fbpx
Wikipedia

Billy the Kid

Henry McCarty (September 17 or November 23, 1859 – July 14, 1881), alias William H. Bonney, better known as Billy the Kid, was an American outlaw and gunfighter of the Old West who is alleged to have killed 21 men before he was shot and killed at the age of 21.[2][3] He is also known for his involvement in New Mexico's Lincoln County War, during which he allegedly committed three murders.

Billy the Kid
Portrait attributed to Ben Wittick, c. 1880
Born
Henry McCarty[1]

September 17 or (1859-11-23)November 23, 1859
New York City, U.S.
DiedJuly 14, 1881(1881-07-14) (aged 21)
Cause of deathGunshot wound
Resting placeOld Fort Sumner Cemetery
34°24′13″N 104°11′37″W / 34.40361°N 104.19361°W / 34.40361; -104.19361 (Billy the Kid's Gravesite)
Other names
  • William H. Bonney
  • Henry Antrim
  • Kid Antrim
Occupations

McCarty was orphaned at the age of 15. His first arrest was for stealing food at the age of 16 in 1875. Ten days later, he robbed a Chinese laundry and was arrested again but escaped shortly afterwards. He fled from New Mexico Territory into neighboring Arizona Territory, making himself both an outlaw and a federal fugitive. In 1877, he began to call himself "William H. Bonney".[4]

After killing a blacksmith during an altercation in August 1877, Bonney became a wanted man in Arizona and returned to New Mexico, where he joined a group of cattle rustlers. He became well known in the region when he joined the Regulators and took part in the Lincoln County War of 1878. He and two other Regulators were later charged with killing three men, including Lincoln County Sheriff William J. Brady and one of his deputies.

Bonney's notoriety grew in December 1880 when the Las Vegas Gazette, in Las Vegas, New Mexico, and The Sun, in New York City, carried stories about his crimes.[5] Sheriff Pat Garrett captured Bonney later that month. In April 1881, Bonney was tried for and convicted of Brady's murder, and was sentenced to hang in May of that year. He escaped from jail on April 28, killing two sheriff's deputies in the process, and evaded capture for more than two months. Garrett shot and killed Bonney, by then aged 21, in Fort Sumner on July 14, 1881.

During the decades following his death, legends grew that Bonney had survived, and a number of men claimed to be him.[6] Billy the Kid remains one of the most notorious figures from the era, whose life and likeness have been frequently dramatized in Western popular culture. He has been a feature of more than 50 movies and several television series.

Early life

Henry McCarty was born to parents of Irish Catholic ancestry,[7] Catherine (née Devine) and Patrick McCarty, in New York City.[8] While his birth year has been confirmed as 1859, the exact date of his birth has been disputed as either September 17 or November 23 of that year. According to Saint Peter's Church in Manhattan, he was baptized Patrick Henry McCarthy there on September 28, 1859.[9][10][11][failed verification][a][13][14][15] Census records indicate that his younger brother Joseph McCarty was born in 1863.[16]

Following the death of her husband, Catherine McCarty and her sons moved to Indianapolis, Indiana, where she met William Henry Harrison Antrim. The McCarty family moved with Antrim to Wichita, Kansas in 1870.[17] After moving again a few years later, Catherine married Antrim on March 1, 1873, at the First Presbyterian Church in Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory, and the McCarty boys served as witnesses.[18][19] Shortly afterward, the family moved from Santa Fe to Silver City, New Mexico and Joseph adopted Antrim's surname.[16] Shortly before McCarty's mother died of tuberculosis on September 16, 1874,[20] William Antrim abandoned the McCarty boys, leaving them orphans.

First crimes

 
Henry Hooker, one-time employer of Billy the Kid, at his Sierra Bonita Ranch in southeast Arizona

McCarty was 14 years old when his mother died. Sarah Brown, the owner of a boarding house, gave him room and board in exchange for work. On September 16, 1875, McCarty was caught stealing food.[21][22] Ten days later, McCarty and George Schaefer robbed a Chinese laundry, stealing clothing and two pistols. McCarty was charged with theft and was jailed. He escaped two days later and became a fugitive,[21] as reported in the Silver City Herald the next day, the first story published about him. McCarty located his stepfather and stayed with him until Antrim threw him out; McCarty stole clothing and guns from him. It was the last time the two saw each other.[23]

After leaving Antrim, McCarty traveled to southeastern Arizona Territory, where he worked as a ranch hand and gambled his wages in nearby gaming houses.[24] In 1876, he was hired as a ranch hand by well-known rancher Henry Hooker.[25][26] During this time, McCarty became acquainted with John R. Mackie, a Scottish-born criminal and former U.S. Cavalry private who, following his discharge, remained near the U.S. Army post at Camp Grant in Arizona. The two men soon began stealing horses from local soldiers.[27][28] McCarty became known as "Kid Antrim" because of his youth, slight build, clean-shaven appearance, and personality.[29][30]

At some point in 1877, McCarty began to refer to himself by the name "William H. Bonney".[4] On August 17, 1877, Bonney was at a saloon in the village of Bonita when he got into an argument with Francis P. "Windy" Cahill, a blacksmith who reportedly had bullied him and on more than one occasion called him a "pimp". Bonney in turn called Cahill a "son of a bitch", whereupon Cahill threw Bonney to the floor and the two struggled for Bonney's revolver. Bonney shot and mortally wounded Cahill. A witness said, "[Billy] had no choice; he had to use his equalizer." Cahill died the following day.[31][32] Bonney fled but returned a few days later and was apprehended by Miles Wood, the local justice of the peace. He was detained and held in the Camp Grant guardhouse but escaped before law enforcement could arrive.[33]

Bonney stole a horse and fled Arizona Territory for New Mexico Territory,[34] but Apaches took the horse from him, leaving him to walk many miles to the nearest settlement. At Fort Stanton,[35] starving and near death, he went to the home of friend and Seven Rivers Warriors gang member John Jones, whose mother Barbara nursed him back to health.[36][4] After regaining his health, Bonney went to Apache Tejo, a former army post, where he joined a band of rustlers who raided herds owned by cattle magnate John Chisum in Lincoln County. After he was spotted in Silver City, his involvement with the gang was mentioned in a local newspaper.[37]

Lincoln County War

Prelude

 
John Henry Tunstall, 1872

After returning to New Mexico, Bonney worked as a cowboy for English businessman and rancher John Henry Tunstall (1853–1878), near the Rio Felix, a tributary of the Pecos River, in Lincoln County (now in Chaves County). Tunstall and his business partner and lawyer Alexander McSween were opponents of an alliance formed by Irish-American businessmen Lawrence Murphy, James Dolan, and John Riley. The three men had wielded an economic and political hold over Lincoln County since the early 1870s, due in part to their ownership of a beef contract with nearby Fort Stanton and a well-patronized dry goods store in the town of Lincoln.

By February 1878, McSween owed $8,000 to Dolan, who obtained a court order and asked Lincoln County Sheriff William J. Brady to attach nearly $40,000 worth of Tunstall's property and livestock. Tunstall put Bonney in charge of nine prime horses and told him to relocate them to his ranch for safekeeping. Meanwhile, Sheriff Brady assembled a large posse to seize Tunstall's cattle.[38][39]

On February 18, 1878, Tunstall learned of the posse's presence on his land and rode out to intervene. During the encounter, one member of the posse shot Tunstall in the chest, knocking him off his horse. Another posse member took Tunstall's gun and killed him with a shot to the back of his head.[39][40] Tunstall's murder ignited the conflict between the two factions that became known as the Lincoln County War.[39][41]

Build-up

 
Dick Brewer, c. 1875

After Tunstall was killed, Bonney and Dick Brewer swore affidavits against Brady and those in his posse, and obtained murder warrants from Lincoln County justice of the peace John B. Wilson.[42] On February 20, 1878, while attempting to arrest Brady, the sheriff and his deputies found and arrested Bonney and two other men riding with him.[43] Deputy U.S. Marshal Robert Widenmann, a friend of Bonney, and a detachment of soldiers captured Sheriff Brady's jail guards, put them behind bars, and released Bonney and Brewer.[44]

Bonney then joined the Lincoln County Regulators; on March 9 they captured Frank Baker and William Morton, both of whom were accused of killing Tunstall. Baker and Morton were killed while allegedly trying to escape.[45]

On April 1, the Regulators ambushed Sheriff Brady and his deputies; Bonney was wounded in the thigh during the battle. Brady and Deputy Sheriff George W. Hindman were killed.[46] On the morning of April 4, 1878, Buckshot Roberts and Dick Brewer were killed during a shootout at Blazer's Mill.[47] Warrants were issued for several participants on both sides, and Bonney and two others were charged with killing Brady, Hindman and Roberts.[48]

Battle of Lincoln (1878)

On the night of Sunday, July 14, McSween and the Regulators—now a group of fifty or sixty men—went to Lincoln and stationed themselves in the town among several buildings.[49] At the McSween residence were Bonney, Florencio Chavez, Jose Chavez y Chavez, Jim French, Harvey Morris, Tom O'Folliard, and Yginio Salazar, among others. Another group led by Marin Chavez and Doc Scurlock positioned themselves on the roof of a saloon. Henry Newton Brown, Dick Smith, and George Coe defended a nearby adobe bunkhouse.[50][51]

On Tuesday, July 16, newly appointed sheriff George Peppin sent sharpshooters to kill the McSween defenders at the saloon. Peppin's men retreated when one of the snipers, Charles Crawford, was killed by Fernando Herrera. Peppin then sent a request for assistance to Colonel Nathan Dudley, commandant of nearby Fort Stanton. In a reply to Peppin, Dudley refused to intervene but later arrived in Lincoln with troops, turning the battle in favor of the Murphy-Dolan faction.[52][53]

A gunfight broke out on Friday, July 19. McSween's supporters gathered inside his house; when Buck Powell and Deputy Sheriff Jack Long set fire to the building, the occupants began shooting. Bonney and the other men fled the building when all rooms but one were burning. During the confusion, McSween was shot and killed by Robert W. Beckwith, who was then shot and killed by Bonney.[54][55]

Outlaw

 
New Mexico Territorial Governor Lew Wallace in 1893

Bonney and three other survivors of the Battle of Lincoln were near the Mescalero Indian Agency when the agency bookkeeper, Morris Bernstein, was murdered on August 5, 1878. All four were indicted for the murder, despite conflicting evidence that Bernstein had been killed by Constable Atanacio Martinez. All of the indictments, except Bonney's, were later quashed.[56][57]

On October 5, 1878, U.S. Marshal John Sherman informed newly appointed Territorial Governor and former Union Army general Lew Wallace that he held warrants for several men, including "William H. Antrim, alias Kid, alias Bonny [sic]" but was unable to execute them "owing to the disturbed condition of affairs in that county, resulting from the acts of a desperate class of men".[58] Wallace issued an amnesty proclamation on November 13, 1878, which pardoned anyone involved in the Lincoln County War since Tunstall's murder. It specifically excluded persons who had been convicted of or indicted for a crime, and therefore excluded Bonney.[59][60]

On February 18, 1879, Bonney and friend Tom O'Folliard were in Lincoln and watched as attorney Huston Chapman was shot and his corpse set on fire. According to eyewitnesses, the pair were innocent bystanders forced at gunpoint by Jesse Evans to witness the murder.[61][62] Bonney wrote to Governor Wallace on March 13, 1879, with an offer to provide information on the Chapman murder in exchange for amnesty. On March 15, Governor Wallace replied, agreeing to a secret meeting to discuss the situation. He met with Wallace in Lincoln on March 17, 1879. During the meeting and in subsequent correspondence, Wallace promised Bonney protection from his enemies and clemency if he would offer his testimony to a grand jury.[b]

On March 20, Wallace wrote to Bonney, "to remove all suspicion of understanding, I think it better to put the arresting party in charge of Sheriff Kimbrell [sic] who shall be instructed to see that no violence is used."[c] Bonney responded on the same day, agreeing to testify and confirming Wallace's proposal for his arrest and detention in a local jail to assure his safety.[65][66] On March 21, he let himself be captured by a posse led by Sheriff George Kimball of Lincoln County. As agreed, Bonney provided a statement about Chapman's murder and testified in court.[67] However, after his testimony, the local district attorney refused to set him free.[68][69] Still in custody several weeks later, Bonney began to suspect Wallace had used subterfuge and would never grant him amnesty. He escaped from the Lincoln County jail on June 17, 1879.[70]

