid True West August 1983 Metz Leon C Researching the Conspiracy That Led to the Last Days of Pat Garrett True West September 1983 O Connor Richard Pat Garrett A Biography of the Famous Marshal and the Killer of Billy the Kid New York Doubleday amp Co 1960 Rickards Colin Pat Garrett Tells How I Killed Billy the Kid Real West April 1971 Shirley Glenn Shotgun for Hire The Story of Deacon Jim Miller Killer of Pat Garrett Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1970 ISBN 0 8061 0902 5 Weisner Herman B Garrett s Death Conspiracy or Double Cross True West December 1979 External links EditWorks by or about Pat Garrett at Internet Archive Amazon Kindle link to The Story of the Outlaw A Study of the Western Desperado Pat Garrett Lawman Who Killed Billy the Kid Visits Washington and Teddy RooseveltPolice appointmentsPreceded byGeorge Kimball Sheriff of Lincoln County New Mexico1881 1882 Succeeded byJohn William PoePreceded byNuma Edward Reymond Sheriff of Dona Ana County New Mexico1896 1900 Succeeded byJose R LuceroCivic officesPreceded byH M Dillon U S Collector of Customs in El Paso Texas1902 1906 Succeeded byA L Sharpe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pat Garrett amp oldid 1180994361, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.