Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Aug 29, 2024 · Discover the wild life and times of the Old West's most famous sheriffs, including Pat Garrett, The Three Guardsmen, John Coffee Hays and more.

    • Wyatt Earp. Wyatt Earp (1848-1929) was an American lawman and gunfighter who helped shape the history of the American West. He was a buffalo hunter and a teamster in Illinois before becoming a cop.
    • Wild Bill Hickok. Wild Bill Hickok, born James Butler Hickok, was an Old West lawman, gunfighter, and gambler. He was born in Illinois in 1837 and grew up in a farming family.
    • Bat Masterson. Bat Masterson was a famed Old West lawman, buffalo hunter, and gambler. He was born in Canada in 1853 but grew up in the American West. Masterson was a flamboyant character known for his elegant attire, attractive appearance, and quick wit.
    • Bill Tilghman. Bill Tilghman was an Old West lawman, gunfighter, and politician. He was born in Missouri in 1854 and grew up in Kansas. Before becoming a politician, Tilghman worked as a buffalo hunter, soldier, and lawman.
  2. This is a list of Old West lawmen: notable people who served in various law enforcement positions during the Old West period. 1851–?

    Name
    Life
    Years Active
    Comments
    1830–1878
    1864–1878
    Sheriff, Santa Clara County, California, ...
    1832–1886
    1883–1886
    Territorial Marshal, Tucson, Arizona ...
    1849–1922
    1888–1893
    Sheriff, Johnson County, Wyoming
    1865–1945
    1884–1890
    New Mexico
    • ‘Longhair Jim’ Courtright. In addition to his untamed locks, Timothy Isaiah “Longhair Jim” Courtright was known for his skill as a gunman, performing at one time as part of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show.
    • Frank M. Canton. Frank Canton was jailed in 1877, under his birth name of Josiah Horner, for robbing a bank in Comanche, Texas, but soon escaped and signed on as a cattle herder, working his way to Nebraska.
    • Henry Newton Brown. Henry Newton Brown was a classic example of a poacher-turned-gamekeeper. He had once ridden with Billy the Kid, and they ambushed and murdered a sheriff in New Mexico in 1878.
    • John Armstrong. John Barclay Armstrong moved to Austin, Texas, in 1871. He joined the Texas Rangers in 1875 and took part in the Las Cuevas War. Armstrong was a member of Captain Leander McNelly’s Special Forces, which, like all special forces, operated on a “Shoot now; ask questions later” policy.
  3. In the American West, 1881 was an eventful year for lawmen and outlaws. Billy the Kid, charged with more than 21 murders in a brief lifetime of crime, is finally brought to justice by Sheriff Pat Garrett, who trails The Kid for more than six months before killing him with a single shot at Fort Sumner, New Mexico.

  4. Oct 29, 2019 · In late summer 1869, James Butler Hickok, better known as "Wild Bill," was elected sheriff of Ellis County, KS, by a population desperate to quell ongoing mayhem. Hickock's tactics for keeping peace proved too aggressive for the Kansans.

  5. People also ask

  6. Mar 26, 2024 · In this article, I will talk about some of the most famous Black outlaws, lawmen, and cowboys of the old wild west.

  1. People also search for