 
Tom O'Folliard, c. 1875

Bonney avoided further violence until January 10, 1880, when he shot and killed Joe Grant, a newcomer to the area, at Hargrove's Saloon in Fort Sumner, New Mexico.[71] The Santa Fe Weekly New Mexican reported, "Billy Bonney, more extensively known as 'the Kid', shot and killed Joe Grant. The origin of the difficulty was not learned."[72] According to other contemporary sources, Bonney had been warned Grant intended to kill him. He walked up to Grant, told him he admired his revolver, and asked to examine it. Grant handed it over. Before returning the pistol, which he noticed contained only three cartridges, Bonney positioned the cylinder so the next hammer fall would land on an empty chamber. Grant suddenly pointed his pistol at Bonney's face and pulled the trigger. When it failed to fire, he drew his own weapon and shot Grant in the head. A reporter for the Las Vegas Optic quoted Bonney as saying the encounter "was a game of two and I got there first".[73][74]

In 1880, Bonney formed a friendship with a rancher named Jim Greathouse, who later introduced him to Dave Rudabaugh. On November 29, 1880, Bonney, Rudabaugh, and Billy Wilson ran from a posse led by sheriff's deputy James Carlysle. Cornered at Greathouse's ranch, he told the posse they were holding Greathouse as a hostage. Carlysle offered to exchange places with Greathouse, and Bonney accepted the offer. Carlysle later attempted to escape by jumping through a window but he was shot three times and killed.[75] The shootout ended in a standoff; the posse withdrew and Bonney, Rudabaugh, and Wilson rode away.[76][77]

A few weeks after the Greathouse incident, Bonney, Rudabaugh, Wilson, O'Folliard, Charlie Bowdre, and Tom Pickett rode into Fort Sumner. Unbeknownst to Bonney and his companions, a posse led by Pat Garrett was waiting for them. The posse opened fire, killing O'Folliard; the rest of the outlaws escaped unharmed.[78][79]

Capture and escape

 
Sheriff Pat Garrett, c. 1903

On December 13, 1880, Governor Wallace posted a $500 bounty for Bonney's capture.[80] Pat Garrett continued his search for Bonney; on December 23, following the siege in which Bowdre was killed, Garrett and his posse captured Bonney along with Pickett, Rudabaugh, and Wilson at Stinking Springs. The prisoners, including Bonney, were shackled and taken to Fort Sumner, then later to Las Vegas, New Mexico. When they arrived on December 26, they were met by crowds of curious onlookers.

The following day, an armed mob gathered at the train depot before the prisoners, who were already on board the train with Garrett, departed for Santa Fe.[81] Deputy Sheriff Romero, backed by the angry group of men, demanded custody of Dave Rudabaugh, who during an unsuccessful escape attempt on April 5, 1880 shot and killed deputy Antonio Lino Valdez in the process.[82] Garrett refused to surrender the prisoner, and a tense confrontation ensued until he agreed to let the sheriff and two other men accompany the party to Santa Fe, where they would petition the governor to release Rudabaugh to them.[83] In a later interview with a reporter, Bonney said he was unafraid during the incident, saying, "if I only had my Winchester I'd lick the whole crowd."[84][85] The Las Vegas Gazette ran a story from a jailhouse interview following Bonney's capture; when the reporter said Bonney appeared relaxed, he replied, "What's the use of looking on the gloomy side of everything? The laugh's on me this time."[86] During his short career as an outlaw, Bonney was the subject of numerous U.S. newspaper articles, some as far away as New York.[87]

After arriving in Santa Fe, Bonney, seeking clemency, sent Governor Wallace four letters over the next three months. Wallace refused to intervene,[88] and he went to trial in April 1881 in Mesilla, New Mexico.[89] Following two days of testimony, Bonney was found guilty of Sheriff Brady's murder; it was the only conviction secured against any of the combatants in the Lincoln County War. On April 13, Judge Warren Bristol sentenced him to hang, with his execution scheduled for May 13, 1881.[89] According to legend, upon sentencing, the judge told Bonney he was going to hang until he was "dead, dead, dead"; his response was, "you can go to hell, hell, hell."[90] According to the historical record, he did not speak after the reading of his sentence.[91]

 
Courthouse and jail, Lincoln, New Mexico

Following his sentencing, Bonney was moved to Lincoln, where he was held under guard on the top floor of the town courthouse. On the evening of April 28, 1881, while Garrett was in White Oaks collecting taxes, Deputy Bob Olinger took five other prisoners across the street for a meal, leaving James Bell,[92] another deputy, alone with Bonney at the jail. He asked to be taken outside to use the outhouse behind the courthouse; on their return to the jail, Bonney—who was walking ahead of Bell up the stairs to his cell—hid around a blind corner, slipped out of his handcuffs, and beat Bell with the loose end of the cuffs. During the ensuing scuffle, Bonney grabbed Bell's revolver and fatally shot him in the back as Bell tried to get away.[93]

Bonney, with his legs still shackled, broke into Garrett's office and took a loaded shotgun left behind by Olinger. He waited at the upstairs window for Olinger to respond to the gunshot that killed Bell and called out to him, "Look up, old boy, and see what you get." When Olinger looked up, Bonney shot and killed him.[93][94] [95] After about an hour, Bonney freed himself from the leg irons with an axe.[96] He obtained a horse and rode out of town; according to some stories he was singing as he left Lincoln.[94]

Recapture and death

While Bonney was on the run, Governor Wallace placed a new $500 bounty on the fugitive's head.[97][98][99] Almost three months after his escape, Garrett, responding to rumors that Bonney was in the vicinity of Fort Sumner, left Lincoln with two deputies on July 14, 1881, to question resident Pete Maxwell, a friend of Bonney's.[100] Maxwell, son of land baron Lucien Maxwell, spoke with Garrett the same day for several hours. Around midnight, the pair sat in Maxwell's darkened bedroom when Bonney unexpectedly entered.[101]

Accounts vary as to the course of events. According to the canonical version, as he entered the room, Bonney failed to recognize Garrett due to the poor lighting. Drawing his revolver and backing away, Bonney asked "¿Quién es? ¿Quién es?" (Spanish for "Who is it? Who is it?").[102] Recognizing Bonney's voice, Garrett drew his revolver and fired twice.[103] The first bullet struck Bonney in the chest just above his heart, while the second missed. Garrett's account leaves it unclear whether Bonney was killed instantly or took some time to die.[101][104]

A few hours after the shooting, a local justice of the peace assembled a coroner's jury of six people. The jury members interviewed Maxwell and Garrett, and Bonney's body and the location of the shooting were examined. The jury certified the body as Bonney's and, according to a local newspaper, the jury foreman said, "It was the Kid's body that we examined."[105] Bonney was given a wake by candlelight; he was buried the next day and his grave was denoted with a wooden marker.[106][107]

Five days after Bonney's killing, Garrett traveled to Santa Fe, New Mexico, to collect the $500 reward offered by Governor Lew Wallace for his capture, dead or alive. William G. Ritch, the acting New Mexico governor, refused to pay the reward.[108] Over the next few weeks, the residents of Las Vegas, Mesilla, Santa Fe, White Oaks, and other New Mexico cities raised over $7,000 in reward money for Garrett. A year and four days after Bonney's death, the New Mexico territorial legislature passed a special act to grant Garrett the $500 bounty reward promised by Governor Wallace.[109]

Because people had begun to claim Garrett unfairly ambushed Bonney, Garrett felt the need to tell his side of the story and called upon his friend, journalist Marshall Upson, to ghostwrite a book for him.[110] The book, The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid,[d] was first published in April 1882.[112] Although only a few copies sold following its release, in time, it became a reference for later historians who wrote about Bonney's life.[110]

Rumors of survival

Over time, legends grew claiming that Bonney was not killed, and that Garrett staged the incident and death out of friendship so that Bonney could evade the law.[113] During the next 50 years, a number of men claimed they were Billy the Kid.[citation needed] Most of these claims were easily disproven, but two have remained topics of discussion and debate.

In 1948, a central Texas man, Ollie P. Roberts, also known as Brushy Bill Roberts, began claiming he was Billy the Kid and went before New Mexico Governor Thomas J. Mabry seeking a pardon. Mabry dismissed Roberts' claims, and Roberts died shortly afterward.[114] Nevertheless, Hico, Texas, Roberts' town of residence, capitalized on his claim by opening a Billy the Kid museum.[115]

John Miller, an Arizona man, also claimed he was Bonney. This was unsupported by his family until 1938, some time after his death. Miller's body was buried in the state-owned Arizona Pioneers' Home Cemetery in Prescott, Arizona; in May 2005, Miller's teeth and bones[116] were exhumed and examined,[117] without permission from the state.[118] DNA samples from the remains were sent to a laboratory in Dallas and tested to compare Miller's DNA with blood samples obtained from floorboards in the old Lincoln County courthouse and a bench where Bonney's body allegedly was placed after he was shot.[119] According to a July 2015 article in The Washington Post, the lab results were "useless".[116]

In 2004, researchers sought to exhume the remains of Catherine Antrim, Bonney's mother, whose DNA would be tested and compared with that of the body buried in William Bonney's grave.[120] As of 2012, her body had not been exhumed.[119]

In 2007,[121] author and amateur historian Gale Cooper filed a lawsuit against the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office under the state Inspection of Public Records Act to produce records of the results of the 2006 DNA tests and other forensic evidence collected in the Billy the Kid investigations.[122] In April 2012, 133 pages of documents were provided; they offered no conclusive evidence confirming or disproving the generally accepted story of Garrett's killing of Bonney,[121] but confirmed the records' existence, and that they could have been produced earlier.[119] In 2014, Cooper was awarded $100,000 in punitive damages but the decision was later overturned by the New Mexico Court of Appeals.[123] The lawsuit ultimately cost Lincoln County nearly $300,000.[121]

In February 2015, historian Robert Stahl petitioned a district court in Fort Sumner asking the state of New Mexico to issue a death certificate for Bonney.[105] In July 2015, Stahl filed suit in the New Mexico Supreme Court. The suit asked the court to order the state's Office of the Medical Investigator to officially certify Bonney's death under New Mexico state law.[124]

Photographs

As of 2021, only one authenticated photograph showing Billy exists; others thought to depict him are disputed.[125]

Dedrick ferrotype

 
Unretouched original ferrotype of Billy the Kid, c. 1880

One of the few remaining artifacts of Bonney's life is a 2-by-3-inch (5.1-by-7.6-centimeter) ferrotype photograph of him, attributed to photographer Ben Wittick[126] in late 1879 or early 1880. The image shows Bonney wearing a vest under a sweater, a slouch hat and a bandana, while holding an 1873 Winchester rifle with its butt resting on the floor. For years, this was the only photograph of Bonney accepted by scholars and historians.[98] The original ferrotype survived because Bonney's friend Dan Dedrick kept it after the outlaw's death. It was passed down through Dedrick's family, and was copied several times, appearing in numerous publications during the 20th century. In June 2011, the original plate was bought at auction for $2.3 million by businessman William Koch.[127][128]

The image shows Bonney wearing his holstered Colt revolver on his left side. This led to the belief that he was left-handed, without taking into account that the ferrotype process produces reversed images.[129] In 1954, western historians James D. Horan and Paul Sann wrote that Bonney was right-handed and carried his pistol on his right hip.[130] The opinion was confirmed by Clyde Jeavons, a former curator of the National Film and Television Archive.[131] Several historians have written that Bonney was ambidextrous.[132][133][134][135]

