One great
unsolved mystery was the death of Sheriff A. J. Royal of Pecos County. This was
a man who needed killing so bad that there were a half-dozen good prospects as
suspects in his assassination. Most of them were lawmen, and a few were Texas
Rangers. And as time went on, the mystery only deepened and the list grew.
Sheriff Andrew Jackson Royal was a bad ‘un. A stunning mixture of
politics and rapaciousness, he routinely threatened the citizenry and misused
and abused his power as Sheriff. He was known to use his pistol like a
flyswatter on pesky citizens. Sometimes he used the butt, other times bullets. His
deputies were often bad men like Barney Riggs who were the stereotypical
western thugs who used their badge of office to lord over everyone.
Inmates such as Jose Juarez sometimes
disappeared from Sheriff Royal’s jail never to be seen alive again. Royal
routinely tried to arrest any citizens who were a threat to his political
machine, with trumped up charges. After an intense manhunt to capture Victor Ochoa, a notorious Mexican
revolutionary, U. S. Deputy Marshal George Scarborough left
the prisoner in Sheriff Royal’s custody. Opportunistic, Royal then illegally released
Ochoa from his jail, an international criminal, who promised to get him the
Hispanic vote.
When he ran
for re-election in 1894, Royal posted armed “deputies” at each polling place to
intimidate his enemies. His legacy was a rotten muskmelon in the veritable
armpit of Texas, so it is no surprise that the people of Pecos County unseated
him when they got a chance. A petition, signed by Judge Williams, W. P. Matthews, John Odom, Jim and Morgan Livingston,
Howell Johnson, R. B. Neighbors, Shipton Parke, and George Miller was fired
off to solicit the help of the Texas Rangers. The people of Pecos wanted their
county back.
History
reveals that these men intended to remove Sheriff Royal one way or another.
These were the men he had threatened repeatedly, and these were the men
whose names have popped up over and over in the accounts of his assassination.
Not long
before he was killed, Royal had nearly beaten Herman Koehler, the
County Treasurer, to death. Koehler
was the peaceful owner of a saloon which happened to be competing with his.
After Royal lost his bid for re-election, he threatened to kill a bunch of his
political adversaries and refused to give up his office, and that’s when the
Rangers were called in.
As usual,
when the Rangers appeared, all quieted down. Royal had to concede and move on.
But he did it with loud threats and his enemies were afraid for their lives.
The whole town was on the edge of its seat. Rumors ran as wild as mule deer
bucks in the rut. Someone was going to pay.
We know now
after so many years that rumors would persist, in various forms, that suggested
a prominent group of townsmen had gathered and conspired to have Royal killed out
of fear, and the conviction that they would never be able to sleep in peace
again. Royal was mad, he was known to kill with little regard for the law, and
he had assured them he would. It was kill or be killed. The Rangers were in
Pecos for the second time in a few weeks, but on an impossible peace- keeping
mission.
A powder keg
was about to blow as the Rangers arrived in Pecos. Already Royal was named in
several indictments by the Grand Jury. He was the complainant in as many more. All
we know for sure is that one mid-morning a couple of Rangers stepped out of the
courthouse, leaving another asleep in their quarters, and a mysterious gunman
confronted Royal in his office as he was finally cleaning out his desk. With
two men sitting beside him, the assassin got his attention, then leveled a
shotgun and blew Royal away. And no one was ever indicted or prosecuted for the
murder. Nobody had an idea who it might have been.
So I thought
it would be fun, if not instructional to list the suspects… and we can take a
vote. Don’t let my captions sway you, your guess is as good as anyone’s, and
probably much more objective than most of the folks involved.
Years later,
some informed parties seemed to agree that the deed had been done by a Texas
Ranger. But which one? Two of them had an alibi, having gone down to the saloon
to whet their whistles. One legend said it was Bass Outlaw. That would be handy
to pin it on him, as he was the most famous “bad” Ranger. It’s something he
might have done. But he was already dead by then.
The Rangers
who could most obviously have been involved were those assigned to Pecos during
that period, and most of them had stellar careers; Sgt Carl Kirchner, Pvt Joe Sitter, Pvt William Schmidt, Pvt Ed Palmer,
and Pvt J. W. Fulgham.
And then
there were the leading citizens, Royal’s known political enemies, all signors
of that petition, whom he planned to kill; Judge
O. W. Williams, W. P. Matthews, (the County Clerk) Shipton Parke (County Commissioner), Morgan Livingston (County Commissioner), and Howell Johnson (former County Attorney and newly elected Justice of
the Peace), any combination of which would have had the motive and the means to
eliminate Royal.
Any of
Herman Koehler’s relatives would have been justified in doing Royal harm, as poor Herman never
recovered from his beating and died soon afterward. There were numerous Mexican
American families who had lost loved ones mysteriously to Royal’s regime. There
were the witnesses for the State during his prosecution for assault, his
merciless pistol whipping of defenseless Elza White; and R. L. Anderson, James Livingston and Shipton Parke(again!), who served on the Grand Jury which indicted
him, as well as R. N. Baker, and Frank and
Francis Rooney. Royal had sworn vengeance on all of them. Not one to be
hesitant to bite the hands that fed him, he owed several of them large sums of
money. One was Herman Koehler, and it seemed he had decided to reduce his debt
by reducing his debtors.
And then
suddenly A. J. Royal was dead.
