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John Wesley
Hardin Fugitive From Injustice By: Gary Yarbrough
If one were to take a poll and ask the average
American to name a few of the the most notorious Old West
gunfighters, most would name Wild Bill Hickok, Wyatt Earp or
Billy the Kid. Occasionally one may hear Clay Allison, Doc
Holliday or even Johnny Ringo. But rarely will John Wesley
Hardin, the deadliest and most successful gunfighter of them
all, be mentioned.
The reasons Wes Hardin's name is less familiar
to most of us today is because Wes was unabashedly politically
incorrect. The spin doctors, therefore, relegated Wes to the
Orwellian "memory hole" and opted to extol other less
qualified characters as the preeminent gunfighters of Old West
fame, notably, Wild Bill Hickok and Wyatt Earp.
James Butler Hickok, a.k.a. Wild Bill, in
available published accounts is credited with no more than
fifteen kills. Of that number more than a few were unarmed
men. The first three men Hickok killed were unarmed men. The
first man was was shot and killed through a curtain partition
because Hickok was terrified to face him. He had tormented
Hickok for months about his feminine features and called
Hickok an hermaphrodite on numerous occasions.
Wyatt Earp killed less than ten men. Contrary to
Hollywood's version of the Wyatt Earp saga, there is only one
body in Dodge City's Boothill Cemetary that is attributed to
Wyatt Earp's six-gun. Earp was a con man and a horse theif,
running a protection racket in the town where he was sherrif.
There was evidence to suggest that the Earps and Doc Holliday
were the actual stagecoach robbers in Tombstone, Az. Earp was
convicted of claim-jumping in Eagle City, Idaho in 1880 and
later arrested in Los Angeles for fleecing J. Y. Patterson out
of $25,000 in a bunko scam.
The total body count of Hickok, Earp and Billy
the Kid combined do not top John Wesley Hardin's confirmed
forty-two kills. Contrary to the historical revisionists'
claim that "John Wesley Hardin was so mean, he once shot a man
just for snoring," Hardin stated, "I never killed a man
wantonly or in cold blood." Neither Hickok nor Earp could make
that claim! In defense of this accusation Wes Hardin warned,
"It is never wise to accept the word of a stranger or the
newspapers."
So, who was John Wesley Hardin? And why has he
been vilified, black-balled and slighted?
John Wesley Hardin was a rebel with a cause, a
valiant defender of the South and a hero of the White race.
The second son of James G. Hardin, a teacher and curcuit
riding Methodist preacher, John's mother, Elizabeth, was also
a teacher. And yet his detractors claim that Wes Hardin was
illiterate!
John Wesley was born on May 26, 1853 in Bonham,
Fannin Co., Texas and named after the founder of the Methodist
Church. His grandfather, Benjamin Hardin, was a member of the
Texas Congress before the first Union. John Wesley's great
uncle, Augustine Hardin, was a signer of the Texas Declaration
of Independence. Hardin County, Texas is named after another
great uncle, Judge William Hardin. The Hardin family was as
big as Texas and prominent in Texan history.
Wes Hardin's first brush with the law came when
he was only fourteen. A school-house bully by the name of
Charles Slotter had sullied the name of a girl Wes was sweet
on, by writing disparaging remarks about her on the wall of
the outhouse and blaming Wes for the deed. When Wes confronted
the culprit, a fight ensued. The bully was severely stabbed
with a knife. Wes was arrested, charged, tried and acquitted
of this incident. The judge and jury praised Wes and clained
the bully got what he had coming to him.
In contrast to Hardin, who respected women,
Hickok once kicked a woman in the face because she jilted him.
Phil Coe, a Texan who witnessed the deed, soundly beat Hickok
to a bloody pulp and was later murdered by Hickok in the
streets of Abilene.
Wes Hardin killed his first man at the age of
fifteen. A huge ex slave named Mage touted that he could whip
any two White men in a wrestling match. When beaten by Joe and
Wes Hardin, Mage became vengeful and stated he would kill Wes
when he saw him again; Wes went home and armed himself. On the
following day Wes was confronted by Mage on the road. Mage was
carrying a club and tried to pull Wes from his horse. When the
horse shied and reared, Wes shot Mage twice. Incredibly, the
huge negro continued to grab for Wes. Four shots later Mage
still did not go down, but Wes was able to ride away and
return with help for the injured assailant. Mage survived for
two days and claimed that Wes was a liar and had murdered him.
This incident of November 1868 was during the
Reconstruction Era following the Civil War. For a White man to
be tried anywhere in the South for the death of a Black man
meant certain conviction and a sentance to prison or hanging.
Wes Hardin understood the reality, stating, "All the courts
were then conducted by bureau agents and renegades who were
the inverterate enemies of the South and administered a code
of justice to suit every case in gross injustice to Southern
people. To be tried at that time for killing a Negro meant
certain death at the hands of a court backed by Northern
bayonettes. Thus, willingly, I became a fugitive, not from
justice, be it known, but from injustice and misrule of the
people who had subjugated the South."