Croquet tintype

 
Detail from photograph purporting to show Bonney (left) playing croquet in 1878

A 4-by-6-inch (100 mm × 150 mm) ferrotype purchased at a memorabilia shop in Fresno, California, in 2010 has been claimed to show Bonney and members of the Regulators playing croquet. If authentic, it is the only known photo of Billy the Kid and the Regulators together and the only image to feature their wives and female companions.[136] Collector Robert G. McCubbin and outlaw historian John Boessenecker concluded in 2013 that the photograph does not show Bonney.[137] Whitny Braun, a professor and researcher, located an advertisement for croquet sets sold at Chapman's General Store in Las Vegas, New Mexico, dated to June 1878. Kent Gibson, a forensic video and still image expert, offered the services of his facial recognition software, and stated that Bonney is indeed one of the individuals in the image.[138]

In August 2015, Lincoln State Monument officials and the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs said that despite the new research, they could not confirm that the image showed Bonney or others from the Lincoln County War era, according to Monument manager Gary Cozzens. A photograph curator at the Palace of the Governors archives, Daniel Kosharek, said the image is "problematic on a lot of fronts", including the small size of the figures and the lack of resemblance of the background landscape to Lincoln County or the state in general.[138] Editors from the True West Magazine staff said, "no one in our office thinks this photo is of the Kid [and the Regulators]."[137]

In early October 2015, Kagin's, Inc., a numismatic authentication firm, said the image was authentic after a number of experts, including those associated with a recent National Geographic Channel program,[139][140] examined it.[141][142]

Posthumous pardon request

In 2010, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson turned down a request for a posthumous pardon of Bonney for the murder of Sheriff William Brady. The pardon was considered to fulfill Governor Lew Wallace's 1879 promise to Bonney. Richardson's decision, citing "historical ambiguity", was announced on December 31, 2010, his last day in office.[143][144]

Grave markers

 
Grave marker for Billy The Kid, also at Fort Sumner, New Mexico
 
The "PALs" gravemarker for Tom O'Folliard, William H. Bonney, alias Billy the Kid, and Charlie Bowdre, at Fort Sumner, New Mexico

In 1931, Charles W. Foor, an unofficial tour guide at Fort Sumner Cemetery, campaigned to raise funds for a permanent marker for the graves of Bonney, O'Folliard, and Bowdre. As a result of his efforts, a stone memorial marked with the names of the three men and their death dates beneath the word "Pals" was erected in the center of the burial area.[145]

In 1940, stone cutter James N. Warner of Salida, Colorado, made and donated to the cemetery a new marker for Bonney's grave.[146] It was stolen on February 8, 1981, but recovered days later in Huntington Beach, California. New Mexico Governor Bruce King arranged for the county sheriff to fly to California to return it to Fort Sumner,[147] where it was reinstalled in May 1981. Although both markers are behind iron fencing, a group of vandals entered the enclosure at night in June 2012 and tipped the stone over.[148]

In literature and the arts

The life and likeness of Billy the Kid have been frequently represented in comics, literature, film, music, theater, radio, television, and video games.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Letter from Rev. James B. Roberts, Church of St. Peter, New York City, to Jack DeMattos, March 24, 1979.[12]
  2. ^ For years Wallace denied that he had agreed to the bargain with Bonney; however, in a newspaper article published in 1902, Wallace changed his story and said he had promised him a pardon in exchange for the testimony.[63]
  3. ^ Letter from Governor Wallace to W.H. Bonney, March 20, 1879.[64]
  4. ^ The full title of the Garrett-Upson book was 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. By Pat. F. Garrett, Sheriff of Lincoln Co., N.M., By Whom He Was Finally Hunted Down and Captured by Killing Him.[111]

References

  1. ^ Nolan, Frederick (2015). The West of Billy the Kid. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-8061-4887-8. from the original on September 2, 2021. Retrieved July 1, 2019.
  2. ^ Rasch 1995, pp. 23–35.
  3. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 244–245.
  4. ^ a b c Wallis 2007, p. 144.
  5. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 145–146.
  6. ^ "The Old Man Who Claimed to Be Billy the Kid". Atlas Obscura. March 30, 2017. from the original on July 8, 2017. Retrieved July 19, 2017.
  7. ^ "Life and death of Billy the Kid". The Clare Champion. July 15, 2010. from the original on February 26, 2020. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
  8. ^ Slatten, Jeremiah (November 2023). "Sign on the Dotted Line: Some truth about the mother of Billy the Kid". The Tombstone Epitaph. Vol. CXXXXIII, no. 11. Tombstone, AZ. pp. 1, 8–9. ISSN 1940-221X.
  9. ^ Carson, William J. (May 1969). "What was Billy the Kid's real name?". Real West Magazine.
  10. ^ Transcript of "Certificate of Baptism", Church of St. Peter, Barclay Street, New York. "This is to certify that Patrick Henry McCarthy, child of Patrick and Catherine Devine, born in NY on the 17 day of September 1859, was baptized on the 28 day of September 1859 according to the rite of the Roman Catholic Church, by the Rev. J. Conron. The sponsors being Thomas Cooney and Mary Clark, as appears from the Baptismal Register of this Church."
  11. ^ An image of the Certificate of Baptism was published in the May 1969 issue of Real West magazine, in an article entitled: "What was Billy the Kid's real name?", by William J. Carson. It indicates that the person's name was "Patrick Henry McCarthy", not Henry McCarty.
  12. ^ DeMattos 1980.
  13. ^ Nolan 2009a, pp. 1–6.
  14. ^ Rasch & Mullin 1953, pp. 1–5.
  15. ^ Rasch 1954, pp. 6–11.
  16. ^ a b Nolan 1998, pp. 15, 29.
  17. ^ Wallis 2007, p. 15.
  18. ^ Nolan 1998, pp. 17–19.
  19. ^ Nolan 2009a, p. 7.
  20. ^ Nolan 2009a, p. 8.
  21. ^ a b "Billy The Kid: Facts, information and articles about Billy The Kid, famous outlaw, and a prominent figure from the Wild West". HistoryNet.com. from the original on January 3, 2016. Retrieved January 4, 2016.
  22. ^ Grant County Herald (Silver City, New Mexico), September 26, 1875.
  23. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 94–95.
  24. ^ Wallis 2007, p. 103.
  25. ^ "Billy the Kid". State of New Mexico. from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
  26. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 10–11.
  27. ^ Wallis 2007, p. 107.
  28. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 11–12.
  29. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 110–111.
  30. ^ Utley 1989, p. 16.
  31. ^ Radbourne, Allan; Rasch, Philip J. (August 1985). "The Story of 'Windy' Cahill". Real West (204): 22–27.
  32. ^ "This Date in History – August 17, 1877 – Billy the Kid kills his first man". History Channel. from the original on March 15, 2016. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  33. ^ Wroth, William H. "Billy the Kid". New Mexico Office of the State Historian. from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  34. ^ Wallis 2007, p. 119.
  35. ^ Nolan 1998, p. 77.
  36. ^ Hays, Chad (March 19, 2013). "Ma'am Jones A stitch in time". True West Magazine. from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  37. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 123–131.
  38. ^ Nolan 2009a, pp. 188–190.
  39. ^ a b c Boardman, Mark (September 25, 2010). "The Tunstalls Return – John Tunstall's kin traveled from England to fathom death in Lincoln". True West Magazine. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  40. ^ Utley 1989, p. 46.
  41. ^ Nolan 2009a, pp. 23–55.
  42. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 48–49.
  43. ^ Bell, Bob Boze (April 1, 2004). "I Shot the Sheriff (and I Killed a Deputy, Too) – Billy Kid and the Regulators vs Sheriff Brady and His Deputies". True West Magazine. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  44. ^ Bell, Bob Boze (September 11, 2015). "Tunstall Ambushed – Regulators vs Dolan's Henchmen". True West Magazine. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved February 11, 2016.
  45. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 56–60.
  46. ^ Nolan 2009a, pp. 233–49, 549.
  47. ^ Rickards, Colin. The Gunfight at Blazer's Mill, 1974 – pp. 36–37.
  48. ^ Wroth, William H. Billy the Kid January 26, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  49. ^ Jacobsen 1994, p. 173.
  50. ^ Nolan 1992, pp. 312–313.
  51. ^ Utley 1987, p. 87.
  52. ^ Nolan 1992, p. 513.
  53. ^ "New Mexico Office of the State Historian | people". newmexicohistory.org. from the original on June 29, 2017. Retrieved July 19, 2017.
  54. ^ Nolan 1992, pp. 322–331.
  55. ^ Utley 1987, pp. 96–111.
  56. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 104–105, 107, 110.
  57. ^ Nolan 2009a, pp. 339–340, 342, 445, 514.
  58. ^ Utley 1987, p. 120.
  59. ^ Nolan 2009a, pp. 315, 515.
  60. ^ Utley 1987, pp. 122–123, 126–128, 141, 150, 154, 156–158.
  61. ^ Utley 1987, pp. 132–136, 139, 141, 143–144.
  62. ^ Nolan 1992, pp. 375–376, 378, 516–517.
  63. ^ Cooper 2017, pp. 556–561.
  64. ^ Cooper 2017, pp. 563–565.
  65. ^ Cooper 2017, p. 565.
  66. ^ Boomhower 2005, p. 103.
  67. ^ Boomhower 2005, p. 104.
  68. ^ Boomhower 2005, pp. 106–107.
  69. ^ Lifson 2009.
  70. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 111–125.
  71. ^ Bell, Bob Boze (May 2, 2007). "The Tale of the Empty Chamber Billy the Kid vs Joe Grant". True West Magazine. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
  72. ^ Santa Fe Weekly New Mexican, January 17, 1880.
  73. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 131–133, 145, 203, 249–250.
  74. ^ Nolan 1992, pp. 397, 518, 572.
  75. ^ . The Officer Down Memorial Page (ODMP). Archived from the original on September 25, 2020. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
  76. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 143–146, 179, 204.
  77. ^ Nolan 1992, pp. 398–401.
  78. ^ Metz 1974, pp. 74–75.
  79. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 155–157, 256–257.
  80. ^ Utley 1989, p. 147.
  81. ^ Wallis 2007, p. 240.
  82. ^ "Deputy Sheriff Antonio Lino Valdez profile". The Officer Down Memorial Page, Inc. from the original on November 27, 2020. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  83. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 126–127.
  84. ^ Metz 1974, pp. 76–85.
  85. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 157–166.
  86. ^ "Book Review: Billy the Kid's Writings, Words & Wit, by Gale Cooper". HistoryNet. November 29, 2012. from the original on September 19, 2015. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  87. ^ Utley 1989, pp. 145–147.
  88. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 240–241.
  89. ^ a b Wallis 2007, p. 242.
  90. ^ "1881 Billy the Kid is shot to death". History.com. from the original on February 15, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  91. ^ Nolan, Frederick (April 28, 2015). "'What if everything we know about Billy the Kid is wrong?' – Special Report". True West Magazine. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved February 12, 2016.
  92. ^ "Deputy Sheriff James W. Bell". The Officer Down Memorial Page (ODMP). from the original on October 23, 2020. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  93. ^ a b Utley 1989, p. 181.
  94. ^ a b Wallis 2007, pp. 243–244.
  95. ^ "Deputy U.S. Marshal Robert Olinger". The Officer Down Memorial Page (ODMP). from the original on August 4, 2020. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  96. ^ Jacobsen 1994, p. 232.
  97. ^ Utley 1989, p. 188.
  98. ^ a b Boardman, Mark (May 24, 2011). "The Holy Grail for Sale – The Billy the Kid tintype is on the auction block, and it might just clear half a million". True West Magazine. from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  99. ^ Villagran, Lauren (December 1, 2013). "Is this Billy the Kid?". Albuquerque Journal – Las Cruces Bureau. from the original on December 15, 2016. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
  100. ^ Wallis 2007, pp. 245–246.
  101. ^ a b Wallis 2007, p. 247.
  102. ^ Frederick Nolan (2014). The Billy the Kid Reader. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0806182544. from the original on July 9, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  103. ^ Janofsky, Michael (June 5, 2003). "122 Years Later, Lawmen Are Still Chasing Billy the Kid". The New York Times. p. 24. from the original on January 25, 2019. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  104. ^ "The Death Of Billy The Kid, 1881". Eyewitness to History/Ibis Communications. from the original on February 19, 2020. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  105. ^ a b Klein, Christopher (February 27, 2015). "Historian Seeks Death Certificate to End Billy the Kid Rumors". History.com. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  106. ^ Rose, Elizabeth R. (December 31, 2012), "Ft. Sumner New Mexico: Where Billy The Kid met his demise", Santa Fe Examiner
  107. ^ Bell, Bob Boze; Gardner, Mark Lee (August 12, 2014). "A Shot in the Dark: Billy the Kid vs Pat Garrett". True West Magazine. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  108. ^ "Santa Fe Daily New Mexican Newspaper", Santa Fe Daily New Mexican, p. 4, July 21, 1881
  109. ^ (New Mexico Territorial Legislature July 18, 1882).
  110. ^ a b Utley 1989, pp. 198–199.
  111. ^ Utley 1989, p. 199.
  112. ^ 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 978-1953221919.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  113. ^ Wallis 2007, p. xiv.
  114. ^ "Field & Stream". Field & Stream 2007–08: 106–. July 1981. ISSN 8755-8599. from the original on November 1, 2017. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  115. ^ Texas Department of Transportation, Texas State Travel Guide, 2008, pp. 200–201
  116. ^ a b Miller, Michael E. (July 21, 2015). "One man's quest to bury the Wild West mystery of Billy the Kid's death". The Washington Post. from the original on December 23, 2015. Retrieved December 25, 2015. A family Bible put his age in 1881 at just 2 years old: far too young for even a criminal nicknamed 'the Kid'.
  117. ^ Banks, Leo W. "A New Billy the Kid?". Tucson Weekly. from the original on June 16, 2009. Retrieved August 4, 2008.
  118. ^ Associated Press (October 24, 2006) 2 won't face charges in Billy the Kid quest February 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Deseret News. Retrieved August 29, 2008.
  119. ^ a b c Burns, James T. (April 28, 2012). . Albuquerque Business Law. Archived from the original on December 26, 2015. Retrieved December 25, 2015.
  120. ^ Miller, Patrick (March 18, 2004). "Shootout over Billy the Kid". The Christian Science Monitor. from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  121. ^ a b c Villagran, Lauren (May 20, 2014). "Award ends suit over Billy the Kid records". Albuquerque Journal. from the original on August 19, 2017. Retrieved December 25, 2015.
  122. ^ Associated Press (August 28, 2008) Lawsuit seeks DNA evidence for 1881 death of Billy the Kid August 19, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Fox News Channel. Retrieved August 29, 2008.
  123. ^ "Billy the Kid quest evolves into records fight". from the original on August 19, 2017. Retrieved August 18, 2017 – via PressReader.
  124. ^ Constable, Anne (July 17, 2015). "Historian asks state's high court to help set record straight on Billy the Kid's death". The Santa Fe New Mexican. from the original on November 8, 2020. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  125. ^ "Flea market photo 'shows Billy the Kid'". BBC News. November 22, 2017. from the original on November 22, 2017. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
  126. ^ Staff. "Four Views of Walpi". Bowers Museum. Archived from the original on July 3, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2024.
  127. ^ Tripp, Leslie (June 26, 2011). "Billy the Kid photograph fetches $2.3 million at auction". CNN. from the original on July 6, 2015. Retrieved July 4, 2015.
  128. ^ "Billy the Kid portrait fetches $2.3m at Denver auction". BBC News US & Canada. June 26, 2011. from the original on February 29, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  129. ^ Adetunji, Jo (June 26, 2011). "Billy the Kid photograph sold at auction in Colorado for $2.3m". The Guardian. from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2015.
  130. ^ Horan, James D. and Sann, Paul. Pictorial History of the Wild West, New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1954 – p. 57.
  131. ^ Mayes, Ian (March 3, 2001). "I kid you not". The Guardian. from the original on March 12, 2014. Retrieved June 19, 2009.
  132. ^ Gardner, Mark Lee: To Hell on a Fast Horse: The Untold Story of Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett (2011), pp. 91, 277
  133. ^ Nolan 1998, p. 29.
  134. ^ Wallis 2007, p. 83.
  135. ^ Goode, Stephen (June 10, 2007). "The fact and fiction of America's outlaw". The Washington Times. Archived from the original on June 20, 2009. Retrieved December 25, 2015. Billy loved to sing and had a good voice, those who knew him claimed ... He was ambidextrous and wrote well with both hands.
  136. ^ Constable, Anne (August 24, 2015). "Billy the Kid: A fan of croquet?". The New Mexican. from the original on May 8, 2020. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  137. ^ a b "Billy the Kid Experts Weigh in on the Croquet Photo". True West Magazine. October 14, 2015. from the original on March 1, 2016. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  138. ^ a b Constable, Anne (August 24, 2015). "Billy the Kid: A fan of croquet?". Santa Fe New Mexican. from the original on May 8, 2020. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  139. ^ Guijarro, Randy (October 18, 2015). . National Geographic. Archived from the original on December 14, 2017. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  140. ^ . National Geographic. October 18, 2015. Archived from the original on December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  141. ^ Booker, Brakkton (October 15, 2015). "$2 Photo Found at Junk Store Has Billy The Kid in It, Could Be Worth $5M". NPR. from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 25, 2016.
  142. ^ Carroll, Rory (October 19, 2015). "Man who discovered rare Billy the Kid photo: 'The hunt is a really grand thing'". The Guardian. from the original on October 28, 2015. Retrieved October 27, 2015.
  143. ^ "No pardon for Billy the Kid". CNN. December 31, 2010. from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  144. ^ "An Outlaw by Any Name: Billy the Kid". The New York Times. July 14, 2016. from the original on January 29, 2017.
  145. ^ Simmons 2006, pp. 161–163.
  146. ^ Simmons 2006, pp. 164–165.
  147. ^ "Billy the Kid's Elusive Tombstone / Old Fort Sumner and Billy the Kid's Grave". Cemeteries-of-tx.com. from the original on May 27, 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  148. ^ Lohr, David (June 30, 2012). "'Billy the Kid' tombstone in New Mexico vandalized". The Huffington Post. from the original on July 4, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2013.

