Bill Longley (gunfighter)
Bill Longley | |
---|---|
Born |
William Preston Longley October 6, 1851 Austin County, Texas |
Died |
October 11, 1878 27) Giddings, Texas | (aged
Nationality | American |
Other names | Wild Bill |
Criminal penalty | Death by hanging |
Criminal status | Deceased |
Parent(s) | Campbell and Sarah Longley |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
William Preston Longley (October 6, 1851 – October 11, 1878), also known as Wild Bill Longley, was an American Old West outlaw and gunfighter noted for his ruthless nature, racist beliefs, speed with a gun, quick temper, and unpredictable demeanor. He is considered one of the deadliest gunfighters in the Old West.
Early life
Bill Longley was born on Mill Creek in Austin County, Texas the sixth of ten children of Campbell and Sarah Longley. His family moved when he was two years old and he was raised on a farm near Old Evergreen, Texas, in present-day Lincoln, Lee County, Texas, where he spent a large part of his childhood learning to shoot.[1] He received an average education for the time. He was six feet (183 cm) tall with a thin build, jet black hair, and was just reaching adulthood when the American Civil War ended in 1865.
By 1867 Texas was fully under the control of the Union due to the Reconstruction Act. The military acted in all capacities, including law enforcement, which caused considerable resentment throughout the state. Around this time, Longley dropped out of school and began living a wild life, drinking, and running in the company of others of a similar disposition.[2]
First murders in Texas
In 1867 the Longley family farm was just one mile from the Camino Real, an old Spanish royal highway that joined San Antonio and Nacogdoches, Texas.
In mid-December 1868, three former slaves named Green Evans, Pryer Evans, and the third known only as Ned, rode through Evergreen, intending evidently to visit friends further south for Christmas. Longley, accompanied by a couple of friends, forced the three men at gunpoint into a dry creek bed. Green Evans panicked and spurred his horse to escape. Longley shot at him several times, killing him.
They then began going through the dead man's pockets, as the other two men rode away to escape. Later, although given sole responsibility for the murder, Longley claimed that he was not the only one shooting; Longley's account of this murder differs from that of his later killings, where he was more inclined to brag about shooting men than to try to divert blame to others. Some versions of Green's killing claim he was a member of the Texas State Police; the TSP only existed from 1870 to 1873.
Longley drifted around Texas for a time, and while gambling in saloons he became acquainted with noted gambler Phil Coe[3] In 1869 Longley and his brother-in-law, John Wilson embarked on a crime spree through southern Texas. Together they robbed settlers and in one instance killed a freed slave named Paul Brice in Bastrop County, Texas, after which they stole his horses. They also reportedly killed a freed slave woman in Evergreen.
In March 1870, a $1,000 reward for their capture was offered by the Union military authority. Longley later claimed that Wilson was killed by outlaws in 1870 in Brazos County, Texas, although contrary evidence suggests he was killed in 1874, in Falls County, Texas.
U.S. Cavalry career
Longley left Texas and moved north to avoid the authorities, and by May 1870 he had joined a gold hunting party in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
The gold mining party travelled into the Black Hills of South Dakota, but a treaty with the Sioux prohibited mining, and the party disbanded when intercepted by a U.S. cavalry unit. On June 22, 1870, Longley enlisted for a five-year commitment in the army, joining Company B of the U.S. 2nd Cavalry Regiment. His unit was stationed at Camp Stambaugh. He deserted two weeks later, as he was unable to adapt to the strict lifestyle, but was captured and court-martialed. He was sentenced to two years hard labour, strapped to a ball and chain, and imprisoned at Camp Stambaugh. He was held for four months and then released to return to his unit. His marksmanship skills were noticed, and he was assigned to the regular hunting parties leaving the post. He deserted again in May 1872.
Return to Texas and further murders
Longley's travels for the rest of 1872 remain mysterious, but by February 1873 he had returned to Texas, where he was accused of murdering another freedman in Bastrop County. He then returned to live with his father's family, which had moved to Bell County. In the summer of that year, Mason County, Texas, Sheriff J. J. Finney arrested Longley for murder and brought him to Austin to collect a reward. However, when the federal military reward was not forthcoming from state officials, Finney released Longley, possibly in exchange for a bribe from Longley's uncle Alexander "Pres" Preston Longley of California.
