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LINCOLN COUNTY, NEW
MEXICO
Alexander Anderson McSween
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Alexander McSween (1843-July, 19, 1878) was a
prominent figure during the Lincoln County War of the Old West, and the
central character alongside John Tunstall and opposite the "Murphy-Dolan Faction." |
| Early Life Born Alexander Anderson McSween, In Canada, McSween was for a time in his youth a preacher. Afterwards he attended law school for one year, in St. Louis, Missouri before moving to Kansas, then to New Mexico Territory. He had married Susan Hummer in 1873. After he arrived in Lincoln County, New Mexico, McSween worked for Murphy-Dolan as an attorney, then left them to work for John Tunstall, with whom he became close friends and by 1876, business partners. |
| Lincoln County War When the trouble between the two factions began, Murphy-Dolan accused McSween of embezzlement, and they hired gunmen from the Jessie Evans Gang and teh John Kinney Gang to rustle Tunstall's cattle, and harass him. On February 18th, 1878, John Tunstall was murdered by William Morton, Jessie Evans and Tom Hill, with Frank Baker believed to have been present. The Lincoln County Regulators were formed, and on March 6th, 1878, the Regulators arrested Frank Baker and William Morton, and executed them. On April 1st, 1878, Billy the Kid, Jim French, Frank McNab, John Middleton, Fred Waite, Henry Brown, enter Lincoln and ambush and kill Sheriff William J. Brady and Deputy George W. Hindman. Deputy Billy Matthews returns fire during the attack, wounding slightly both Billy the Kid and Jim French with leg shots, but the wounds are minor. On April 4th, 1878, there is a gun battle at Blazer's Mill between Buckshot Roberts, a bounty hunter working for Dolan, and the Regulators. Roberts and Regulator Dick Brewer are killed, Middleton is badly wounded. Billy the Kid is grazed by a bullet, and George Coe has his trigger finger shot off. On April 18th, Billy the Kid, John Middleton, Fred Waite, and Henry Newton Brown are indicted for the murder of Sheriff Brady, while Dolan, Jessie Evans, Matthews and others are indicted for the murder of Tunstall. On May 15, 1878, Manuel Segovia, the cowboy who had killed Frank McNab, is captured. |
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Battle of Lincoln On July 15th, 1878, when the Regulators were surrounded in Lincoln at the Alex McSween house, along with Alex McSween and his partner Harvey Morris. Facing them were the Dolan/Murphy/Seven Rivers cowboys, led by Sheriff George Peppin. On July 19th, after numerous exchanges of gunfire over a four day period, the house was set afire. As the flames spread and night fell, Susan McSween was granted safe passage out of the house while the men inside continued to fight the fire. By 9pm, the Regulators and McSween made plans to break free of the house. Jim French went out first, followed by Billy the Kid, Tom O'Folliard, and Jose Chavez y Chavez. The Dolan men saw the running men and opened fire, killing Harvey Morris, McSween's law partner. Some US Cavalry troopers had arrived by that time, with instructions to make arrests to avoid executions by the Dolan Faction, and they'd taken up position in the back yard to take those left into custody. However, a close-order gunfight erupted, and Alex McSween was killed, as was Seven Rivers cowboy Bob Beckwith. With McSween dead the Lincoln County War
was in effect over. McSween's widow, Susan,
remarried some time later, to a businessman name George Barber, but the
marriage did not last and ended in divorce. She would purchase a ranch in
Three Rivers, New
Mexico, and later became one of the
most prominent cattlewomen of the Old West. She sold out in 1902 to politician
Albert
Fall, and moved to White Oaks, New Mexico, where she remained until her death in
1931.
[Source: Wikipedia - The Free Encyclopedia. Transcribed by
C.
Anthony] |
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