Clover
Family Research Compendium
Created,
Edited, and
Maintained June Clover Byrne
For the Clover Family Historical Society

Clovers
in
Wyoming
Census Records
1900 Albany County, Wyoming Election District no 1 Sherman Ranch ED 2
sh 9a line 29: Carol Clover Nov 1878 single KS IA IA day laborer
relationship to head of house appears to be partner. This appears
to be a boarding house with stacks of people living in it all listed as
partner. The first person in the household is Peter Nelson
also listed as partner.
1920
Goshen County, Wyoming NARA T625 roll 2026 page 109 line 2: Wayne
Clover 25 KS IN US Real Estate Agent; Bessie R. wife 26 KS MI OH; Wayne
Jr son 2 9/12 WY KS KS
1920 Big Horn County, Wyomin NARA 625 roll 2025 ED 5 sh 1A page
185: Clarence e. 24 KS; Bergaaut 23 WY; John father 1879 WY [This may
or may not be a Clover. It was sent to me but I can't read
anything on Ancestry or Heritage Quest. I need to see the
microfilm.]
Death Records and
Obituaries
Obituary:
Casper, Wyoming - Friday, December 31, 2004 William Herman 'Bill'
Clover
[Thermopolis is in Hot Springs County, Wyoming ]
THERMOPOLIS -- Funeral services for William Herman "Bill" Clover, 76,
will be conducted at 10 a.m. Friday, Dec. 31, at Mortimore Funeral Home
of Thermopolis. Burial will follow in Riverside Cemetery. He died
Dec. 26, 2004, at Hot Springs County Memorial Hospital in
Thermopolis.
Born May 19, 1928, in McIntosh, Okla., he was the son of Rufus
Churchill and Bessie (Neely) Clover. At age 18, he joined the U.S. Army
and served in Germany.After his honorable discharge, he married Almeda
Mary Hood. They were
the parents of four children. She preceded him in death in 1989.
He worked in the construction business for many years; and, later,
owned and operated a truck and traveled to many places. Also, he was a
chef.
In 1998, he moved to Thermopolis; and, on Nov. 22, 1998, he married
Martha Travis. They enjoyed their retirement years and took many trips
to Montana,
Colorado, Arizona and California. His interests included music,
cooking, traveling, and gardening.
Survivors include his wife of Thermopolis; son, William, of Anchorage,
Alaska; three daughters, Colleen Clover and Jeneane Lattbau and her
husband of Santa Maria, Calif., and Michelle Moss and her husband of
Twin Falls, Idaho; two brothers, Carlos and Ray; sister, Bonnie Miller;
five grandchildren; stepdaughter, Georgia Homi; and
three step-grandchildren.
Martha
F Clover obituary
www.helenair.com
Martha Frances Travis Clover
Posted: 01/04/06
Martha Frances
Travis Clover 79, died Friday, Dec. 30, 2005, at her
daughter’s residence in Thermopolis. Graveside services will be
held Memorial Day weekend in Helena.
Martha and her
twin
were born Feb. 22, 1926, in Butte, on George Washington’s
birthday and thus were named Martha and George. She was one of 14
children born to Thomas and Cecil (Perry) Hawkins.
She married
Philemon S. Travis, Aug. 7, 1943, in Helena. She was a telephone
operator 15 years for AT&T and also worked for the state of
Montana. She was a member of the Eastern Star and Moose Auxiliary in
Helena. Philemon died in 1980. As of 1982 she divided her time between
Thermopolis and Helena. She moved to Thermopolis in 1995. In 1998 she
married William Clover. He died in 2004.
Martha enjoyed
sewing and caring for her cerebral palsied grandson, Tyler, to whom she
devoted her life. She attended First Baptist Church.
Survivors include
her daughter, Georgeanne (Mitch) Homi; grandsons, Travis, Toivo and
Tyler Homi; brothers, George Hawkins of Eagle, Idaho; Tom Hawkins of
Portland, Ore.; Jerald Hawkins of Dillon; and Harold Hawkins of
Redland, Wash.; sisters, Peggy Taylor of Butte and Nancy Landon of
Omaha, Neb.; and four great-grandchildren.
