Nov 14, 1882:
Franklin Leslie kills Billy "The Kid" Claiborne
On
this day, the gunslinger Franklin "Buckskin" Leslie shoots the Billy
"The Kid" Claiborne dead in the streets of Tombstone, Arizona.
The
town of Tombstone is best known today as the site of the infamous
shootout at the O.K. Corral. In the 1880s, however, Tombstone was home
to many gunmen who never achieved the enduring fame of Wyatt Earp or Doc
Holliday. Franklin "Buckskin" Leslie was one of the most notorious of
these largely forgotten outlaws.
There are few surviving details
about Leslie's early life. At different times, he claimed to have been
born in both Texas and Kentucky, to have studied medicine in Europe, and
to have been an army scout in the war against the Apache Indians. No
evidence has ever emerged to support or conclusively deny these claims.
The first historical evidence of Leslie's life emerges in 1877, when he
became a scout in Arizona. A few years later, Leslie was attracted to
the moneymaking opportunities of the booming mining town of Tombstone,
where he opened the Cosmopolitan Hotel in 1880. That same year he killed
a man named Mike Killeen during a quarrel over Killeen's wife, and he
married the woman shortly thereafter.
Leslie's reputation as a
cold-blooded killer brought him trouble after his drinking companion and
fellow gunman John Ringo was found dead in July 1882. Some Tombstone
citizens, including a young friend of Ringo's named Billy "The Kid"
Claiborne, were convinced that Leslie had murdered Ringo, though they
could not prove it. Probably seeking vengeance and the notoriety that
would come from shooting a famous gunslinger, Claiborne unwisely decided
to publicly challenge Leslie, who shot him dead.
The remainder
of Leslie's life was equally violent and senseless. After divorcing
Killeen in 1887, he took up with a Tombstone prostitute, whom he
murdered several years later during a drunken rage. Even by the loose
standards of frontier law in Tombstone, the murder of an unarmed woman
was unacceptable, and Leslie served nearly 10 years in prison before he
was paroled in 1896. After his release, he married again and worked a
variety of odd jobs around the West. He reportedly made a small fortune
in the gold fields of the Klondike region before he disappeared forever
from the historical record.
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