How did Billy the Kid really die? The controversy.

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  • čas přidán 25. 02. 2021
  • "I have been researching and studying the life of Billy the Kid for at least four decades,” says Bell. This is my third-and final-book on his short and violent life, and I believe it’s finally time to tell the truth about one of the biggest lies in the entire saga.”
    In The Final Word, Bell contends the “contorted and ridiculous Pat Garrett version” of how the Kid died is “a total lie.” “I don’t believe Billy was walking in his stocking feet across the parade ground to get some beef,” says Bell. “I don’t believe he was armed with a Colt Thunderer.”
    Bob Boze Bell is known as America's Western Storyteller. He is an artist, author, writer and serves as executive editor of True West magazine. Bell is a popular, sought-after figure in television documentaries about the Old West, appearing as an expert in dozens of Wild West history shows. Bell won an Emmy Award as Executive Producer of the PBS special, Outrageous Arizona, a zany look at the state's centennial, that he also wrote and helped direct. As an author, Bell has brought to life Billy the Kid, Geronimo, Doc Holliday, Wyatt Earp and Wild Bill Hickok in his best-selling Illustrated Life and Times series. His books Classic Gunfights I, II and III are must-reads about the most important Old West gunfights. Bell’s Bad Men is now in its fourth printing, while his illustrated autobiography, The 66 Kid: Raised on the Mother Road, gives personal insight into the passions that have driven him on his lifelong quest to interpret the history of the American West for audiences around the world.
    📚 Buy "The Illustrated Life and Times of Billy the Kid": store.truewestmagazine.com/tw...
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Komentáře • 640

  • @PD3a11
    @PD3a11 Před 2 lety +58

    “Nothing changes more than the past.” Great comment.

    • @ITILII
      @ITILII Před 2 lety +1

      When the legend becomes fact, print the legend - In other words, when fiction becomes fact, print the fiction...From the movie, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence

    • @lukesnare8063
      @lukesnare8063 Před 2 lety

      The past can never be changed you can only change it with words

    • @timjohnson2551
      @timjohnson2551 Před 2 lety

      @@ITILII w WW2 WW2 ³ww⁴ was

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 Před rokem +1

      And at least we have the courage to change it to the truth if we ever find it.

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 Před rokem

      @@lukesnare8063 The past doesn’t change but what we say about it and what we think the facts are does change, and should.

  • @27Zangle
    @27Zangle Před 2 lety +38

    My father was really into western, books, movies, history, etc. I remember him reading Louis L'Amour over and over among other articles. He lived in the Nevada, Arizona area while growing up and would regularly visit family throughout his life until his death. I remember books laying around and he would read them over and over through the years. He watched a lot of old westerns and anything new that came out and would include me with the movie watching on Friday nights. We would get some sleeping bags to camp in the living room, ice cream, and a coke. He would usually drink himself to sleep and I would finish the movie on my own before shutting off the VCR and TV.
    One thing my mother had always said was, "Your father was born about 100 years too late."

    • @strahaironscale571
      @strahaironscale571 Před 2 lety +3

      sounds like a cool dad

    • @beachcomber1able
      @beachcomber1able Před rokem

      What was his opinion on Brushy Bill?

    • @i.marr.6688
      @i.marr.6688 Před rokem +1

      @@beachcomber1able Do you believe Brushy Bill was really Billy the Kid? I doubt it was him If billy wasn't shot dead he would have resurfaced sometime later, On the other hand he was identified by some who knew Billy, But I believe he was shot By Pat Garratt

    • @beachcomber1able
      @beachcomber1able Před rokem +1

      @@i.marr.6688 No way was Brushy Billy. 😆
      Forty odd folks went to Billy's funeral and the ladies of the town dressed His body .

    • @danielwebster5748
      @danielwebster5748 Před 11 měsíci

      That is a good story. I have always said the same about myself

  • @jimmiethomas7194
    @jimmiethomas7194 Před 2 lety +10

    My great great grandmother was Odilia Maxwell. Pete’s sister. Through sayings passed down I don’t believe Billy the Kid was killed that night!