In addition to her
husbands, she was preceded in death by four sisters, Esther Hawkins,
Corrine Fennell, Dovey Peel and Betty Osborne; and three brothers,
Paul, Robert and William Hawkins. Mortimore Funeral Home was in charge
of arrangements.
Condolences may be
sent to 121 Cedar Ridge, Thermopolis, WY 82443.
__________________________________________________________________________
Social
Security Death Index
Martha F. Clover 22 Feb 1926 30 Dec 2005 Thermopolis, Hot Springs,
Wyoming
William H. Clover 19 May 1928 26
Dec 2004 Thermopolis, Hot Springs, Wyoming
In
the following article about the famous Johnson County War, Samuel T.
Clover was present as a newspaperman. This is a fascinating
account and I could not resist including it.
American Heritage.com Sam Clover
http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/1961/3/1961_3_50.shtml
THE JOHNSON COUNTRY WAR By HELENA
HUNTINGTON SMITH
Enraged by losses from their herds a
band of respectable cattle barons took the law into their own
hands—and barely escaped with their lives
On a blizzardy April morning in 1892, fifty armed men surrounded a
cabin on Powder River in which two accused cattle rustlers had been
spending the night. The first rustler was shot as he came down the path
for the morning bucket of water; he was dragged over the doorstep by
his companion, to die inside. The second man held out until afternoon,
when the besiegers fired the house. Driven out by the Hames, he went
down with twenty-eight bullets in him. HE was left on the bloodstained
snow with a card pinned to his shirt, reading: “Cattle thieves,
beware!”
So far the affair follows the standard pattern of frontier heroics, a
pattern popularized by Owen Wister and justified to some extent by the
facts of history if you don’t look too closely: strong men on a
far frontier, in the absence of law, make their own law for the
protection of society, which generally approves.
Thus runs the cliche, but in Wyoming this time it went awry. In the
first place the attackers were not crude frontiersmen taking the law
into their own hands. They were men of means and education,
predominantly eastern, who really should have known better; civilized
men, at home in drawing rooms and familiar with Paris. Two were Harvard
classmates of the year ’78, the one a Boston blue blood, the
other a member of a Wall Street banking family. Hubert E. Tcschemachcr
and Fred DeBillicr had come west after graduation to hunt elk, as so
many gilded youths from both sides of the Atlantic were doing; had
fallen in love with the country; and had remained as partners in a
half-million-dollar ranching enterprise.
Our fifty vigilantes were truly a strange company to ride through the
land slaughtering people. The instigators dominated the cattle business
and the affairs of the former territory, which had recently been
elevated to statehood, and more than half of them had served in the
legislature. Their leader, Major Frank Wolcott, was a fierce little
pouter pigeon of a man, a Kentuckian lately of the Union Army, whose
brother was United States senator from Colorado. Accompanying the party
as surgeon was a socially prominent Philadelphian, Dr. Charles Bingham
Penrose, who had come to Wyoming for his health. It was not improved by
his experiences.
These gentlemen had no thought of the danger to themselves as they set
out, without benefit of the law, to liquidate their enemies. Convinced
of their own righteousness, they expected nine-tenths of the people of
Wyoming to be on their side, and they even looked for a popular
uprising to assist them. Instead, thirty six hours after their
sanguinary victory on Powder River, they were surrounded in their turn
by an enraged horde of citizens, and just missed being lynched
themselves. They were saved only by the intervention of the President
of the United States, who ordered federal troops to their aid. But it
wasn’t quite the usual scene of the cavalry riding to the rescue
at the end of the movie, for while the cattlemen were snatched from
imminent death, they were also arrested for the murder of the two men
and marched off in custody of the troops—the latter, from the
commanding officer on down, making clear their personal opinion that
they regretted the rescue.
So ended the Johnson County War—tragic, bizarre, unbelievable. It
was all a sequel to the great beef bonanza, which began around 1880.
The cattle boom combined the most familiar features of the South Sea
Bubble and the 1929 bull market—such as forty per cent dividends
that would never cease—with some special features of its
own—such as a rash of adventuring English Lords and Honorables,
free grass, and the blessings of “natural increase”
provided by the prolific Texas cow. A man could grow rich without his
lifting a finger.