Sources

  • Adams, Ramon F. (1960). A Fitting Death for Billy the Kid. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. OCLC 8937525.
  • Boomhower, Ray E. (2005). The Sword and the Pen. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. p. 103. ISBN 0-87195-185-1.
  • Burns, Walter (2014). The Saga of Billy the Kid: The Thrilling Life of America's Original Outlaw. Garden City, New York: Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-63220-112-6. OCLC 894170041. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  • Coe, George W. (1934). Frontier Fighter: The Autobiography of George W. Coe Who Fought and Rode with Billy the Kid, as Related to Nan Hillary Harrison. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. OCLC 692143776. from the original on June 13, 2019. Retrieved August 29, 2016.
  • Cooper, Gale (2017). The Lost Pardon of Billy the Kid: An Analysis Factoring in the Santa Fe Ring, Governor Lew Wallace's Dilemma, and a Territory in Rebellion. Albuquerque, New Mexico: Gelcour Books. ISBN 978-0986070723.
  • DeMattos, Jack (November 1978). "The Search for Billy the Kid's Roots". Real West. No. 160. Real West.
  • DeMattos, Jack (January 1980). "The Search for Billy the Kid's Roots – Is Over!". Real West. No. 167. Real West.
  • DeMattos, Jack (August 1983). "Gunfighters of the Real West: Henry McCarty, Alias 'Billy the Kid'". Real West. No. 192. Real West.
  • Dworkin, Mark J. (2015). American Mythmaker: Walter Noble Burns and the Legends of Billy the Kid, Wyatt Earp, and Joaquín Murrieta. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-4902-8. from the original on June 12, 2019. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • Dykes, Jefferson (1952). Billy the Kid: The Bibliography of a Legend. Albuquerque: The University of New Mexico Press. from the original on June 9, 2019. Retrieved August 29, 2016.
  • Earle, James H. (1988). The Capture of Billy the Kid. College Station, Texas: Creative Publishing Co. ISBN 0-932702-44-9. OCLC 18052460.
  • Edwards, Harold L. (1995). Goodbye Billy the Kid. College Station, Texas: Creative Publishing Co. ISBN 1-57208-000-0. OCLC 33335740.
  • Fable, Edmund Jr. (1980) [1881]. The True Life of Billy the Kid, The Noted New Mexican Outlaw. College Station, Texas: Creative Publishing Co. ISBN 0-932702-11-2. OCLC 6487191.
  • Fulton, Maurice Garland (1968). Robert N. Nullin (ed.). History of the Lincoln County War. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. OCLC 437868.
  • Gardner, Mark Lee (2010). 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. ISBN 978-0-06-136827-1. OCLC 419859633.
  • Garrett, Pat F. (1882). The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid (1st ed.). Santa Fe: New Mexican Printing and Publishing Co. OCLC 748293298.
  • Hough, Emerson (September 1901). "Billy the Kid: The True Story of a Western 'Bad Man'". Everybody's Magazine. New York: The Ridgeway Company. from the original on September 2, 2021. Retrieved August 28, 2016.
  • Hunt, Frazier (2009) [1956]. The Tragic Days of Billy the Kid. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press. ISBN 978-0-86534-717-5. OCLC 316327276. from the original on December 23, 2016. Retrieved November 21, 2017.
  • Jacobsen, Joel (1994). Such Men as Billy the Kid: The Lincoln County War Reconsidered. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-2576-3. OCLC 29429457.
  • Keleher, William Aloysius (2007) [1957]. Violence in Lincoln County 1869–1881. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press. ISBN 978-0-86534-622-2. OCLC 182573474.
  • Klasner, Lily; Chisum, John Simpson; Ball, Eve (1972). My Girlhood Among Outlaws. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-0354-4. OCLC 166482848.
  • Koop, Waldo E. (1964). "Billy the Kid: The Trail of a Kansas Legend". Kansas City Posse of Westerners. IX (3).
  • Lifson, Amy (2009). "Ben-Hur". Humanities. Vol. 30, no. 6. Washington, D.C.: National Endowment for the Humanities. from the original on March 5, 2012. Retrieved August 27, 2014.
  • McCubbin, Robert G. (May 2007). "The Many Faces of Billy the Kid". True West. True West.
  • Metz, Leon C. (August 1983). "My Search for Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid". True West. True West.
  • Metz, Leon C. (1983) [1974]. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Western Lawman (reprint, revised ed.). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-1838-3. OCLC 18722891.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (2009a). The Life and Death of John Henry Tunstall. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press. ISBN 978-0-86534-722-9. OCLC 440562959.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (2009) [1992]. The Lincoln County War: A Documentary History (revised ed.). Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press. ISBN 978-0-86534-721-2. OCLC 319064671. from the original on June 11, 2019. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (1992). The Lincoln County War: A Documentary History. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (June 2003). "The Hunting of Billy the Kid". Wild West. Wild West.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (1998). The West of Billy the Kid. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-3082-2.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (July 2000). "The Private Life of Billy the Kid". True West. True West.
  • Nolan, Frederick W. (2007). The Billy the Kid Reader. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-8446-3.
  • Otero, Miguel (2006) [1936]. The Real Billy the Kid, With New Light on the Lincoln County War. New York: Sunstone Press. ISBN 978-1-61139-100-8.
  • Poe, John William (2006) [1933]. The Death of Billy the Kid (reprint ed.). Santa Fe: Sunstone Press Company. ISBN 978-0-86534-532-4.
  • Radbourne, Allan; Rasch, Phillip J. (August 1985). "The Story of 'Windy' Cahill". Real West. No. 204. Real West.
  • Rasch, Philip J.; Mullin, Robert N. (1953). "New Light on the Legend of Billy the Kid". New Mexico Folklore Record 7.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (1954). "Dim Trails: The Pursuit of the McCarty Family". New Mexico Folklore Record 8.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (1955). "The Twenty-One Men He Put Bullets Through". New Mexico Folklore Record 9.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (January 1969). "A Second Look at the Blazer's Mill Affair". Frontier Times.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (November 1987). "The Trials of Billy the Kid". Real West. No. 216. Real West.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (1995). Trailing Billy the Kid. Stillwater, Oklahoma: Western Publications. ISBN 978-0-935269-19-2.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (1997). Gunsmoke in Lincoln County. Stillwater, Oklahoma: Western Publications. ISBN 978-0-935269-24-6.
  • Rasch, Philip J. (1998). Warriors of Lincoln County. Stillwater, Oklahoma: Western Publications. ISBN 978-0-935269-26-0.
  • Rickards, Colin W. (1974). "The Gunfight at Blazer's Mill". Southwestern Studies Monograph No. 40. El Paso, Texas: Western Press.
  • Simmons, Mark (2006). Stalking Billy the Kid: Brief Sketches of a Short Life. Sunstone Press. ISBN 0-86534-525-2.
  • Turk, David S. (February 2007). "Billy the Kid and the U.S. Marshals Service". Wild West Magazine. from the original on August 17, 2018. Retrieved November 2, 2017.
  • Tuska, Jon (1983). Billy the Kid: A Handbook. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-9406-9.
  • Utley, Robert M. (1987). High Noon in Lincoln: Violence on the Western Frontier. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-1201-3. OCLC 15629305. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  • Utley, Robert M. (1989). Billy the Kid: A Short and Violent Life. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-9558-2. OCLC 37868038. from the original on June 11, 2019. Retrieved May 12, 2016.
  • Wallis, Michael (2007). Billy the Kid: The Endless Ride. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-0-393-06068-3. OCLC 77270750. Retrieved November 21, 2017.

