Barber–Mizell feud

Barber–Mizell feud
Date 1870
Location Brevard and Orange counties in Florida
Causes boundary dispute, cattle taxation, resentment over Reconstruction
Parties to the civil conflict
Barber family, Yates family
Mizell family, Overstreet family
Lead figures
Mose Barber, Needham Yates
Sheriff David Mizell, Judge John Mizell, Henry Overstreet
Casualties
Death(s) 41
Arrested 10
Detained 0

The Barber–Mizell feud was a feud in Brevard and Orange counties, Florida in 1870 resulting in 41 deaths and no criminal convictions that arose when cattle baron Mose Barber disputed the jurisdiction of Orange County Sheriff and tax collector David Mizell over his land. When Mizell rode to collect taxes from Barber, he was waylaid and killed. Orange County, where the feud took place, used to be made up of open ranges and was still part of the American frontier; thus making the conflict a range war.[1] In the resultant feud, 41 men were killed.[2] [3] [4]

Feud-related deaths

These feud-related deaths were enumerated in the 1870 Mortality schedule of Orange County, Florida:

Further reading

External links

References

  1. Wilbanks, Williams. Forgotten Heroes: Police Officers Killed in Early Florida, 1840-1925. Turner Publishing; Limited edition (June 15, 1998). p. 17. ISBN 978-1563114076.
  2. Eriksen, John M., Brevard County... A Short History to 1955
  3. "The Barber-Mizell Feud". freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2014-02-25.
  4. "Barber/Mizell Feud". kidwell.org. Retrieved 2014-02-25.
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