On March 31, 1875, Longley shot his childhood friend Wilson Anderson dead with a shotgun. The murder was alleged to have been instigated by Longley's uncle Caleb B. Longley, who had blamed Anderson for the death of his son Cale and urged Longley to take revenge. Longley then fled northward, accompanied by his brother James Stockton Longley, who was later tried and acquitted of Anderson's murder. A new reward was posted for Longley's capture.
Under increasing pressure from law enforcement, Longley fled from place to place and used several aliases to avoid arrest. He briefly found work on a cotton farm, but he was forced to run again in November 1875, after murdering a hunting buddy named George Thomas with whom he had had a fistfight.
Longley committed another killing in Uvalde County in January 1876, when his attempted ambush of fellow outlaw Lou Shroyer turned into a gunfight. Shroyer shot Longley's horse from under him, but Longley shot Shroyer dead. This is the only known case in Longley's career where one of his victims returned fire.
Fleeing again, Longley went to east Texas and became a sharecropper for preacher, William R. Lay. Stability eluded him again, however, when Longley became rivals with Lay's nephew for the affections of a young woman. Longley beat his rival up, was subsequently jailed, and escaped. Longley blamed Lay for his brief imprisonment. On June 13, 1876, Longley rode out to his landlord's farm, found him milking a cow, and murdered him with a shotgun. Lay would be the last man known to be killed by Longley.
Longley then possibly went to Grayson County, where two of his friends, Jim and Dick Sanders, were in jail. Longley broke them out, and the trio escaped, disarming deputy Matt Shelton when he tried to arrest them. Approximately one year later, deputy Matt Shelton confirmed this encounter. Longley then fled to Louisiana.
Capture and execution
On June 6, 1877, Longley was surrounded and arrested without incident by Nacogdoches County Sheriff Milt Mast and two deputies, while he was residing in De Soto Parish, Louisiana, under the alias "Bill Jackson". He was returned to Texas, tried in the Lee County Court, and sentenced to hang for the murder of Wilson Anderson. His appeal was denied in March 1878. On October 11, 1878, Longley was executed by hanging in Giddings, Texas, only a few miles from his birthplace of Evergreen. His grave and a state historical marker are in Giddings City Cemetery.
He claimed to have killed thirty-two people,[4] mostly of Hispanic and African American heritage. Although often referred to as a "gunfighter", most of Longley's victims were unarmed, and he killed several in the course of committing a robbery.
Legend, hoaxes, and tall tales
Death hoax
Years after the execution, Longley's father, Campbell, came forward in a press release stating that his son had not been executed. He claimed that a wealthy relative in California bribed the lawmen with $4,000, prompting them to rig a trick rope. They then staged the hanging and whisked the body away. The family even came up with alleged letters said to have been written by Longley from California. The legend spread, and many believed it for quite some time.
This prompted many historians to investigate. Finally, after confirming the gravesite of Longley, an exhumation of the human remains was performed. They were taken to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D. C., where DNA tests were performed, along with a skull reconstruction. In June 2001, it was officially reported that the remains from the gravesite were indeed those of Bill Longley.[5]
Unverified claims
Numerous myths and legends have grown up about Longley that cannot be verified by any contemporary source. Many of these legends trace back to tall tales that Longley himself told while imprisoned in Giddings in 1877. Some of these stories are provably false, while others could be true but lack any contemporary corroborating evidence. Longley's lies appear to have been motivated partly by his desire to rival John Wesley Hardin's reputation as a killer.[6] Longley was outraged when he found he was to be put to death, while Hardin was only sentenced to twenty-five years in prison.
The most clearly false story Longley told was of being captured and lynched in 1869 alongside one of Cullen Baker's outlaw gang, surviving when a lucky shot severed the rope he had been hanged from, and then joining Baker's riders. As Baker was dead and his band dispersed at the time Longley claimed this happened, the story cannot be true.[7]
There is no contemporaneous evidence to back claims that Longley murdered a black militiaman in Old Evergreen in 1866 for insulting his father Campbell, or that he shot eight black people in Lexington in 1867 to avenge the loss of a horse racing bet.[8] Furthermore, Longley would have been 14 and 15 years old respectively at the time of the alleged incidents. True or false, the stories are consistent with Longley's well-established racist character; in his own words he "was taught to believe it was right to kill sassy negroes."[9]
Longley's account of killing a trail boss named Rector while en route to Wyoming in 1870 is similarly of unknown veracity.[10]
Weapons of choice
Traditionally, Longley is said to have used a pair of Dance .44 revolvers; the Dance was a Texas-manufactured imitation of the Colt Dragoon.[11] However, he used a shotgun to kill both Wilson Anderson and William Lay, his only murders for which his weapon is definitely known.