External links

  • – guide by New Mexico Tourism Department
  • Letter, 15 March 1879, Lew Wallace to W. H. Bonney, at the Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis
  • Letter, 20 March 1879, W. H. Bonney to Lew Wallace, at the Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis

billy, other, uses, disambiguation, henry, mccarty, september, november, 1859, july, 1881, alias, william, bonney, better, known, american, outlaw, gunfighter, west, alleged, have, killed, before, shot, killed, also, known, involvement, mexico, lincoln, county. For other uses see Billy the Kid disambiguation Henry McCarty September 17 or November 23 1859 July 14 1881 alias William H Bonney better known as Billy the Kid was an American outlaw and gunfighter of the Old West who is alleged to have killed 21 men before he was shot and killed at the age of 21 2 3 He is also known for his involvement in New Mexico s Lincoln County War during which he allegedly committed three murders Billy the KidPortrait attributed to Ben Wittick c 1880BornHenry McCarty 1 September 17 or 1859 11 23 November 23 1859New York City U S DiedJuly 14 1881 1881 07 14 aged 21 Fort Sumner New MexicoCause of deathGunshot woundResting placeOld Fort Sumner Cemetery34 24 13 N 104 11 37 W 34 40361 N 104 19361 W 34 40361 104 19361 Billy the Kid s Gravesite Other namesWilliam H BonneyHenry AntrimKid AntrimOccupationsCattle rustlercowboy and ranch handgamblerhorse thiefoutlawMcCarty was orphaned at the age of 15 His first arrest was for stealing food at the age of 16 in 1875 Ten days later he robbed a Chinese laundry and was arrested again but escaped shortly afterwards He fled from New Mexico Territory into neighboring Arizona Territory making himself both an outlaw and a federal fugitive In 1877 he began to call himself William H Bonney 4 After killing a blacksmith during an altercation in August 1877 Bonney became a wanted man in Arizona and returned to New Mexico where he joined a group of cattle rustlers He became well known in the region when he joined the Regulators and took part in the Lincoln County War of 1878 He and two other Regulators were later charged with killing three men including Lincoln County Sheriff William J Brady and one of his deputies Bonney s notoriety grew in December 1880 when the Las Vegas Gazette in Las Vegas New Mexico and The Sun in New York City carried stories about his crimes 5 Sheriff Pat Garrett captured Bonney later that month In April 1881 Bonney was tried for and convicted of Brady s murder and was sentenced to hang in May of that year He escaped from jail on April 28 killing two sheriff s deputies in the process and evaded capture for more than two months Garrett shot and killed Bonney by then aged 21 in Fort Sumner on July 14 1881 During the decades following his death legends grew that Bonney had survived and a number of men claimed to be him 6 Billy the Kid remains one of the most notorious figures from the era whose life and likeness have been frequently dramatized in Western popular culture He has been a feature of more than 50 movies and several television series Contents 1 Early life 1 1 First crimes 2 Lincoln County War 2 1 Prelude 2 2 Build up 2 2 1 Battle of Lincoln 1878 3 Outlaw 3 1 Capture and escape 3 2 Recapture and death 4 Rumors of survival 5 Photographs 5 1 Dedrick ferrotype 5 2 Croquet tintype 6 Posthumous pardon request 7 Grave markers 8 In literature and the arts 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Sources 12 External linksEarly lifeHenry McCarty was born to parents of Irish Catholic ancestry 7 Catherine nee Devine and Patrick McCarty in New York City 8 While his birth year has been confirmed as 1859 the exact date of his birth has been disputed as either September 17 or November 23 of that year According to Saint Peter s Church in Manhattan he was baptized Patrick Henry McCarthy there on September 28 1859 9 10 11 failed verification a 13 14 15 Census records indicate that his younger brother Joseph McCarty was born in 1863 16 Following the death of her husband Catherine McCarty and her sons moved to Indianapolis Indiana where she met William Henry Harrison Antrim The McCarty family moved with Antrim to Wichita Kansas in 1870 17 After moving again a few years later Catherine married Antrim on March 1 1873 at the First Presbyterian Church in Santa Fe New Mexico Territory and the McCarty boys served as witnesses 18 19 Shortly afterward the family moved from Santa Fe to Silver City New Mexico and Joseph adopted Antrim s surname 16 Shortly before McCarty s mother died of tuberculosis on September 16 1874 20 William Antrim abandoned the McCarty boys leaving them orphans First crimes nbsp Henry Hooker one time employer of Billy the Kid at his Sierra Bonita Ranch in southeast ArizonaMcCarty was 14 years old when his mother died Sarah Brown the owner of a boarding house gave him room and board in exchange for work On September 16 1875 McCarty was caught stealing food 21 22 Ten days later McCarty and George Schaefer robbed a Chinese laundry stealing clothing and two pistols McCarty was charged with theft and was jailed He escaped two days later and became a fugitive 21 as reported in the Silver City Herald the next day the first story published about him McCarty located his stepfather and stayed with him until Antrim threw him out McCarty stole clothing and guns from him It was the last time the two saw each other 23 After leaving Antrim McCarty traveled to southeastern Arizona Territory where he worked as a ranch hand and gambled his wages in nearby gaming houses 24 In 1876 he was hired as a ranch hand by well known rancher Henry Hooker 25 26 During this time McCarty became acquainted with John R Mackie a Scottish born criminal and former U S Cavalry private who following his discharge remained near the U S Army post at Camp Grant in Arizona The two men soon began stealing horses from local soldiers 27 28 McCarty became known as Kid Antrim because of his youth slight build clean shaven appearance and personality 29 30 At some point in 1877 McCarty began to refer to himself by the name William H Bonney 4 On August 17 1877 Bonney was at a saloon in the village of Bonita when he got into an argument with Francis P Windy Cahill a blacksmith who reportedly had bullied him and on more than one occasion called him a pimp Bonney in turn called Cahill a son of a bitch whereupon Cahill threw Bonney to the floor and the two struggled for Bonney s revolver Bonney shot and mortally wounded Cahill A witness said Billy had no choice he had to use his equalizer Cahill died the following day 31 32 Bonney fled but returned a few days later and was apprehended by Miles Wood the local justice of the peace He was detained and held in the Camp Grant guardhouse but escaped before law enforcement could arrive 33 Bonney stole a horse and fled Arizona Territory for New Mexico Territory 34 but Apaches took the horse from him leaving him to walk many miles to the nearest settlement At Fort Stanton 35 starving and near death he went to the home of friend and Seven Rivers Warriors gang member John Jones whose mother Barbara nursed him back to health 36 4 After regaining his health Bonney went to Apache Tejo a former army post where he joined a band of rustlers who raided herds owned by cattle magnate John Chisum in Lincoln County After he was spotted in Silver City his involvement with the gang was mentioned in a local newspaper 37 Lincoln County WarMain article Lincoln County War Prelude nbsp John Henry Tunstall 1872After returning to New Mexico Bonney worked as a cowboy for English businessman and rancher John Henry Tunstall 1853 1878 near the Rio Felix a tributary of the Pecos River in Lincoln County now in Chaves County Tunstall and his business partner and lawyer Alexander McSween were opponents of an alliance formed by Irish American businessmen Lawrence Murphy James Dolan and John Riley The three men had wielded an economic and political hold over Lincoln County since the early 1870s due in part to their ownership of a beef contract with nearby Fort Stanton and a well patronized dry goods store in the town of Lincoln By February 1878 McSween owed 8 000 to Dolan who obtained a court order and asked Lincoln County Sheriff William J Brady to attach nearly 40 000 worth of Tunstall s property and livestock Tunstall put Bonney in charge of nine prime horses and told him to relocate them to his ranch for safekeeping Meanwhile Sheriff Brady assembled a large posse to seize Tunstall s cattle 38 39 On February 18 1878 Tunstall learned of the posse s presence on his land and rode out to intervene During the encounter one member of the posse shot Tunstall in the chest knocking him off his horse Another posse member took Tunstall s gun and killed him with a shot to the back of his head 39 40 Tunstall s murder ignited the conflict between the two factions that became known as the Lincoln County War 39 41 Build up nbsp Dick Brewer c 1875After Tunstall was killed Bonney and Dick Brewer swore affidavits against Brady and those in his posse and obtained murder warrants from Lincoln County justice of the peace John B Wilson 42 On February 20 1878 while attempting to arrest Brady the sheriff and his deputies found and arrested Bonney and two other men riding with him 43 Deputy U S Marshal Robert Widenmann a friend of Bonney and a detachment of soldiers captured Sheriff Brady s jail guards put them behind bars and released Bonney and Brewer 44 Bonney then joined the Lincoln County Regulators on March 9 they captured Frank Baker and William Morton both of whom were accused of killing Tunstall Baker and Morton were killed while allegedly trying to escape 45 On April 1 the Regulators ambushed Sheriff Brady and his deputies Bonney was wounded in the thigh during the battle Brady and Deputy Sheriff George W Hindman were killed 46 On the morning of April 4 1878 Buckshot Roberts and Dick Brewer were killed during a shootout at Blazer s Mill 47 Warrants were issued for several participants on both sides and Bonney and two others were charged with killing Brady Hindman and Roberts 48 Battle of Lincoln 1878 Main article Battle of Lincoln 1878 On the night of Sunday July 14 McSween and the Regulators now a group of fifty or sixty men went to Lincoln and stationed themselves in the town among several buildings 49 At the McSween residence were Bonney Florencio Chavez Jose Chavez y Chavez Jim French Harvey Morris Tom O Folliard and Yginio Salazar among others Another group led by Marin Chavez and Doc Scurlock positioned themselves on the roof of a saloon Henry Newton Brown Dick Smith and George Coe defended a nearby adobe bunkhouse 50 51 On Tuesday July 16 newly appointed sheriff George Peppin sent sharpshooters to kill the McSween defenders at the saloon Peppin s men retreated when one of the snipers Charles Crawford was killed by Fernando Herrera Peppin then sent a request for assistance to Colonel Nathan Dudley commandant of nearby Fort Stanton In a reply to Peppin Dudley refused to intervene but later arrived in Lincoln with troops turning the battle in favor of the Murphy Dolan faction 52 53 A gunfight broke out on Friday July 19 McSween s supporters gathered inside his house when Buck Powell and Deputy Sheriff Jack Long set fire to the building the occupants began shooting Bonney and the other men fled the building when all rooms but one were burning During the confusion McSween was shot and killed by Robert W Beckwith who was then shot and killed by Bonney 54 55 Outlaw nbsp New Mexico Territorial Governor Lew Wallace in 1893Bonney and three other survivors of the Battle of Lincoln were near the Mescalero Indian Agency when the agency bookkeeper Morris Bernstein was murdered on August 5 1878 All four were indicted for the murder despite conflicting evidence that Bernstein had been killed by Constable Atanacio Martinez All of the indictments except Bonney s were later quashed 56 57 On October 5 1878 U S Marshal John Sherman informed newly appointed Territorial Governor and former Union Army general Lew Wallace that he held warrants for several men including William H Antrim alias Kid alias Bonny sic but was unable to execute them owing to the disturbed condition of affairs in that county resulting from the acts of a desperate class of men 58 Wallace issued an amnesty proclamation on November 13 1878 which pardoned anyone involved in the Lincoln County War since Tunstall s murder It specifically excluded persons who had been convicted of or indicted for a crime and therefore excluded Bonney 59 60 On February 18 1879 Bonney and friend Tom O Folliard were in Lincoln