Instead of the old-style cow outfit with its headquarters in a dugout
and a boss who ate beef, bacon, and beans, there were cattle companies
with offices in Wall Street, London, or Edinburgh; champagne parties;
thoroughbred racing on the plains; and younger sons who were shipped
out west to mismanage great ranches at fancy salaries. In a raw new
city sprawled along the Union Pacific tracks, the Cheyenne Club boasted
the best steward of any club in the United States, and its members were
drawn from a roster of aristocracy on both sides of the Atlantic.
Burke’s Peerage and the Social Register mingled, though not
intimately, with common cowhands from Texas, but only the latter knew
anything about cattle.
To be sure, some of what they knew was a trifle shady: they knew how to
handle a long rope and a running iron; how to brand a maverick right
out from under the noses of the lords. But the mavericks, unbranded
animals of uncertain ownership, were rather casually regarded anyhow;
“finders keepers” was the unwritten rule which had governed
their disposition in the early days, and they had been a source of
controversy and bloodshed throughout the history of the West. While
they were now claimed by the big cattle companies, the Texas cowboys
were not impressed.
The boom crashed into ruin in the awful winter of 1886-87. Snow fell
and drifted and thawed and froze and fell again, clothing the ground
with an iron sheath of white on which a stagecoach could travel and
through which no bovine hoof could paw for grass; and since the plains
were heavily overstocked and the previous summer had been hot and dry,
there was no grass anyway. Moaning cattle wandered into the outskirts
of towns, trying to eat frozen garbage and the tar paper oft the eaves
of the shacks; and when the hot sun of early summer uncovered the fetid
carcasses piled in the creek bottoms, the bark of trees and brush was
gnawed as high as a cow could reach. Herd losses averaged fifty per
cent, with ninety per cent for unacclimated southern herds, and some
moral revulsion set in, even the Cheyenne Daily Sun remarking that a
man who turned animals out on a barren plain without food or shelter
would suffer loss of respect of the community in which he lived.
Meanwhile there were gloomy faces at the Cheyenne Club. “Cheer
up, boys,” quipped the bartender across the street, setting out a
row of glasses, “the books won’t freeze.” In the
heyday of the beef bonanza, herds had been bought and sold by
“book count,” based on a back-of-an-envelope calculation of
“natural increase,” with no pother about a tally on the
range. As the day of reckoning dawned, it turned out that many big
companies had fewer than half the number of cattle claimed on their
books. Now the terrible winter cut this half down to small fractions;
faraway directors, grown glacial as the weather, hinted that blizzards
were the fault of their underlings in Cheyenne; while the few surviving
cows, instead of giving birth to sextuplets as was their clear duty,
produced a correspondingly diminished calf crop to fatten on the
gorgeous grass that sprang up after the snows.
In their bitterness, the cattlemen believed that the damned thieves
were to blame. Obsessed with this idea, they now proceeded to bring
upon themselves an epidemic of stealing without parallel in the West.
At least that was what they called it, though to a cool-headed observer
from Nebraska it looked more like “the bitter conflict which has
raged incessantly between large and small owners.”
In fact it was even more. For Wyoming in the nineties shared the
outlook of that decade everywhere else; a decade of economic and moral
monopoly, when righteousness belonged exclusively to the upper class,
along with the means of production; a decade when the best people
simply could not be wrong. The best people in this case were the
Wyoming Stock Growers Association and their several rich and prominent
eastern friends, and the climate of opinion they breathed was
startlingly revealed in the hanging of Jim Averill and Cattle Kate.
When the cattlemen shed crocodile tears because thieves went unwhipped,
they forgot that thieves were not the worst to go free. At least six
persons were shot or hanged in the years before the final flare-up, but
not one person was ever brought to trial for the crimes—not even
in the case of Jim Averill and the woman whose real name was Ella, who
were hanged on the Sweetwater in 1889.
Averill and Ella ran a log-cabin saloon and road ranch up a desolate
little valley off the Sweetwater, and they were nuisances. The man was
articulate and a Populist of sorts, and had attacked the big cattlemen
in a letter to the local press; the woman was a cowboys’
prostitute who took her pay in stolen cattle. From this, aristocratic
Dr. Penrose could argue later that “she had to die for the good
of the country.”