  • @moustafasharmoot
    @moustafasharmoot Před 3 lety +54

    My Great Grandmother use to tell how The Dalton Gang would hide out in her Father in Law's bard after they would rob a train. My 2X Great Grand Father lived in Perry, Okla his name was Chief Hoke Dent, they would leave the barn door open and the Dalton Gang after Robbing a train or bank would ride into Indian terrority and hide out in his barn. His wife would bring out dinner and breakfast to them. When they would leave my 2 X Great grandmother would go out to get the dishes and The Dalton Gang would leave a stack of gold coins on a wood barrel.

  • @0lddragracer426
    @0lddragracer426 Před 3 lety +42

    In 1950, I was 12 years old. I was a big reader then, and now. I went to my local library, to check out some books, and found "The Saga of Billy the Kid," by Walter Noble Burns. I read it, and it left me with a life long fascination for the kid. I happened to mention this to one of my cousins, and a few days later I received a brand new copy of my own. It's still in Print, since 1927. I have been re-reading it, and enjoying it very much. Because I know so much more now about the kid, and his story, this read is not quite the same. Gone are the stars in my eyes. I believe you are correct when you said that this book made Billy Bonny a super star. It absolutely did!

  • @stevensmith1911
    @stevensmith1911 Před 3 lety +7

    Hello Bob,
    I was at the Denver photo auction and actually spoke to you earlier that day. What a day!

  • @tacofingerz7247
    @tacofingerz7247 Před 2 lety +80

    The only thing that really makes me doubt about Billy's death is the fact that there is no picture of him being dead. A wanted outlaw like him? A thirsty dog lile Garrett? Not a single picture taken? Like , it wasnt that all of that happen in a shootout in the middle of nowhere with a killing weather, it wasnt in battle, it was IN a room, and ambush, well planned and orchestrated, patiently pulled off and yet nobody took a fuckin picture? Hell we dont have pictures of the Dalton gang while being a gang, just the one where they are dead. We have a lot of pictures of a lot of dead outlaws who werent as notorious as billys and yet, knowing also that before his death there was only one picture of him? Cough we dont have a Bin Ladens dead pic either Cough. Just SAYIN.

    • @808ghostMiller
      @808ghostMiller Před 2 lety +16

      Definitely agree!!! 💯. Makes that movie Old Henry that much more entertaining

    • @BlackbirdSpecOps
      @BlackbirdSpecOps Před 2 lety +14

      Fort Sumner was small and there wasn’t a photography studio there. Photographers back then travelled through and plied their trade when they were available. Not uncommon to not have a photo of Billy the Kid dead.

    • @brianmallen8887
      @brianmallen8887 Před 2 lety +6

      @Stephan Revier Can we talk about the croquet picture? If everybody else in the pic is who they say they are and there's no way to fake putting them in there....then it's got to be the Kid, right?...All we want is the truth, right? ..And if it is the Kid? It sure tells you something. The look on his face, the way he's covering his overbite. He got something going on under his sweater about mid-section. I think he's hiding a pistol. The guy in the pic pointing at the Kid, there's a reason for that. In fact, everybody in the pic seems to be focusing direct or indirectly at the Kid.....It may be splitting hairs but Billy the Kid wasn't the same kind of criminal as The Daltons, James gang, Sam Bass etc. .. He never stuck a gun in somebody's face to rob them. Like Arizona's "Cowboys" he stole horses and cattle, but Billy never robbed banks, trains, or people. Pat Garret was just doing his fucking job. You don't just let something go after somebody kills two of your deputies and then fails to leave the territory. Billy stuck around cause he was in love with Paulita Maxwell? I think Pat Garret woulda hunted the Kid to the ends of the earth and the kid knew it and decided to have it out in New Mexico. That's why Billy was sneaking around in his socks with a knife. Garret would have been a fool to approach a wiley, sneaky, escape artist who was damn good with a rifle and pistol like Bonney on the up and up. It's not a fucking movie, this stuff really happened. These were real people who didn't want to go out in a blaze of glory.

    • @pauls5096
      @pauls5096 Před 2 lety +3

      @Stephan Revier Dude, step away from the exclamation point. It's only to be used quite sparingly.