Hardin's father had this to say in a letter to
one Charles Morgan, "Not until the courts of Texas are again
halls of true and impartial justice will I encourage my son to
stand himself before their judgement."
Thus began John Wesley Hardin's career as an
outlaw and a gunfighter. By Wes Hardin's reasoning, if the
Yankees' rule was to be the law in Texas, then his only choice
was to be an outlaw.
Texas was occupied by Union soldiers and the
State Police were appointed by Governer Edmund Davis, himself
an appointee of the Northern aggressors. The State Police was
composede of carpetbaggers and scalawags from the North, half
the force consisted of freed Negroes. According to Wes,
"Instead of protecting life, liberty and property, they
frequently destroyed it." Wes made a vow to never be taken at
the point of a gun.
After the death of the Negro Mage, a posse of
three Union soldiers spotted Wes and gave chase. Wes outran
them and set up a hasty ambush. When the soldiers entered the
trap Wes killed two of them point blan with a shotgun; the
third, a Negro, fled on horseback. Wes chased him and jokingly
demanded, "Halt, in the name of the Confederacy!" The Negro
snapped a shot at Wes and died for his effort.
John Wesley Hardin had no respect for and gave
no quarter to anyone seeking his arrest. Of the forty-two
confirmed kills attributed to Wes, more than half served law
enforcement capacity: soldiers, posse members, State Police,
Texas Rangers and Pinkerton detectives. Seven of those were
Negroes. Wes killed two other Negroes, a rapist and a rioter,
two Indians and seven Mexicans. Five of the Mexicans he killed
at one time, on horseback, in a charge that Quantrell's
Raiders would have envied.
Following the deaths of Mage and the three man
posse, Wes Hardin tried to avoid any more bloodshed and went
to live with relatives in Navarro Co., Texas.. There he taught
school until he was informed that the authorities were
notified of his whereabouts. Again, seeking to avoid trouble
and his arrest, Wes joined friends on a cattle drive up the
Chisholm Trail to its northern most point, Abilene, Kansas,
where the marshall was none other than the legendary "Wild
Bill" Hickok. Hickok was widely known for his hatred and
mistreatment of Texans, however, Wes intended to make his
acquaintance. News of Hardin's arrival preceded him up the
Chisholm Trail. It was on this drive that Wes killed the five
Mexicans at the Arkansas River crossing. Word of this incident
worried Hickok, as it takes a bit of skill to kill five men in
open, armed combat. When the two gunfighters eventually
crossed paths in an Abilene saloon Hardin tried to goad Hickok
into a gun fight by telling him that he heard that Wild Bill
was a "Texan-hating Yankee son-of-a-bitch" and that the world
would be better off without him, adding that Wild Bill
"preferred killing Texans to Mexicans and Niggers." Hickok,
aware of Hardin's intent. responded saying, "Folks will
believe what they want to believe" and offered to buy Hardin a
drink.
The ordinance banning the wearing of firearms
within city limits was not strictly enforced. The law was
applied arbitrarily as a means to levy and collect fines from
people who could be intimidated into doing so. Over a few
left-handed drinks Bill and Wes became friendly toward one
another, as much as two gun-slingers could be friends, anyway.
Hardin's cousin Joe Clements had been arrested
by one of Hickoks deputies and Wes asked Hickok to release
him. Hickok said he would. Before retiring for the evening
Hickok asked Wes to help keep the rowdy Texas cattle hands in
line while they were in Abilene; to this Wes agreed. But when
Hickok said, "You might also do me a favor by not wearing them
guns in town," Hardin turned and walked away.
The following day while making his rounds,
Hickok approached the Bull's Head Saloon, the Texans' favorite
hang-out. Hickok noticed a cowboy amble inside.. A moment
later Hardin walked out, dressed to the nines amd packing twin
.44 caliber Colts on his hips. The windows and doors of the
saloon immediately filled with grinning Texan faces. Hickok,
also dressed to the nines, hailed Hardin a little distance
from the saloon. "I thought we had an understanding about them
pistols, Little Arkansas?" Little Arkansas was the nick name
given to Wes after he killed the five Mexicans at the river
crossing. Hickoks deputy moved behind Wes, levelling a
double-barrel shotgun at Wes's back. Hardin remarked that he
was on his way out of town. Appeased, Hickok turned to leave.
A loud rebel yell erupted from the Bull's Head Saloon.
