He never robbed a bank or a train and never fought a traditional duel but Billy the Kid remains one of America’s most notorious outlaws.
General Lew Wallace, during the Civil War
President Rutherford B Hayes replaced Governor Axtell with Civil War General Lew Wallace, a bureaucratic and military jack of all trades who immediately issued a general pardon to those not indicted as well as a proclamation to allow the military to vanquish “insurrection.” This allowed soldiers greater leeway to intercede in the civil disputes that gripped Lincoln County.
Deputy Bob Ollinger
As Bob Olinger opened the gate at the side of the structure, he heard a voice coming from the nearest window on the second floor. Looking up, the last thing he ever saw was Billy the Kid holding Olinger’s own gun, the shotgun that the deputy repeatedly taunted Billy with. Billy the Kid poked the weapon out of the window and after greeting his jailer by simply stating “Hello, Bob,” he pulled the triggers on both barrels. Olinger was killed instantly by the massive blast.
Lincoln County Courthouse
Arriving in Lincoln on April 21, Billy the Kid was lodged not in the notoriously insecure town jail but in the newly designated county courthouse, the building formerly housing the Dolan-Murphy store run by The House. Shackled and handcuffed, Billy was to be under constant guard in a room next to Pat Garrett’s office.
The second of two grave markers for Billy the Kid in Fort Sumner, New Mexico
The two books used to produce this podcast included: “Billy the Kid: A Short and Violent Life,” by Robert Utley and “To Hell on a Fast Horse: The Untold Story of Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett,” by Mark Lee Gardner.
The music used in this episode was in order: “Oh, Fire,” by Carmen Maria and Edu Espinal, “Jah Jah Bangs,” by Quinqas Moreira and “Leaning on the Everlasting Life,” by Zachariah Hickman
Of Some Very Famous People You've Never Really Heard Of…In Less Than An Hour.