and watched as attorney Huston Chapman was shot and his corpse set on fire According to eyewitnesses the pair were innocent bystanders forced at gunpoint by Jesse Evans to witness the murder 61 62 Bonney wrote to Governor Wallace on March 13 1879 with an offer to provide information on the Chapman murder in exchange for amnesty On March 15 Governor Wallace replied agreeing to a secret meeting to discuss the situation He met with Wallace in Lincoln on March 17 1879 During the meeting and in subsequent correspondence Wallace promised Bonney protection from his enemies and clemency if he would offer his testimony to a grand jury b On March 20 Wallace wrote to Bonney to remove all suspicion of understanding I think it better to put the arresting party in charge of Sheriff Kimbrell sic who shall be instructed to see that no violence is used c Bonney responded on the same day agreeing to testify and confirming Wallace s proposal for his arrest and detention in a local jail to assure his safety 65 66 On March 21 he let himself be captured by a posse led by Sheriff George Kimball of Lincoln County As agreed Bonney provided a statement about Chapman s murder and testified in court 67 However after his testimony the local district attorney refused to set him free 68 69 Still in custody several weeks later Bonney began to suspect Wallace had used subterfuge and would never grant him amnesty He escaped from the Lincoln County jail on June 17 1879 70 nbsp Tom O Folliard c 1875Bonney avoided further violence until January 10 1880 when he shot and killed Joe Grant a newcomer to the area at Hargrove s Saloon in Fort Sumner New Mexico 71 The Santa Fe Weekly New Mexican reported Billy Bonney more extensively known as the Kid shot and killed Joe Grant The origin of the difficulty was not learned 72 According to other contemporary sources Bonney had been warned Grant intended to kill him He walked up to Grant told him he admired his revolver and asked to examine it Grant handed it over Before returning the pistol which he noticed contained only three cartridges Bonney positioned the cylinder so the next hammer fall would land on an empty chamber Grant suddenly pointed his pistol at Bonney s face and pulled the trigger When it failed to fire he drew his own weapon and shot Grant in the head A reporter for the Las Vegas Optic quoted Bonney as saying the encounter was a game of two and I got there first 73 74 In 1880 Bonney formed a friendship with a rancher named Jim Greathouse who later introduced him to Dave Rudabaugh On November 29 1880 Bonney Rudabaugh and Billy Wilson ran from a posse led by sheriff s deputy James Carlysle Cornered at Greathouse s ranch he told the posse they were holding Greathouse as a hostage Carlysle offered to exchange places with Greathouse and Bonney accepted the offer Carlysle later attempted to escape by jumping through a window but he was shot three times and killed 75 The shootout ended in a standoff the posse withdrew and Bonney Rudabaugh and Wilson rode away 76 77 A few weeks after the Greathouse incident Bonney Rudabaugh Wilson O Folliard Charlie Bowdre and Tom Pickett rode into Fort Sumner Unbeknownst to Bonney and his companions a posse led by Pat Garrett was waiting for them The posse opened fire killing O Folliard the rest of the outlaws escaped unharmed 78 79 Capture and escape nbsp Sheriff Pat Garrett c 1903On December 13 1880 Governor Wallace posted a 500 bounty for Bonney s capture 80 Pat Garrett continued his search for Bonney on December 23 following the siege in which Bowdre was killed Garrett and his posse captured Bonney along with Pickett Rudabaugh and Wilson at Stinking Springs The prisoners including Bonney were shackled and taken to Fort Sumner then later to Las Vegas New Mexico When they arrived on December 26 they were met by crowds of curious onlookers The following day an armed mob gathered at the train depot before the prisoners who were already on board the train with Garrett departed for Santa Fe 81 Deputy Sheriff Romero backed by the angry group of men demanded custody of Dave Rudabaugh who during an unsuccessful escape attempt on April 5 1880 shot and killed deputy Antonio Lino Valdez in the process 82 Garrett refused to surrender the prisoner and a tense confrontation ensued until he agreed to let the sheriff and two other men accompany the party to Santa Fe where they would petition the governor to release Rudabaugh to them 83 In a later interview with a reporter Bonney said he was unafraid during the incident saying if I only had my Winchester I d lick the whole crowd 84 85 The Las Vegas Gazette ran a story from a jailhouse interview following Bonney s capture when the reporter said Bonney appeared relaxed he replied What s the use of looking on the gloomy side of everything The laugh s on me this time 86 During his short career as an outlaw Bonney was the subject of numerous U S newspaper articles some as far away as New York 87 After arriving in Santa Fe Bonney seeking clemency sent Governor Wallace four letters over the next three months Wallace refused to intervene 88 and he went to trial in April 1881 in Mesilla New Mexico 89 Following two days of testimony Bonney was found guilty of Sheriff Brady s murder it was the only conviction secured against any of the combatants in the Lincoln County War On April 13 Judge Warren Bristol sentenced him to hang with his execution scheduled for May 13 1881 89 According to legend upon sentencing the judge told Bonney he was going to hang until he was dead dead dead his response was you can go to hell hell hell 90 According to the historical record he did not speak after the reading of his sentence 91 nbsp Courthouse and jail Lincoln New MexicoFollowing his sentencing Bonney was moved to Lincoln where he was held under guard on the top floor of the town courthouse On the evening of April 28 1881 while Garrett was in White Oaks collecting taxes Deputy Bob Olinger took five other prisoners across the street for a meal leaving James Bell 92 another deputy alone with Bonney at the jail He asked to be taken outside to use the outhouse behind the courthouse on their return to the jail Bonney who was walking ahead of Bell up the stairs to his cell hid around a blind corner slipped out of his handcuffs and beat Bell with the loose end of the cuffs During the ensuing scuffle Bonney grabbed Bell s revolver and fatally shot him in the back as Bell tried to get away 93 Bonney with his legs still shackled broke into Garrett s office and took a loaded shotgun left behind by Olinger He waited at the upstairs window for Olinger to respond to the gunshot that killed Bell and called out to him Look up old boy and see what you get When Olinger looked up Bonney shot and killed him 93 94 95 After about an hour Bonney freed himself from the leg irons with an axe 96 He obtained a horse and rode out of town according to some stories he was singing as he left Lincoln 94 Recapture and death While Bonney was on the run Governor Wallace placed a new 500 bounty on the fugitive s head 97 98 99 Almost three months after his escape Garrett responding to rumors that Bonney was in the vicinity of Fort Sumner left Lincoln with two deputies on July 14 1881 to question resident Pete Maxwell a friend of Bonney s 100 Maxwell son of land baron Lucien Maxwell spoke with Garrett the same day for several hours Around midnight the pair sat in Maxwell s darkened bedroom when Bonney unexpectedly entered 101 Accounts vary as to the course of events According to the canonical version as he entered the room Bonney failed to recognize Garrett due to the poor lighting Drawing his revolver and backing away Bonney asked Quien es Quien es Spanish for Who is it Who is it 102 Recognizing Bonney s voice Garrett drew his revolver and fired twice 103 The first bullet struck Bonney in the chest just above his heart while the second missed Garrett s account leaves it unclear whether Bonney was killed instantly or took some time to die 101 104 A few hours after the shooting a local justice of the peace assembled a coroner s jury of six people The jury members interviewed Maxwell and Garrett and Bonney s body and the location of the shooting were examined The jury certified the body as Bonney s and according to a local newspaper the jury foreman said It was the Kid s body that we examined 105 Bonney was given a wake by candlelight he was buried the next day and his grave was denoted with a wooden marker 106 107 Five days after Bonney s killing Garrett traveled to Santa Fe New Mexico to collect the 500 reward offered by Governor Lew Wallace for his capture dead or alive William G Ritch the acting New Mexico governor refused to pay the reward 108 Over the next few weeks the residents of Las Vegas Mesilla Santa Fe White Oaks and other New Mexico cities raised over 7 000 in reward money for Garrett A year and four days after Bonney s death the New Mexico territorial legislature passed a special act to grant Garrett the 500 bounty reward promised by Governor Wallace 109 Because people had begun to claim Garrett unfairly ambushed Bonney Garrett felt the need to tell his side of the story and called upon his friend journalist Marshall Upson to ghostwrite a book for him 110 The book The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid d was first published in April 1882 112 Although only a few copies sold following its release in time it became a reference for later historians who wrote about Bonney s life 110 Rumors of survivalOver time legends grew claiming that Bonney was not killed and that Garrett staged the incident and death out of friendship so that Bonney could evade the law 113 During the next 50 years a number of men claimed they were Billy the Kid citation needed Most of these claims were easily disproven but two have remained topics of discussion and debate In 1948 a central Texas man Ollie P Roberts also known as Brushy Bill Roberts began claiming he was Billy the Kid and went before New Mexico Governor Thomas J Mabry seeking a pardon Mabry dismissed Roberts claims and Roberts died shortly afterward 114 Nevertheless Hico Texas Roberts town of residence capitalized on his claim by opening a Billy the Kid museum 115 John Miller an Arizona man also claimed he was Bonney This was unsupported by his family until 1938 some time after his death Miller s body was buried in the state owned Arizona Pioneers Home Cemetery in Prescott Arizona in May 2005 Miller s teeth and bones 116 were exhumed and examined 117 without permission from the state 118 DNA samples from the remains were sent to a laboratory in Dallas and tested to compare Miller s DNA with blood samples obtained from floorboards in the old Lincoln County courthouse and a bench where Bonney s body allegedly was placed after he was shot 119 According to a July 2015 article in The Washington Post the lab results were useless 116 In 2004 researchers sought to exhume the remains of Catherine Antrim Bonney s mother whose DNA would be tested and compared with that of the body buried in William Bonney s grave 120 As of 2012 update her body had not been exhumed 119 In 2007 121 author and amateur historian Gale Cooper filed a lawsuit against the Lincoln County Sheriff s Office under the state Inspection of Public Records Act to produce records of the results of the 2006 DNA tests and other forensic evidence collected in the Billy the Kid investigations 122 In April 2012 133 pages of documents were provided they offered no conclusive evidence confirming or disproving the generally accepted story of Garrett s killing of Bonney 121 but confirmed the records existence and that they could have been produced earlier 119 In 2014 Cooper was awarded 100 000 in punitive damages but the decision was later overturned by the New Mexico Court of Appeals 123 The lawsuit ultimately cost Lincoln County nearly 300 000 121 In February 2015 historian Robert Stahl petitioned a district court in Fort Sumner asking the state of New Mexico to issue a death certificate for Bonney 105 In July 2015 Stahl filed suit in the New Mexico Supreme Court The suit asked the court to order the state s Office of the Medical Investigator to officially certify Bonney s death under New Mexico state law 124 PhotographsAs of 2021 update only one authenticated photograph showing Billy exists others thought to depict him are disputed 125 Dedrick ferrotype nbsp Unretouched original ferrotype of Billy the Kid c 1880One of the few remaining artifacts of Bonney s life is a 2 by 3 inch 5 1 by 7 6 centimeter ferrotype photograph of him attributed to photographer Ben Wittick 126 in late 1879 or early 1880 The