But enough of that rant, let’s talk about today’s events. Between leaving Santa Rosa up on Route 40 this morning and our arriving at the "lousy internet" RV park here in Carlsbad we have been picking our way south down some of the most casually maintained roads in the country. But we didn't mind, even though we couldn't listen to our book on tape because the paved washboard road caused the tape player to skip. Still, that was okay because we got to visit the official Billy the Kid grave site and museum in Fort Sumner, New Mexico. Though Billy the Kid has never been one of MY favorite old west miscreants, I have always wanted to visit the site of the Lincoln County War here in New Mexico. (By the way, that's Billy and me in the upper left)
Here’s what Wiki says about good ol’ Billy:
William H. Bonney (born William Henry McCarty, Jr. c. November 23, 1859 – c. July 14, 1881), better known as Billy the Kid (also known as Henry Antrim) was a 19th-century Irish American gunman who participated in the Lincoln County War and became a frontier outlaw in the American Old West. According to legend, he killed 21 men, but it is generally believed that he killed between four and nine. He killed his first man in 1877 at the age of 17, although he could have been as young as 15.
McCarty (or Bonney, the name he used at the height of his notoriety) was 5'8" tall with blue eyes, blond hair or dirty blond hair, and a smooth complexion. He was described as being friendly and personable at times, and as lithe as a cat. Contemporaries described him as a "neat" dresser who favored an "unadorned Mexican sombrero". These qualities, along with his cunning and celebrated skill with firearms, contributed to his paradoxical image as both a notorious outlaw and a folk hero.
Billy was relatively unknown during most of his lifetime but was catapulted into legend in 1881 when New Mexico's governor, Lew Wallace, placed a price on his head. In addition, the Las Vegas Gazette (Las Vegas, New Mexico) and the New York Sun carried stories about his exploits. Other newspapers followed suit. Several biographies written about Billy the Kid after his death portrayed him in varying lights.
If you want to read more, check this out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_the_Kid
(By the way, that's the Kid murdering Robert Ollinger in photo #2)
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