Die she did, with her paramour, at the end of a rope thrown over a tree
limb and swung out over a gulch. There were three eyewitnesses to the
abduction and one to the actual hanging, and a coroner’s jury
named four prominent cattlemen among the perpetrators. But before the
case reached the grand jury three of the witnesses had vanished and the
fourth had conveniently died. Afterward two of the men w’hose
hands were filthy from this affair continued to rub elbows with the
fastidious Teschemaker on the executive committee of the Stock Growers
Association, and nauseating jokes about the last moments of Kate were
applauded at the Cheyenne Club. Even Owen Wister joined in the
applause, noting in his diary for October 12, 1889: “Sat
yesterday in smoking car with one of the gentlemen indicted [sic] for
lynching the man and the woman. He seemed a good solid citizen and I
hope he’ll get off.”
The association tightened its blacklist. In a cattle economy where cows
were the only means of getting ahead, the cowboys had long been
forbidden to own a brand or a head of stock on their own, lest they be
tempted to brand a maverick. Now more and more of them were
“blackballed” on suspicion from all lawful employment
within the territory. Likewise the association made the rules of the
range, ran the roundups to suit itself, and kept out the increasing
number of people it didn’t like; hence many small stockmen,
suspect of misbehavior by their very smallness, were also relegated to
a shady no man’s land outside the law.
If you call a man a thief, treat him like a thief, and deprive him of
all chance to earn a living honestly, he will soon oblige you by
becoming a thief. By 1890 a thin colony of blackballed cowboys
had settled on the rivers and creeks of Johnson County and were waging
war with rope and running iron on the big outfits. Then early in 1892 a
group calling themselves the Northern Wyoming Farmers’ and
Stockgrowers’ Association announced in the press their intention
of holding an independent roundup, in defiance of the state law and the
Wyoming Stock Growers Association. This was provocative, insolent,
outrageous if you like; it was hardly the furtive behavior of ordinary
thieves.
Also announced in the press were the names of two foremen for what was
now being called the “shotgun roundup.” One was a Texan,
known as a skilled cowhand, who was lightning with a gun. His name was
Nathan D. Champion. Meanwhile the storied walls of the
Cheyenne Club beheld the amazing spectacle of nineteenth century
gentlemen plotting wholesale murder. The declared object of their
expedition was the “extermination”- not
“arrest,” but “extermination”—of various
undesirable persons in the northern part of the state. The death list
stood at seventy. In addition to a hard core of nineteen most-wanted
rustlers, it almost certainly included a large number who were merely
thought to be too close to the rustler faction, among them the sheriff
of Johnson County and the three county commissioners.
This incredible project was fully known in advance to Acting Governor
Amos W. Barber, to United States Senators Joseph M. Carey and Francis
E. Warren, and to officials of the Union Pacific Railroad, whose
consent to run a special train was obtained; and none of whom found
anything questionable in the undertaking. Twenty-five hired gunfighters
from Texas raised the manpower complement to fifty, since the local
cowboys were thoroughly disaffected and would not have pulled a trigger
for their employers. A smart Chicago newsman, Sam T. Clover, had heard about the impending necktie
party and was in Cheyenne determined to get the story for the Herald.
He and a local reporter were taken along just as though the expedition
were legal; it apparently had not occurred to the planners that they
were inviting witnesses to murder.
They got started the afternoon of April 5, on board a train loaded with
men, arms, equipment, horses, and three supply wagons. An overnight run
landed them in Casper, two hundred miles to the northwest, where they
descended, saddled their horses, and were oft before the townspeople
were up—except tor enough of the latter to start talk. Their
objective was Buffalo, the county seat of Johnson County, but when they
arrived at a friendly ranch on the second night, they received new
intelligence which determined them to change their course: Nate
Champion and possibly a good catch of other rustlers were at a cabin on
the Middle Fork of Powder River, only twelve miles away. They decided
to detour and finish this group off before proceeding to Buffalo.
Rumors have come down to us of the drinking and dissension that
accompanied this decision: faced with the actuality of shooting trapped
men in a cabin the next morning, stomachs began to turn over, and three
members of the party pulled out, including the doctor and the local
newsman. But that night the main body rode on to the attack, through
one of the worst April blizzards in memory. They plodded along without
speaking, while beards and mustaches became coated with ice, and the
wind lashed knife-edged snow in their faces. Halting before daybreak to
thaw out around sagebrush fires, they went on until they looked down
over a low bluff at the still-sleeping KC ranch.