image shows Bonney wearing a vest under a sweater a slouch hat and a bandana while holding an 1873 Winchester rifle with its butt resting on the floor For years this was the only photograph of Bonney accepted by scholars and historians 98 The original ferrotype survived because Bonney s friend Dan Dedrick kept it after the outlaw s death It was passed down through Dedrick s family and was copied several times appearing in numerous publications during the 20th century In June 2011 the original plate was bought at auction for 2 3 million by businessman William Koch 127 128 The image shows Bonney wearing his holstered Colt revolver on his left side This led to the belief that he was left handed without taking into account that the ferrotype process produces reversed images 129 In 1954 western historians James D Horan and Paul Sann wrote that Bonney was right handed and carried his pistol on his right hip 130 The opinion was confirmed by Clyde Jeavons a former curator of the National Film and Television Archive 131 Several historians have written that Bonney was ambidextrous 132 133 134 135 Croquet tintype nbsp Detail from photograph purporting to show Bonney left playing croquet in 1878A 4 by 6 inch 100 mm 150 mm ferrotype purchased at a memorabilia shop in Fresno California in 2010 has been claimed to show Bonney and members of the Regulators playing croquet If authentic it is the only known photo of Billy the Kid and the Regulators together and the only image to feature their wives and female companions 136 Collector Robert G McCubbin and outlaw historian John Boessenecker concluded in 2013 that the photograph does not show Bonney 137 Whitny Braun a professor and researcher located an advertisement for croquet sets sold at Chapman s General Store in Las Vegas New Mexico dated to June 1878 Kent Gibson a forensic video and still image expert offered the services of his facial recognition software and stated that Bonney is indeed one of the individuals in the image 138 In August 2015 Lincoln State Monument officials and the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs said that despite the new research they could not confirm that the image showed Bonney or others from the Lincoln County War era according to Monument manager Gary Cozzens A photograph curator at the Palace of the Governors archives Daniel Kosharek said the image is problematic on a lot of fronts including the small size of the figures and the lack of resemblance of the background landscape to Lincoln County or the state in general 138 Editors from the True West Magazine staff said no one in our office thinks this photo is of the Kid and the Regulators 137 In early October 2015 Kagin s Inc a numismatic authentication firm said the image was authentic after a number of experts including those associated with a recent National Geographic Channel program 139 140 examined it 141 142 Posthumous pardon requestIn 2010 New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson turned down a request for a posthumous pardon of Bonney for the murder of Sheriff William Brady The pardon was considered to fulfill Governor Lew Wallace s 1879 promise to Bonney Richardson s decision citing historical ambiguity was announced on December 31 2010 his last day in office 143 144 Grave markers nbsp Grave marker for Billy The Kid also at Fort Sumner New Mexico nbsp The PALs gravemarker for Tom O Folliard William H Bonney alias Billy the Kid and Charlie Bowdre at Fort Sumner New MexicoIn 1931 Charles W Foor an unofficial tour guide at Fort Sumner Cemetery campaigned to raise funds for a permanent marker for the graves of Bonney O Folliard and Bowdre As a result of his efforts a stone memorial marked with the names of the three men and their death dates beneath the word Pals was erected in the center of the burial area 145 In 1940 stone cutter James N Warner of Salida Colorado made and donated to the cemetery a new marker for Bonney s grave 146 It was stolen on February 8 1981 but recovered days later in Huntington Beach California New Mexico Governor Bruce King arranged for the county sheriff to fly to California to return it to Fort Sumner 147 where it was reinstalled in May 1981 Although both markers are behind iron fencing a group of vandals entered the enclosure at night in June 2012 and tipped the stone over 148 In literature and the artsMain article List of works about Billy the Kid The life and likeness of Billy the Kid have been frequently represented in comics literature film music theater radio television and video games See alsoFolklore of the United States List of Old West gunfighters List of Old West lawmenNotes Letter from Rev James B Roberts Church of St Peter New York City to Jack DeMattos March 24 1979 12 For years Wallace denied that he had agreed to the bargain with Bonney however in a newspaper article published in 1902 Wallace changed his story and said he had promised him a pardon in exchange for the testimony 63 Letter from Governor Wallace to W H Bonney March 20 1879 64 The full title of the Garrett Upson book was 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 By Pat F Garrett Sheriff of Lincoln Co N M By Whom He Was Finally Hunted Down and Captured by Killing Him 111 References Nolan Frederick 2015 The West of Billy the Kid University of Oklahoma Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 8061 4887 8 Archived from the original on September 2 2021 Retrieved July 1 2019 Rasch 1995 pp 23 35 Wallis 2007 pp 244 245 a b c Wallis 2007 p 144 Utley 1989 pp 145 146 The Old Man Who Claimed to Be Billy the Kid Atlas Obscura March 30 2017 Archived from the original on July 8 2017 Retrieved July 19 2017 Life and death of Billy the Kid The Clare Champion July 15 2010 Archived from the original on February 26 2020 Retrieved November 13 2020 Slatten Jeremiah November 2023 Sign on the Dotted Line Some truth about the mother of Billy the Kid The Tombstone Epitaph Vol CXXXXIII no 11 Tombstone AZ pp 1 8 9 ISSN 1940 221X Carson William J May 1969 What was Billy the Kid s real name Real West Magazine Transcript of Certificate of Baptism Church of St Peter Barclay Street New York This is to certify that Patrick Henry McCarthy child of Patrick and Catherine Devine born in NY on the 17 day of September 1859 was baptized on the 28 day of September 1859 according to the rite of the Roman Catholic Church by the Rev J Conron The sponsors being Thomas Cooney and Mary Clark as appears from the Baptismal Register of this Church An image of the Certificate of Baptism was published in the May 1969 issue of Real West magazine in an article entitled What was Billy the Kid s real name by William J Carson It indicates that the person s name was Patrick Henry McCarthy not Henry McCarty DeMattos 1980 Nolan 2009a pp 1 6 Rasch amp Mullin 1953 pp 1 5 Rasch 1954 pp 6 11 a b Nolan 1998 pp 15 29 Wallis 2007 p 15 Nolan 1998 pp 17 19 Nolan 2009a p 7 Nolan 2009a p 8 a b Billy The Kid Facts information and articles about Billy The Kid famous outlaw and a prominent figure from the Wild West HistoryNet com Archived from the original on January 3 2016 Retrieved January 4 2016 Grant County Herald Silver City New Mexico September 26 1875 Wallis 2007 pp 94 95 Wallis 2007 p 103 Billy the Kid State of New Mexico Archived from the original on January 26 2016 Retrieved January 6 2016 Utley 1989 pp 10 11 Wallis 2007 p 107 Utley 1989 pp 11 12 Wallis 2007 pp 110 111 Utley 1989 p 16 Radbourne Allan Rasch Philip J August 1985 The Story of Windy Cahill Real West 204 22 27 This Date in History August 17 1877 Billy the Kid kills his first man History Channel Archived from the original on March 15 2016 Retrieved January 17 2016 Wroth William H Billy the Kid New Mexico Office of the State Historian Archived from the original on January 26 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Wallis 2007 p 119 Nolan 1998 p 77 Hays Chad March 19 2013 Ma am Jones A stitch in time True West Magazine Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved February 10 2016 Wallis 2007 pp 123 131 Nolan 2009a pp 188 190 a b c Boardman Mark September 25 2010 The Tunstalls Return John Tunstall s kin traveled from England to fathom death in Lincoln True West Magazine Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Utley 1989 p 46 Nolan 2009a pp 23 55 Utley 1989 pp 48 49 Bell Bob Boze April 1 2004 I Shot the Sheriff and I Killed a Deputy Too Billy Kid and the Regulators vs Sheriff Brady and His Deputies True West Magazine Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Bell Bob Boze September 11 2015 Tunstall Ambushed Regulators vs Dolan s Henchmen True West Magazine Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 11 2016 Utley 1989 pp 56 60 Nolan 2009a pp 233 49 549 Rickards Colin The Gunfight at Blazer s Mill 1974 pp 36 37 Wroth William H Billy the Kid Archived January 26 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 9 2016 Jacobsen 1994 p 173 Nolan 1992 pp 312 313 Utley 1987 p 87 Nolan 1992 p 513 New Mexico Office of the State Historian people newmexicohistory org Archived from the original on June 29 2017 Retrieved July 19 2017 Nolan 1992 pp 322 331 Utley 1987 pp 96 111 Utley 1989 pp 104 105 107 110 Nolan 2009a pp 339 340 342 445 514 Utley 1987 p 120 Nolan 2009a pp 315 515 Utley 1987 pp 122 123 126 128 141 150 154 156 158 Utley 1987 pp 132 136 139 141 143 144 Nolan 1992 pp 375 376 378 516 517 Cooper 2017 pp 556 561 Cooper 2017 pp 563 565 Cooper 2017 p 565 Boomhower 2005 p 103 Boomhower 2005 p 104 Boomhower 2005 pp 106 107 Lifson 2009 Utley 1989 pp 111 125 Bell Bob Boze May 2 2007 The Tale of the Empty Chamber Billy the Kid vs Joe Grant True West Magazine Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved January 10 2016 Santa Fe Weekly New Mexican January 17 1880 Utley 1989 pp 131 133 145 203 249 250 Nolan 1992 pp 397 518 572 Deputy Sheriff James Carlysle The Officer Down Memorial Page ODMP Archived from the original on September 25 2020 Retrieved November 19 2020 Utley 1989 pp 143 146 179 204 Nolan 1992 pp 398 401 Metz 1974 pp 74 75 Utley 1989 pp 155 157 256 257 Utley 1989 p 147 Wallis 2007 p 240 Deputy Sheriff Antonio Lino Valdez profile The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved December 30 2019 Wallis 2007 pp 126 127 Metz 1974 pp 76 85 Utley 1989 pp 157 166 Book Review Billy the Kid s Writings Words amp Wit by Gale Cooper HistoryNet November 29 2012 Archived from the original on September 19 2015 Retrieved February 10 2016 Utley 1989 pp 145 147 Wallis 2007 pp 240 241 a b Wallis 2007 p 242 1881 Billy the Kid is shot to death History com Archived from the original on February 15 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Nolan Frederick April 28 2015 What if everything we know about Billy the Kid is wrong Special Report True West Magazine Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 12 2016 Deputy Sheriff James W Bell The Officer Down Memorial Page ODMP Archived from the original on October 23 2020 Retrieved August 14 2020 a b Utley 1989 p 181 a b Wallis 2007 pp 243 244 Deputy U S Marshal Robert Olinger The Officer Down Memorial Page ODMP Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved August 14 2020 Jacobsen 1994 p 232 Utley 1989 p 188 a b Boardman Mark May 24 2011 The Holy Grail for Sale The Billy the Kid tintype is on the auction block and it might just clear half a million True West Magazine Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Villagran Lauren December 1 2013 Is this Billy the Kid Albuquerque Journal Las Cruces Bureau Archived from the original on December 15 2016 Retrieved February 6 2016 Wallis 2007 pp 245 246 a b Wallis 2007 p 247 Frederick Nolan 2014 The Billy the Kid Reader University of Oklahoma Press p 86 ISBN 978 0806182544 Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Retrieved July 4 2021 Janofsky Michael June 5 2003 122 Years Later Lawmen Are Still Chasing Billy the Kid The New York Times p 24 Archived from the original on January 25 2019 Retrieved January 25 2019 The Death Of Billy The Kid 1881 Eyewitness to History Ibis Communications Archived from the original on February 19 2020 Retrieved February 18 2020 a b Klein Christopher February 27 2015 Historian Seeks Death Certificate to End Billy the Kid Rumors History com Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Rose Elizabeth R December 31 2012 Ft Sumner New Mexico Where Billy The Kid met his demise Santa Fe Examiner Bell Bob Boze Gardner Mark Lee August 12 2014 A Shot in the Dark Billy the Kid vs Pat Garrett True West Magazine Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 Santa Fe Daily New Mexican Newspaper Santa Fe Daily New Mexican p 4 July 21 1881 