In popular culture
In 1954, the actor Douglas Kennedy played Longley in an episode of Jim Davis's syndicated western television series, Stories of the Century.[12]
In 1958, Steve McQueen played Longley in Season 2, Episode 23 of Tales of Wells Fargo.[13]
Longley is the title character in The Texan a television series starring Rory Calhoun which aired on CBS from 1958-1960 and portrayed Longley in an heroic role, a wanderer throughout the American West who assists those having trouble with the lawless element.[14]
Longley figures prominently in Louis L'Amour's 1959 novel The First Fast Draw, a highly fictionalized version of Cullen Baker's life.
Texas singer/songwriter Houston Marchman wrote a song about Longley, Bill Longley[15] which is on his second CD Leavin' Dallas (1999).
References
- ↑ O'Neal, Bill (1979). Encyclopedia of Western Gunfighters. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 192–194. ISBN 0-8061-1508-4.
- ↑ B Longley; Web Archive of History Net online;
- ↑ FC; Texas Handbook online; accessed August 2009.
- ↑ Daily Globe article; Chronicling America: St. Paul, Minnesota; October 17, 1878, Image 2, column 7
- ↑ Note: One datum in support of this conclusion was that the grave contained a Catholic medallion (The Miraculous Medal, an image of the Blessed Virgin Mary) that Longley was reportedly wearing on the day he was hanged. Longley had converted to Catholicism shortly before his death, as reported by the Scientific American Frontiers episode entitled, "Dead Men's Tales".
- ↑ Boastful Bill Longley – Cold Blooded Texas Killer; History Net online;
- ↑ Rick Miller and David JOhnson (2011), Bloody Bill Longley: The Mythology of a Gunfighter, Univ. of North Texas Press, ISBN 1-57441-305-8, p. 27.
- ↑ Rick Miller and David Johnson (2011) ( Bloody Bill Longley: The Mythology of a Gunfighter, Univ. of North Texas Press, ISBN 1-57441-305-8, p. 16-17.
- ↑ Miller, p. 15.
- ↑ Miller, p. 41.
- ↑ William Foster-Harris (2007), The Look of the Old West: A Fully Illustrated Guide, Skyhorse Publishing, Inc., ISBN 1-60239-024-X, p. 61.
- ↑ "Stories of the Century: "Bill Longley", May 20, 1954". Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
- ↑ "Tales of Wells Fargo: "Bill Longley", Feb 10, 1958". Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved April 19, 2013.
- ↑ Billy Hathorn, "Roy Bean, Temple Houston, Bill Longley, Ranald Mackenzie, Buffalo Bill, Jr., and the Texas Rangers: Depictions of West Texans in Series Television, 1955 to 1967", West Texas Historical Review, Vol. 89 (2013), pp. 110-112
- ↑ "Marchman Houston, Bill Longley Tabs". Bill Longley.
Further reading
- Bartholomew, Ed Ellsworth. Wild Bill Longley: A Texas Hard-Case, Frontier Press of Texas, Houston, 1953
- Fuller, Henry Clay. The Adventures of Bill Longley, Galveston Daily News, Nacogdoches (Texas), September 16, 1877
- Sifakis, Carl. Encyclopedia of American Crime, Facts On File Inc., New York, 1982
- Miller, Rick. Bloody Bill Longley, Henington Publishing Company, 1996.
External links
- William Preston Longley from the Handbook of Texas Online
- Lone Star Legends: Wild Bill Longley - A Dangerous Man in Dangerous Times
- Wild Bill Longley
- Lone Star Diary - The Story of a Texas killer...This "Wild Bill" was no hero at the Wayback Machine (archived September 28, 2007) by Murray Montgomery
- Bill Longley Does Not Get Along Well With Others - A Visit to the Giddings City Cemetery by John Troesser
- Bill Longley at Find a Grave
- 1878 interview with Longley The Louisiana Democrat March 27, 1878
- 1878 account of Longley career The Anderson Intelligencer October 31, 1878