Two innocent visitors, trappers, had been spending the night in the
cabin. As first one and then the other sauntered forth into the gray
morning air, he was recognized as not among the wanted men, and as soon
as a corner of the barn hid him from the house, each was made prisoner.
After a long wait Champion’s friend Nick Ray finally appeared and
was shot down. The door opened, and Champion himself faced a storm of
bullets to drag Ray inside.
The fusillade went on for hour after hour. In the log shack Nate
Champion was writing, with a cramped hand in a pocket notebook, the
record of his last hours. Me and Nick was getting breakfast when the
attack took place. Two men was with us—Bill Jones and another
man. The old man went after water and did not come back. His friend
went to see what was the matter and he did not come back. Nick started
out and I told him to look out, that I thought there was someone at the
stable and would not let them come back.
Nick is shot but not dead yet. He is awful sick. I must go and wait on
him.
It is now about two hours since the first shot. Nick is still alive.
They are still shooting and are all around the house. Boys, there is
bullets coming in here like hail.
Them fellows is in such shape I can’t get at them. They are
shooting from the stable and river and back of the house.
Nick is dead. He died about 9 o’clock.
Hour after hour the hills crackled with rifle fire, and such was the
emptiness of the country that while the besiegers were on a main road,
such as it was, connecting civilization with a little settlement at the
back of beyond, they could bang away all day without fear of
interruption. Or almost. As it happened there was a slight interruption
in midafternoon.
Jack Flagg, a rustler intellectual of sorts, had left his ranch
eighteen miles up the Red Fork of Powder River on this snowy morning of
April 9, on his way to the Democratic state convention at Douglas, to
which he was a delegate from Johnson County. It was one of the oddities
of the situation that the thieves were all Democrats, and the murderers
were all Republicans. A rancher, newspaper editor, and schoolteacher,
Flagg was an accomplished demagogue who had twisted the tails of the
big outfits by means fair and foul. He was very much on the wanted list.
He was riding about fifty yards or so behind a wagon driven by his
seventeen-year-old stepson; and since the invaders had withdrawn into a
strategy huddle and pulled in their pickets, there was no sound of
firing to warn him as the wagon rattled downhill to the bridge by the
KC. Flagg started over to the house to greet his friends, and was
ordered to halt by someone who failed to recognize him.
“Don’t shoot me, boys, I’m all right,” he
called gaily, taking it for a joke. Under the hail of bullets which
disabused him, he fled back to the wagon and slashed the tugs holding
one of the team, and he and the boy made their miraculous escape.
The wagon Flagg left behind was put to use by the invaders. Since hours
of cannonading had failed to dislodge Champion, they loaded it with old
hay and dry chips and pushed it up to the cabin, where they set it
afire. Flames and smoke rolled skyward until they wondered if the man
inside had cheated them by shooting himself. Champion, however, was
still writing.
I heard them splitting wood. I guess they are going to fire the house
to-night.
I think I will make a break when night comes if alive.
It’s not night yet.
The house is all fired. Goodbye boys, if I never see you again.
Nathan D. Champion.
Finally, he broke
through the roof at one end of the house and sprinted desperately for
the cover of a little draw, which he never reached.
Pawing over the body, the invaders found and read the diary, after
which it was presented to the Chicago newsman. Its contents survived,
to become a classic of raw courage in the annals of the West.
Next day, Sunday, April 10, the invaders were approaching Buffalo when
they were met by a rider on a lathered horse, who warned them that the
town was in an uproar and they had better turn back if they valued
their lives. They had just made a rest halt at the friendly TA ranch.
Their only hope was to return there and dig in.
Sam Clover, ace reporter, was
too smart for that trap. Deciding to take his chance with the aroused
local population, he left the now deflated avengers and rode on into
Buffalo, where he did some fast talking and finally got himself under
the wing of his old friend Major Edmond G. Fechet of the 6th Cavalry,
with whom he had campaigned during the Ghost Dance troubles in North
Dakota. With the rest of the 6th, Fechet was now stationed at Fort
McKinney, near Buffalo. So Clover rode off to
the fort to luxuriate in hot baths and clean sheets and to write
dispatches, while the wretched invaders prepared to stand siege for
their lives.
They worked all night, and by morning of the eleventh were entrenched
behind a very efficient set of fortifications at the TA ranch, where
they were virtually impregnable except for a shortage of food supplies.