New Mexico Territorial Legislature July 18 1882 a b Utley 1989 pp 198 199 Utley 1989 p 199 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 1953221919 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wallis 2007 p xiv Field amp Stream Field amp Stream 2007 08 106 July 1981 ISSN 8755 8599 Archived from the original on November 1 2017 Retrieved July 20 2017 Texas Department of Transportation Texas State Travel Guide 2008 pp 200 201 a b Miller Michael E July 21 2015 One man s quest to bury the Wild West mystery of Billy the Kid s death The Washington Post Archived from the original on December 23 2015 Retrieved December 25 2015 A family Bible put his age in 1881 at just 2 years old far too young for even a criminal nicknamed the Kid Banks Leo W A New Billy the Kid Tucson Weekly Archived from the original on June 16 2009 Retrieved August 4 2008 Associated Press October 24 2006 2 won t face charges in Billy the Kid quest Archived February 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine Deseret News Retrieved August 29 2008 a b c Burns James T April 28 2012 Billy the Kid and New Mexico Open Records Law Albuquerque Business Law Archived from the original on December 26 2015 Retrieved December 25 2015 Miller Patrick March 18 2004 Shootout over Billy the Kid The Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved December 13 2015 a b c Villagran Lauren May 20 2014 Award ends suit over Billy the Kid records Albuquerque Journal Archived from the original on August 19 2017 Retrieved December 25 2015 Associated Press August 28 2008 Lawsuit seeks DNA evidence for 1881 death of Billy the Kid Archived August 19 2017 at the Wayback Machine Fox News Channel Retrieved August 29 2008 Billy the Kid quest evolves into records fight Archived from the original on August 19 2017 Retrieved August 18 2017 via PressReader Constable Anne July 17 2015 Historian asks state s high court to help set record straight on Billy the Kid s death The Santa Fe New Mexican Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved December 14 2015 Flea market photo shows Billy the Kid BBC News November 22 2017 Archived from the original on November 22 2017 Retrieved November 23 2017 Staff Four Views of Walpi Bowers Museum Archived from the original on July 3 2022 Retrieved March 21 2024 Tripp Leslie June 26 2011 Billy the Kid photograph fetches 2 3 million at auction CNN Archived from the original on July 6 2015 Retrieved July 4 2015 Billy the Kid portrait fetches 2 3m at Denver auction BBC News US amp Canada June 26 2011 Archived from the original on February 29 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 Adetunji Jo June 26 2011 Billy the Kid photograph sold at auction in Colorado for 2 3m The Guardian Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved December 28 2015 Horan James D and Sann Paul Pictorial History of the Wild West New York Crown Publishers Inc 1954 p 57 Mayes Ian March 3 2001 I kid you not The Guardian Archived from the original on March 12 2014 Retrieved June 19 2009 Gardner Mark Lee To Hell on a Fast Horse The Untold Story of Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett 2011 pp 91 277 Nolan 1998 p 29 Wallis 2007 p 83 Goode Stephen June 10 2007 The fact and fiction of America s outlaw The Washington Times Archived from the original on June 20 2009 Retrieved December 25 2015 Billy loved to sing and had a good voice those who knew him claimed He was ambidextrous and wrote well with both hands Constable Anne August 24 2015 Billy the Kid A fan of croquet The New Mexican Archived from the original on May 8 2020 Retrieved December 10 2017 a b Billy the Kid Experts Weigh in on the Croquet Photo True West Magazine October 14 2015 Archived from the original on March 1 2016 Retrieved February 3 2016 a b Constable Anne August 24 2015 Billy the Kid A fan of croquet Santa Fe New Mexican Archived from the original on May 8 2020 Retrieved September 23 2015 Guijarro Randy October 18 2015 Billy the Kid New Evidence Found Photograph National Geographic Archived from the original on December 14 2017 Retrieved December 10 2017 Billy the Kid New Evidence National Geographic October 18 2015 Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved December 10 2017 Booker Brakkton October 15 2015 2 Photo Found at Junk Store Has Billy The Kid in It Could Be Worth 5M NPR Archived from the original on January 26 2016 Retrieved January 25 2016 Carroll Rory October 19 2015 Man who discovered rare Billy the Kid photo The hunt is a really grand thing The Guardian Archived from the original on October 28 2015 Retrieved October 27 2015 No pardon for Billy the Kid CNN December 31 2010 Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved December 31 2010 An Outlaw by Any Name Billy the Kid The New York Times July 14 2016 Archived from the original on January 29 2017 Simmons 2006 pp 161 163 Simmons 2006 pp 164 165 Billy the Kid s Elusive Tombstone Old Fort Sumner and Billy the Kid s Grave Cemeteries of tx com Archived from the original on May 27 2016 Retrieved February 9 2016 Lohr David June 30 2012 Billy the Kid tombstone in New Mexico vandalized The Huffington Post Archived from the original on July 4 2012 Retrieved March 21 2013 Sources Adams Ramon F 1960 A Fitting Death for Billy the Kid Norman University of Oklahoma Press OCLC 8937525 Boomhower Ray E 2005 The Sword and the Pen Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press p 103 ISBN 0 87195 185 1 Burns Walter 2014 The Saga of Billy the Kid The Thrilling Life of America s Original Outlaw Garden City New York Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 63220 112 6 OCLC 894170041 Retrieved May 12 2016 Coe George W 1934 Frontier Fighter The Autobiography of George W Coe Who Fought and Rode with Billy the Kid as Related to Nan Hillary Harrison Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 692143776 Archived from the original on June 13 2019 Retrieved August 29 2016 Cooper Gale 2017 The Lost Pardon of Billy the Kid An Analysis Factoring in the Santa Fe Ring Governor Lew Wallace s Dilemma and a Territory in Rebellion Albuquerque New Mexico Gelcour Books ISBN 978 0986070723 DeMattos Jack November 1978 The Search for Billy the Kid s Roots Real West No 160 Real West DeMattos Jack January 1980 The Search for Billy the Kid s Roots Is Over Real West No 167 Real West DeMattos Jack August 1983 Gunfighters of the Real West Henry McCarty Alias Billy the Kid Real West No 192 Real West Dworkin Mark J 2015 American Mythmaker Walter Noble Burns and the Legends of Billy the Kid Wyatt Earp and Joaquin Murrieta Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 4902 8 Archived from the original on June 12 2019 Retrieved June 13 2016 Dykes Jefferson 1952 Billy the Kid The Bibliography of a Legend Albuquerque The University of New Mexico Press Archived from the original on June 9 2019 Retrieved August 29 2016 Earle James H 1988 The Capture of Billy the Kid College Station Texas Creative Publishing Co ISBN 0 932702 44 9 OCLC 18052460 Edwards Harold L 1995 Goodbye Billy the Kid College Station Texas Creative Publishing Co ISBN 1 57208 000 0 OCLC 33335740 Fable Edmund Jr 1980 1881 The True Life of Billy the Kid The Noted New Mexican Outlaw College Station Texas Creative Publishing Co ISBN 0 932702 11 2 OCLC 6487191 Fulton Maurice Garland 1968 Robert N Nullin ed History of the Lincoln County War Tucson University of Arizona Press OCLC 437868 Gardner Mark Lee 2010 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 ISBN 978 0 06 136827 1 OCLC 419859633 Garrett Pat F 1882 The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid 1st ed Santa Fe New Mexican Printing and Publishing Co OCLC 748293298 Hough Emerson September 1901 Billy the Kid The True Story of a Western Bad Man Everybody s Magazine New York The Ridgeway Company Archived from the original on September 2 2021 Retrieved August 28 2016 Hunt Frazier 2009 1956 The Tragic Days of Billy the Kid Santa Fe New Mexico Sunstone Press ISBN 978 0 86534 717 5 OCLC 316327276 Archived from the original on December 23 2016 Retrieved November 21 2017 Jacobsen Joel 1994 Such Men as Billy the Kid The Lincoln County War Reconsidered Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 2576 3 OCLC 29429457 Keleher William Aloysius 2007 1957 Violence in Lincoln County 1869 1881 Santa Fe New Mexico Sunstone Press ISBN 978 0 86534 622 2 OCLC 182573474 Klasner Lily Chisum John Simpson Ball Eve 1972 My Girlhood Among Outlaws Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0 8165 0354 4 OCLC 166482848 Koop Waldo E 1964 Billy the Kid The Trail of a Kansas Legend Kansas City Posse of Westerners IX 3 Lifson Amy 2009 Ben Hur Humanities Vol 30 no 6 Washington D C National Endowment for the Humanities Archived from the original on March 5 2012 Retrieved August 27 2014 McCubbin Robert G May 2007 The Many Faces of Billy the Kid True West True West Metz Leon C August 1983 My Search for Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid True West True West Metz Leon C 1983 1974 Pat Garrett The Story of a Western Lawman reprint revised ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 1838 3 OCLC 18722891 Nolan Frederick W 2009a The Life and Death of John Henry Tunstall Santa Fe New Mexico Sunstone Press ISBN 978 0 86534 722 9 OCLC 440562959 Nolan Frederick W 2009 1992 The Lincoln County War A Documentary History revised ed Santa Fe New Mexico Sunstone Press ISBN 978 0 86534 721 2 OCLC 319064671 Archived from the original on June 11 2019 Retrieved May 12 2016 Nolan Frederick W 1992 The Lincoln County War A Documentary History Norman University of Oklahoma Press Nolan Frederick W June 2003 The Hunting of Billy the Kid Wild West Wild West Nolan Frederick W 1998 The West of Billy the Kid Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 3082 2 Nolan Frederick W July 2000 The Private Life of Billy the Kid True West True West Nolan Frederick W 2007 The Billy the Kid Reader Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 8446 3 Otero Miguel 2006 1936 The Real Billy the Kid With New Light on the Lincoln County War New York Sunstone Press ISBN 978 1 61139 100 8 Poe John William 2006 1933 The Death of Billy the Kid reprint ed Santa Fe Sunstone Press Company ISBN 978 0 86534 532 4 Radbourne Allan Rasch Phillip J August 1985 The Story of Windy Cahill Real West No 204 Real West Rasch Philip J Mullin Robert N 1953 New Light on the Legend of Billy the Kid New Mexico Folklore Record 7 Rasch Philip J 1954 Dim Trails The Pursuit of the McCarty Family New Mexico Folklore Record 8 Rasch Philip J 1955 The Twenty One Men He Put Bullets Through New Mexico Folklore Record 9 Rasch Philip J January 1969 A Second Look at the Blazer s Mill Affair Frontier Times Rasch Philip J November 1987 The Trials of Billy the Kid Real West No 216 Real West Rasch Philip J 1995 Trailing Billy the Kid Stillwater Oklahoma Western Publications ISBN 978 0 935269 19 2 Rasch Philip J 1997 Gunsmoke in Lincoln County Stillwater Oklahoma Western Publications ISBN 978 0 935269 24 6 Rasch Philip J 1998 Warriors of Lincoln County Stillwater Oklahoma Western Publications ISBN 978 0 935269 26 0 Rickards Colin W 1974 The Gunfight at Blazer s Mill Southwestern Studies Monograph No 40 El Paso Texas Western Press Simmons Mark 2006 Stalking Billy the Kid Brief Sketches of a Short Life Sunstone Press ISBN 0 86534 525 2 Turk David S February 2007 Billy the Kid and the U S Marshals Service Wild West Magazine Archived from the original on August 17 2018 Retrieved November 2 2017 Tuska Jon 1983 Billy the Kid A Handbook Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 9406 9 Utley Robert M 1987 High Noon in Lincoln Violence on the Western Frontier Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 1201 3 OCLC 15629305 Retrieved May 12 2016 Utley Robert M 1989 Billy the Kid A Short and Violent Life Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 9558 2 OCLC 37868038 Archived from the original on June 11 2019 Retrieved May 12 2016 Wallis Michael 2007 Billy the Kid The Endless Ride New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0 393 06068 3 OCLC 77270750 Retrieved November 21 2017 External linksBilly the Kid Territory guide by New Mexico Tourism Department Letter 15 March 1879 Lew Wallace to W H Bonney at the Indiana Historical Society Indianapolis Letter 20 March 1879 W H Bonney to Lew Wallace at the Indiana Historical Society Indianapolis Portals nbsp Art nbsp Biography nbsp Film nbsp Music nbsp New York City nbsp Radio nbsp TelevisionBilly the Kid at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Billy the Kid amp oldid 1214790011, 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.