Old man
Charles A. Crosby, County Clerk and a political ally who shared an office with
the Sheriff, was right there, but nearly blind and not likely to have shot the
Sheriff so boldly, as there was no means of escape, and he easily could have
missed and brought destruction upon himself. Apparently Crosby and Royal had
their backs to each other, Crosby facing the door. “Back to back they faced
each other…” Another possible assassin could have been another man supposedly
loyal to Royal, the recently resigned Justice of the Peace H. L. Hatchette, who
failed in his bid for County Attorney. He was also in the room at the time of
the killing. From his position, Hatchette reportedly could not see the killer
standing in the doorway, but said Crosby could have. But Crosby could not see and claimed he did
not recognize the voice of the killer...”And if you don’t believe it’s true, go
ask the blind man, he saw it too.”
It is
perhaps a coincidence, or a sinister design that most of the possible suspects
in the assassination were in or around the courthouse when the crime was
committed. If they were in fear for their lives, why were they all there? Within
moments after Crosby came out in the smoke-filled hall and announced the
Sheriff’s death, Judge Williams was there, and later recalled seeing Johnson,
Parke, both Livingstons, both Rooneys, John Odom and Rangers Palmer, Schmidt
and Kirchner. When it comes to suspicion for murder, “the more the merrier.” Of course if they knew the killer, or were aware of his mission, they would be quick to respond so as to appear innocent...
Judge
Williams admitted that he had a shotgun on the premises, hidden in a vault, (as
did others, who were expecting violence) but when he inspected it, it was still
loaded, although it looked as if it had been fired … but not that day- in his estimation...
Several of these
men had already come to blows with the defeated sheriff. There is no question
that the critical mass of all of this enmity evolved into murder. The question
still remains… who shot Sheriff Royal?
By the time Captain John Hughes had sent his
Rangers to Pecos for a second time, there is no doubt that Sheriff Royal had
become a royal pain in the Ranger behind. It would not be like Hughes to send
his men in without a plan… even a contingency plan. Conveniently, the
statements afterwards provided everyone present with an alibi. Meanwhile Royal
got tucked away, shot down in cold blood and nobody cared. Nobody was even
indicted, much less prosecuted. All these Rangers and yet nobody had a clue,
nobody went and tried to track the killer. It is all too much to digest.
I believe it
may well have been the Ranger rumor mill which has fed this event and its
aftermath for so long, and which was able to officially conceal the actual
crime. Locals always pointed to the Rangers as the culprits. In fact few of
them had any problem with his assassination as Sheriff Royal was so despised
and feared. In his old age, Judge O. W. Williams, himself a possible suspect,
claimed he had gotten a written confession from one of the Texas Rangers, who
wanted to get his guilt off of his conscience. He said his name was Smith…
This might
have been several Rangers serving in west Texas in that period. If we allow the
old judge to slur his speech a little, Smith could easily have been Schmid or
Schmidt. That immediately brings Frank
Schmid to the fore, as well as William Schmidt, who was supposedly the Ranger
making the rounds at the local tavern with Sgt Kirchner.
It seems many
believed that either the Rangers killed Sheriff Royal or were helpful in some
way towards his demise… or the cover up of his assassination.
But what
most writers seem to ignore was the obvious suspect, and I do not understand
why. Killin’ Jim Miller, the legendary
“Deacon Jim” should have been a prime suspect. Everything about the killing
pointed to him; Professional, surgical, in the back, with a shotgun. And Miller
had a decent motive. It is true he may have been the hired assassin, and killed
the Sheriff for the money, but he also had a dog in the hunt. Here is where the
thing smells to high heaven…
Jim (James
Brown) Miller was absolutely active in this very area. Recommended by the good
church going folks of Pecos, he started out as a deputy under Sheriff Bud Frazer
of Reeves County. But he killed a
Mexican prisoner who supposedly “tried to escape” (a kind of euphemism among
the Texas Rangers since the McNelly days) and Frazer became leery of him. He
was fired. Since then he had been in a running war with Bud Frazer and his
family next door in Reeves County for years. There were several gun battles. Frazer was a
dead shot, but never suspected that Miller, scoundrel that he was, was unsporting
enough to wear a bullet-proof vest. With the help of Mannie Clements and Martin
Q. Hardin, (both related to John Wesley Hardin) Miller made Frazer and his
family miserable if not fear for their lives.
Whatever his
motivation, or the legalities, Killin’ Jim Miller was cleaning up the Pecos
Valley. And he may well have been in
cooperation with some local lawmen, like U. S. Deputy Marshal Scarborough, who could not do what he
would do. Later Miller was believed by Captain Hughes of the Texas Rangers to
have assassinated Pat Garrett, another bad egg who made many enemies and owed
everyone a lot of money. Miller was often hired to settle scores with notorious
corrupt lawmen, when there was no legal satisfaction available through proper
channels. This we know… This is what he had done in Oklahoma with several accomplices when he was
finally caught by vigilantes, who would gladly do what lawmen would not… hang
him.
So… cast
your vote. Fortunately, this canvas is non-binding. But I am curious what you
guys think about this wonderful, smelly, unsolved mystery of the west.
NOTE: I owe much of the credit for this article to Clayton W. Williams, and his book Texas' Last Frontier.
NOTE: I owe much of the credit for this article to Clayton W. Williams, and his book Texas' Last Frontier.
2 comments:
It was one of the Rooney brothers.
peruna says:
My bet would be Scarborough, or an accomplice of his
like Miller. Good stuff, Russell
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