By morning they were besieged by an impromptu army of hornet-mad
cowboys and ranchmen, led by Sheriff “Red” Angus of Johnson
County. The army numbered over three hundred on the day of surrender.
In Buffalo, churches and schools were turned into headquarters for the
steadily arriving recruits; ladies baked cakes to send to Sheriff
Angus’ command post; the young Methodist preacher, who was
possessed of no mean tongue, employed it to denounce this crime of the
century. The leading merchant, a venerable Scotsman named Robert Foote,
mounted his black horse and, with his long white beard flying in the
breeze, dashed up and down the streets, calling the citizens to arms.
More impressive still, he threw open his store, inviting them to help
themselves to ammunition, slickers, blankets, flour—everything.
He was said to be a heavy dealer in rustled beef, and on the
invaders’ list; but so was almost everyone of importance in
Buffalo.
The telegraph wires had been cut repeatedly since the start of the
invasion, but on April 12 they were working again momentarily, and a
friend in Buffalo got a telegram through to the governor with the first
definite word of the invaders’ plight. From that time on, all the
heavy artillery of influence, from Cheyenne to Washington and on up to
the White House, was brought to bear to rescue the cattlemen from the
consequences of their act.
Senators Carey and Warren called at the executive mansion late that
night and got President Benjamin Harrison out of bed. He was urged to
suppress an insurrection in Wyoming, though the question of just who
was in insurrection against whom was not clarified. Telegrams flew back
and forth. At 12:50 A.M. on April 13, Colonel J. J. Van Horn of the 6th
Cavalry wired the commanding general of the Department of the Platte,
acknowledging receipt of orders to proceed to the TA ranch.
Two hours later, three troops of the 6th filed out of Fort McKinney in
the freezing dark, in a thoroughly disgusted frame of mind because (a)
they had just come in that afternoon from chasing a band of marauding
Crows back to the reservation and did not relish being ordered out
again at three in the morning; and furthermore because (b) they were
heartily on the side of Johnson County and would rather have left the
invaders to their fate.
They reached the TA at daybreak. Inside the beleaguered ranch house
Major Wolcott and his men, their food exhausted, were preparing to make
a break as soon as it was sufficiently light. They had eaten what they
thought would be their last breakfast, and were awaiting the
lookout’s whistle which would call them to make that last
desperate run—like so many Nate Champions—into the ring of
hopelessly outnumbering rifles.
But hark! Instead of the suicide signal, a cavalry bugle! Major Wolcott
crossed to a window.
“Gentlemen, it is the troops!”
From start to finish the Johnson County story reads like a parody of
every Hollywood western ever filmed, and never more so than at this
moment. Down the hill swept a line of seven horsemen abreast; between
the fluttering pennons rode Colonel Van Horn, Major Fechet, Sheriff
Angus; a representative of the governor, who would not have stuck his
neck into northern Wyoming at this point for anything; and, of course, Sam T. Clover of
the Chicago Herald. One of the guidon bearers carried a white
handkerchief. An answering flutter of white appeared on the
breastworks. Major Wolcott advanced stiffly and saluted Colonel Van
Horn.
“I will surrender to you, but to that man”—indicating
Sheriff Angus—“never!”
Forty-four prisoners were marched off to the fort, not including the
few defectors and two of the Texas mercenaries, who later died of
wounds. Of the ringleaders, only one had received so much as a scratch.
“The cattlemen’s war” was front-paged all over the
nation for some three weeks, with the Boston Transcript putting tongue
in cheek to remark on the everwidening activities of Harvard men. Then
the rest of the country forgot it. Four days after the surrender, still
guarded by unsympathetic troops, the prisoners were removed to Fort
Russell, near Cheyenne. Here they were safely away from Johnson County,
which had, however, been behaving with remarkable restraint. The
weather was worse than ever and the march overland one of the most
miserable on record. Apart from that, the killers got off at no heavier
cost to themselves than minor inconvenience and some ignominy. They
were never brought to justice.
