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"I jumped in the saddle and grabbed holt of the horn,
Best damn cowboy that ever was born."
-- The Old Chisum Trail
Little is known about Billy the Kid's genesis, except that he
came into this world (according to his own testimony) in an Irish
section of the Bowery slums of New York City sometime (it is
estimated) between September and November, 1859. Since he was born
in the days before documented record-keeping, both his parentage and
real name remain unsettled. For years, scholars generally agreed he
was christened William Henry Bonney, his parents being William and
Kathleen (nee McCarty) Bonney. More recent research, though,
unearths clues that point to his having been born with the name
Henry McCarty, to a Patrick and Catherine (nee Bonney) McCarty.
The confusion stems from Billy the Kid's later use of the name
William H. Bonney as his legal name – but it now appears
that he may have simply created that alias from by blending his
mother's maiden name (Bonney) with the first name of the man
with whom his mother lived (William Antrim) after his natural
father either died or abandoned the brood.
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Mrs. Catherine McCarty (Nash) |
Conjecture and presumption continue. The best we can do at this
point is to trace a woman named Catherine McCarty who moved with a
William Antrim to Indianapolis, Indiana, during or immediately after
the Civil War (probably about 1865). She brought with her a child
named Henry and another son named Joseph. (What became of the latter
is not known, but census records and other official documents citing
a lad called Joseph support the belief that the boy who was to
become Billy the Kid had a brother.) |
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Catherine McCarty shows up again five years later (1870) in Wichita,
Kansas. Here, she operated an Irish laundry service. The mysterious
William Antrim evidently came with her. His occupation during this
period is unknown, although he undoubtedly had capital, plus a savvy
for real estate as his name appears on documents as holder of some
valuable property in town.
Their heels barely cooled, the tribe journeyed forth again, this
time to a settlement called Coffeyville, springing up along the
Kansas cattle trail. The first police report attesting to young
Henry's mischievousness appears in town hall files. A constable's
log cites 13-year-old Henry McCarty and a huckleberry as the two
thieves of various minor items pilfered from a merchant's shop.
Punishment, no doubt, was light – probably the boxing of ears by a
local judge -- for teenage Henry regarded the incident with no more
sobriety than a paper cut. This is judged from his committing of
subsequent surface infractions that surely left Mama Catherine
worried.
Perhaps that is why she and William decided to move on after only
a year in Coffeyville – or could it have been that the Coffeyville
women's tea discovered the couple was yet unmarried? Whatever the
reason, a legally united William and Catherine Antrim reappear on
record in the territory of New Mexico by March, 1873. They opened a
boarding house in the booming mining town aptly named Silver City,
stretching in the late afternoon shadows of the Gila Mountains.
Their boarders were chiefly transients who had braved the Apache
hunting grounds to "try their luck" in the silver fields.
Intrigued by the lure of millions at his fingertips, Antrim himself
often accompanied the prospectors, pan in hand, on their
expeditions. While he was gone, Catherine and her sons remained
behind to tend to the demanding chores of the lodging house.
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William Antrim (Nash) |
Another reason the ever-traveling Antrims may have ultimately
chosen the God-forsaken remoteness of New Mexico could have been
that its dry climate promised a hopeful cure for Catherine's
chronically ailing health. If that was the case, then her husband
should have concentrated less on visions of silver and more on the
workload he dumped on his wife. The McCarty boys lost their mother
to lung disease in September, 1874, while their step-dad was out
mining. |
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Here is where history loses track of the Antrims and follows
singularly Henry, then not quite 15 years old, as he commences on a
career that labels him "Billy the Kid". This article,
then, for clarity, will henceforth refer to the subject as
"Billy," the name prosperity gave him.
After his mother's death, Billy strayed from school and loitered
in Silver City's billiard halls, much to the chagrin of Antrim who
never really did get along with the boy even when Catherine was
alive. Together with a pug-faced confederate, Sombrero Jack (real
name George Shaffer), Billy bounced in and out of scrapes with the
law. After the duo was caught red-handed stealing garments from a
Chinese laundress, Antrim laid down the law: Either return to school
or get a job, he told the delinquent. But, Billy found both
prospects bland. He fled home, most likely never to see William
Antrim or his brother again.
Billy escaped willy-nilly from all obligation. Roaming, the New
Yorker-turned Midwesterner-turned-sagebrusher discovered the ways of
the mesa. A stranger in a land that, away from the Anglo
settlements, predominantly spoke Spanish, he learned the language
quickly. Hanging with whatever vagabond he encountered in the
saddle, all ruffians, Billy's wide-eyed curiosity soon faded engaged
in the life of a cowpoke. New-found buddies – whether Anglo or
Hispanic -- taught him how to shoot and how to toss a Bowie knife
and how to use a riata and how to rustle cattle. Bright and
eager, he learned the tricks well. As he did so, he became a
familiar Gypsy under the expansive dome of a Southwestern sky. Few
knew his name; they called him the Wandering Kid or, simply, the
Kid. The Billy was soon to be provided.
Billy is supposed to have killed his first men near the Guadalupe
Mountains in 1876 when he mistook a couple of reservation Apaches
for (as he said) "unfriendlies". American tempers were
singed over the recent eradication of George Armstrong Custer and
his 7th Cavalry at the Little Big Horn; the white man, brooding the
loss, hated anything Indian. Incited by the massacre that spilled
across the nation's headlines, and taking the two wandering Apaches
as nomads, Billy learned later that the soldiery was looking for the
man who shot the peaceable people at a time when the district
representatives were trying hard to keep the Southwestern border
blood-free of racial animosity. Eluding arrest, Billy hightailed out
of New Mexico.
But, the life that awaited the boy had already foreshadowed him
-- a life of violence. On August 17, 1877, he is supposed to have,
according to legend, first heard himself called "Billy the
Kid," a name that would forever brand him and unite him with
the zenith players in the saga of the Old West. The anecdote goes
unproven – it is tongue-in-cheek -- but it is colorful and bears
relating here.
Billy had drifted into the quiet plains town of Camp Grant,
Arizona, that day. Burning from a hot desert sun, he sought refuge
in the town's saloon. Inside, as he tried to order a beer,
anvil-fisted blacksmith Frank P. Cahill, who had had a few shots of
whiskey too many, began picking on the skinny visitor filmed by
trail dust and wearing the whisp of a dirty goatee. Cahill, whose
braggadocio reputation had earned him the nickname
"Windy," wouldn't let up: "Look at this guy, he looks
like a little scared billy goat – Neeeigh! Bleeeeeeeat! I'm
gunna call you Billy the Kid Goat!" he guffawed. The other, who
remained silent due to the blacksmith's overbearing size, retaliated
however when Windy shoved. Slaps turned to punches and suddenly
Billy found himself overcome and on the barroom floor, being kicked
face-- and chest-ward -- until Billy drew his six-shooter and blew
the wind forever out of Windy.
Managing to keep ahead of the vigilantes who gathered from within
the tavern, Billy during his exit heard one of them shout,
"Stop him! Stop him! String up that Billy the Kid!"
Did it really happen this way? Probably not. But, in the annals
of the American West, where legend outdoes fact – but usually
generates from fact – it's best to go with the legend.
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