Startled, Hickok swung around and pulled a Navy Colt. Hardin,
distracted by the yell also, looked back at Hickok to find
himself looking into the barrel of a gun. Hickok told Hardin
to hand over his guns butt first. Wes drew his guns and held
them out butt first, but placed his index finged in both
trigger guards and rolled and cocked his pistols in a flash
and stuck them in Hickok's face. A roar of cheers came from
the Bull's Head patrons, as hardin told Hickok to drop the
Navy Colt. Naturally, Hickok refused. The two gunfighters were
in a Mexican stand-off. Hickok told Hardin to holster his guns
and leave town. Wes told Hickok he was not going to allow
Hickok to shoot him in the back. Hickok put his gun away. The
Texans yelled for Hardin to "Kill the son-of-a-bitch!" But
Hardin holstered his guns and calmly walked away. This
occurred in November 1871 when John Wesley Hardin was only 18
years old. Hickok would later become an alcholic and opium
addict, going blind from gonorrhea.
In August of 1872 Wes killed a police officer
and wounded another after an attempt to arrest Wes for the
reward money offered on him. One year later, Sheriff Charles
Webb tried to back shoot Wes after offering to buy Wes a
drink.. When Wes turned to enter the saloon, Webb pulled his
gun and fired one round which grazed Hardin's ribs. Hardin
spun and killed Webb.
The decade of the 1870's was a time of great
turbulence and violence in the Southwest and especially in
Texas. Under Reconstruction law, Yankee, Negro and mob rule
plagued the land. John Wesley and friends openly opposed
Negro, mob rule and tyranny in general. Wes later wrote, "In
putting down Negro rule in Gonzales I made many friends, and
made it a thing of the past for a Negro to hold office in that
county." Jack Helms was sheriff of DeWitt and Gonzales
counties in 1873. He was, also, a captain of a vigilante mob.
Before killing Helms, Wes told him, "You have made life,
liberty and property uncertain. You have been killing men long
enough. I know you belong to a legalized band of murdering
cowards, and have hung and murdered better men than yourself."
Eventually a mob took Hardin's family and
relatives hostage, including his wife, Jane, and a newborn
daughter, Molly, forcing Wes to leave Texas. He fled to
Florida, where he was later reunited with Jane, who gave birth
to their second child, John W. Hardin Jr.
In 1874 Hardin's brother Joe, a lawyer, was
lynched by a mob. Their parents and his younger brother,
Jefferson Davis Hardin, moved to Navarro County, Texas. Wes
was eventually captured in Florida in 1878, ten years after
the killing of the Negro Mage. He was extradited to Gonzales,
Texas to stand trial for killing the back-shooting sheriff,
Charles Webb. At that time in Texas a man accused of murder
could not testify on his own behalf. Hardin's witnesses were
either dead or wanted themselves by the authorities. The best
defense Wes had was a witness for the prosecution who
testified that Webb had fired first, then fired again just as
Hardin's bullet struck him. It was not known if Wes had
actually killed Webb, since others had riddled Webb with
bullets as he fell to the boardwalk.
The presiding judge was prejudiced because
John's older brother Joe had beaten him in a land dispute
years before. Five of the jurors were participants in the mob
lynching of Joe Hardin. Wes was sentenced to twenty-five years
in prison, he was twenty-six years old.
In the Texas State Prison at Huntsville John
Wesley read constantly. Between escape attempts,
bull-whippings and isolation, Wes studied algebra, geometry,
history and theology. Since prison informants and a ball and
chain made it impossible to escape, Wes became a model
prisoner. He was superintendant of Sunday school and president
of the debating society. Wes became interested in and studied
law. After fifteen years, nine months and twelve days John
Wesley Hardin was pardoned. He passed the Texas State Bar exam
and opened a law office in El Paso, Texas. His devoted wife
died one year prior to his release from prison.
Wes was murdered on August 19, 1895 by Sheriff
John Selman, who walked into the Acme Saloon and shot Wes in
the back of the head as he was rolling dice. Selman was
charged with murder but acquitted and he resumed his duties as
an officer of the law. Ironically, several months later Selman
was killed in a gunfight with a United States Deputy Marshal.
John Wesley Hardin's record and character must
not be black-balled and slighted in truth. He was just an
honest man in an unjust and corrupted land. Though Hardin was
an outlaw rebel, he never stole a penny in his life, nor
wronged anyone who was not trying to wrong him. It is not
difficult to understand why Hardin's true life story is
suppressed, however, nor why Hickok and Earps stories have
been romanticized and exaggerated. Both were Northerners from
Illinois. Both were loyal to the Union and both were officers
of the "law," which was corrupt and unjust. The truth is, the
North must have been hard-pressed for heroes to glorify these
two contemptible wretches.
John Wesley Hardin was a patriot and the king of
pistoleers, a true Aryan hero. In his own words: "I was
always a very child of nature, her ways and moods were my
study. The man who does not exercise the first law of nature-
that of self-preservation- is not worthy of living and
breathing the breath of life."
Quotes from "The Life of John Wesley Hardin" as
written by himself, University of Oklahoma Press, Morman, OK
1961.
*******Gary Yarbrough has not consented for any information about him or any so-called writings to be placed on this website or any other. Gary Yarbrough has no access to the internet; therefore, he has no control over what is placed on various websites about him. Gary does NOT promote any kind of organization or gathering.
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