They did, however, pay an admitted $100,000 as the price of the
invasion, counting legal expenses and not mentioning the illegal. Of
the sordid features of the Johnson County invasion which all but defy
comment, the worst was the affair of the trappers. These two simple and
unheroic men, who had been with Champion and Nick Ray in the cabin and
had the bad luck to witness the KC slaughter, were hustled out of the
state under an escort of gunmen in terror of their lives, and thence
across Nebraska to Omaha, where they were piled onto a train, still
under escort of gunmen and lawyers, and delivered at an eastern
destination. The Johnson County authorities and their friends had been
trying frantically to get them back, but no subpoenas could be issued
because the cattlemen, still protected by the army, were not yet
formally charged with anything. Counting bribes to federal officers and
judges, legal fees, forfeited bail, and other expenses, it was said to
have cost $27,000 to get the witnesses across Nebraska alone. The
trappers had been promised a payoff of $2,500 each, and given postdated
checks. When presented for cashing, the checks proved to be on a bank
that had never existed.
Meanwhile the armor of self-pity remained undented. In their own eyes
and those of their friends, the cattlemen were the innocent victims of
an outrage. While awaiting a hearing at Fort Russell, they were kept in
the lightest of durance, coming and going freely to Cheyenne. Major
Wolcott was permitted a trip outside the state. When Fred DeBillier
showed signs of cracking under the strain of captivity, raving and
uttering strange outcries in the middle of the night, he was tenderly
removed, first to a hotel and later to his home in New York, for rest
and medical treatment.
Eventually the prisoners were transferred to the state penitentiary at
Laramie, where the district judge who ordered the removal assured
Governor Amos W. Barber that these important persons would by no means
be required to mingle with ordinary convicts. They were then escorted
to their new quarters by a guard of honor, which included
Wyoming’s adjutant general and acting secretary of state.
Public opinion was overwhelmingly against the prisoners, but it was
poorly led and ineffective, and public wrath was dissipated into thin
air. On their side, however, in the words of a newspaper correspondent,
the cattlemen were “backed not only by the Republican machine
from President Harrison on down to the state organization, but by at
least twenty-five million dollars in invested capital. They have the
President, the governor, the courts, their United States Senators, the
state legislature and the army at their backs.” Jt was enough.
One sequel to the episode was an attempt to muzzle the press. A
small-town editor who criticized the cattlemen too violently was jailed
on a charge of criminal libel and held for thirty days—long
enough to silence his paper. A second editor was beaten. But the
latter, whose name was A. S. Mercer, exacted an eye for an eye in his
celebrated chronicle of the invasion, published two years later and
resoundingly entitled: The Banditti of the Plains, or The
Cattlemen’s Invasion of Wyoming. The Crowning Infamy of the Ages.
Thereupon his print shop was burned to the ground, and another
subservient judge ordered all copies of the book seized and burned. But
while they were awaiting the bonfire, a wagonload of them was removed
one night and drawn by galloping horses over the Colorado line.
Thereafter copies on library shelves were stolen and mutilated as far
away as the Library of Congress until only a few were left. But two new
editions have since been published, and so—in the end—Mr.
Mercer won.
The same judge who had shown himself so solicitous of the
prisoners’ comfort granted a change of venue from Johnson County,
not to a neutral county but to the cattlemen’s own stronghold in
Cheyenne. The trial was set for January 2, 1893. Nineteen days later
over a thousand veniremen had been examined and there were still only
eleven men on the jury. The prolonged financial strain was too much for
Johnson County; since there were no witnesses anyway, the prosecution
tossed in the towel, and the case was dismissed.
The so-called rustlers came out with the cleaner hands. Good luck had
saved them from spilling the blood of the invaders; and while there was
one unsolved killing of a cattlemen’s adherent afterward, this
appears to have been an act of personal grudge, not of community
vengeance. The chain reaction of retaliatory murders that could have
started never did; and strife-torn Johnson County settled down to
peace. The roundups became democratic, with big and little stockmen
working side by side. Montagu sons married Capulet daughters; notorious
rustlers turned into respectable ranchmen and hobnobbed with their
former enemies. One was mentioned for governor, and another rose to
high position in—of all things—the Wyoming Stock Growers
Association.
Yet, if bitterness has mercifully subsided, a certain remnant of
injustice remains. The ghosts of old wrongs unrighted still walk in
Buffalo, and, with the law cheated of its due, the pleasant little town
with its creek and its cottonwood trees can only wait for that earthly
equivalent of the Last Judgment, the verdict of history.
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