    • @LuisGomez-pg2qk
      @LuisGomez-pg2qk Před 2 lety

      AT TACO FINGERS - FT SUMNER AT THAT TIME WAS VERY SMALL TOWN, STILL IS ,MOSTLY MEXICANS LIVED THERE.NEW MEXICO IS STILL SOMEWHAT DESOLATE ESPECIALLY IN LINCOLN COUNTY COULD POSSIBLY BE NO CAMERAS AT FT SUMNER AT THAT TIME.ALSO GARRETT KILLED THE KID IN THE DARK SO THAT WOULD HAVE ANGERED BILLY'S FRIENDS N SO GARRETT RECEIVED NO COOPERATION FROM ANYONE IN FT SUMNER AND I'M SURE GARRETT N HIS DEPUTIES FEARED FOR THIER LIVES SO THEY JUS WANTED TO GET THE HELL OUT OF TOWN NO PICTURES, NO AUTOGRAPHS, NO PARADE GARRETT KILLED BONNEY N JUS IMMEDIATELY LEFT.

  • @andrewt8754
    @andrewt8754 Před 3 lety +41

    Love your work Bob, I'm a massive western fan all the way from down under Australia, my man cave is like going back in time with so much western stuff everywhere.

    • @c-secofficer123
      @c-secofficer123 Před 2 lety +2

      "They some men were born in the wrong century.. I think I was born on the wrong continent"
      This aint Dodge City...and you aint Bill Hickok

  • @Didymus1of12
    @Didymus1of12 Před rokem +9

    My grandfather always believed the Pat Garrett shot Billy from cover underneath a bed or couch that was on the walkway (porch). I didn't know enough to believe or disbelieve his story, but I just saw a short film by a man that knew the Maxwells and his account was essentially the same. My grandad was born in 1881, went to the NM School of Mines in Socorro. Evidently he knew someone who also knew Billy and Maxwell's adopted daughter, who, I believe was Billy's girlfriend. He said she was his babysitter.

  • @danielscuiry2847
    @danielscuiry2847 Před 2 lety +4

    Dear Bob: I’ve followed you and your work on The Kid’s life for years. Watching this episode made me decide to get your “Final Word”. Thank you for all that you’ve done here.

  • @ciAMkia
    @ciAMkia Před 2 lety +9

    Being American Indian and a history buff, I have loved True West since I was a kid. So, many thanks to you, Sir.
    So glad you've brought up Mr. Utley and Mr. Hutton, two historians that I respect immensely.
    I absolutely agree with you entirely, the story Garrett told just doesn't make any sense.
    No photos of the Kid's corpse? Really? Nonsense.
    If the Kid had been killed, there would have been photographs, with as much evidence as possible.

    • @LRBeforeTheInternet
      @LRBeforeTheInternet Před rokem +6

      Yeah, because there were tons of photographers living in Fort Sumner in 1881. LOL :)

  • @dustypendleton6694
    @dustypendleton6694 Před 3 lety +18

    Bob Boze Bell. After all the news and interviews about the way that Frank Hamer and Maney Gault orchestrated the trap and assassination of Bonnie and Clyde; I find it easy to accept your theory of the taking down of Billy the Kid. It's the intelligent way to avoid a shoot out with someone who would not hesitate to kill. Well done.

    • @charlesbrowngodhelpmeimiss4907
      @charlesbrowngodhelpmeimiss4907 Před rokem +1

      Rest well William Bonnie pals

    • @earlclue
      @earlclue Před rokem

      assassination? really?...thats how you see it?....dang

    • @silverstar4289
      @silverstar4289 Před rokem

      You make a good point. Billy was a psychopath who would kill without hesitation. He received the fate he earned.

  • @troyyarbrough
    @troyyarbrough Před 2 lety +28

    My grandfather knew the Maxwell family quite well and he told me that Pat Garrett shot the wrong man by mistake and had to cover it up. Whether it's true or not... is anybody's guess. Like you said, "Nothing changes more than the past."

    • @richarddemuth7077
      @richarddemuth7077 Před rokem +3

      I BELIEVE you and I AGREE. Read Garrett's account of the shooting very carefully and also look at the 1880's photograph of the Maxwell's Fort Sumner property. His location descriptions MATCH but also IMPLY it was one of the MEXICAN rancheros he shot. An "expendable" guy nobody would apparently miss whose identity could be covered up.

    • @ernstb7376
      @ernstb7376 Před rokem +3

      Why would some mexican ranchworker end up in Petes bedroom at midnight and disturb him? I dont think Pete would have liked that very much.🤔

    • @richarddemuth7077
      @richarddemuth7077 Před rokem +8

      According to a 1983 interview I heard about with Pat Garrett's last surviving daughter, SHE ADMITTED that her father had TOLD HER HE DIDN'T kill Billy the Kid. Would a father LIE to UNimpress his DAUGHTER that he DIDN'T DO something he was FAMOUS for??

    • @ernstb7376
      @ernstb7376 Před rokem

      @@richarddemuth7077 Well that is interesting....there are many people saying later that he shot the wrong man...but can we belive this...Deluvina Maxwell cried and let her sorrows out and she cursed and hated Pat Garrett for many years after the killing...why spend time on that if it wasnt Billy that got killed? The jury the day after concluded that it was Billy. They cleaned him an put clothes on his body before putting him into the grave. Around 40 people attended the funeral...Jesus Silva a friend of Billy was there too...no one said it was the wrong guy...Garrett could not have been able to persue all this people to lye for the rest of their lives. And then he wrote a book about it...If Billy was around kicking it was a brave move...naaa...I think Billy died that night in fort Sumner...despite what people tend to say...

    • @danielblackburn1241
      @danielblackburn1241 Před měsícem

      ​@richarddemuth7077 she died 20 odd years before that date so I doubt there's any truth there

  • @matthewb2923
    @matthewb2923 Před 3 lety +35

    i am a younger kid now getting into history i love learning about it and it opens my mind to how it was back then and then now!

    • @tacofingerz7247
      @tacofingerz7247 Před 2 lety +4

      History is a beautiful thing. Keep diving in!

    • @dannyfaircloth2679
      @dannyfaircloth2679 Před 2 lety +1

      I have a funny fact for you my soon to be exwife is kin to John Westley harden and my grate grandfather was a Texas ranger that went after John Westley harden

    • @armyvet8279
      @armyvet8279 Před 2 lety

      Yeah sure

    • @susanmccormick6022
      @susanmccormick6022 Před 2 lety

      @@tacofingerz7247 Welcome,but be careful,it's addictive.

    • @susanmccormick6022
      @susanmccormick6022 Před 2 lety

      @@dannyfaircloth2679 Fascinating.

  • @kathyjaneburke2798
    @kathyjaneburke2798 Před 2 lety +2

    My Dad had a subscription to True West! I remember reading them, in the '70s. It gave me a true love of the "ole west". Thank you for keeping the magazine & my curiosity alive!

  • @elviejodelmar2795
    @elviejodelmar2795 Před 3 lety +5

    I lived in Torrence County, NM, (the county just north of Lincoln County) in the early 1990's. The county phone book was only about 1/4" to 1/2" thick but used space to publish a short history of an old timer who told story of a character, Uncle Billy. who was rumored to be Billy the Kid and who always went armed.
    The story-teller as a young man was on horseback running in front of a rain storm and came to a sliding stop in front of Uncle Billy's house and burst into the house only to come face-to-face with a .45 in the hands of Uncle Billy.

  • @silverstar4289
    @silverstar4289 Před 2 lety +4

    It is a treat to get Bob’s perception on whether the Kid lived to old age. He sums it up well. There may be noteworthy considering if the same belief was associated with James, and other criminals

  • @0lddragracer426
    @0lddragracer426 Před 2 lety +11

    I re-watched this Bob, and enjoyed it again. There is a CZcams video somewhere, that someone made testing the theory of using dimes in a shotgun. He set up a block of geletin, and a large paper target. He loaded some rounds with dimes, and then buckshot. The dimes literally scattered, and did nothing! He shot more than once, with the same results. So much for that story. Of course, the buckshot was a different story. I believe Ollinger would have tested his dime loads, had he actually been using them. That said, I think the kid gave him a load of 00 buck out of his own 10 gauge shotgun. From all accounts, Ollinger deserved it!

    • @jeffreyelliott622
      @jeffreyelliott622 Před rokem +1

      Billy the Kid said Best $1.80 I ever spent !! Bob !! Quit napping on the job Bob !!!

    • @angelvalle6515
      @angelvalle6515 Před 11 měsíci

      Spread him out like tularosa 😉

  • @alissarobertson8840
    @alissarobertson8840 Před 3 lety +19

    I had a book about old west outlaws in the mid 60's with that famous photo of the kid. My Dad noticed the loading gate on the Winchester was on the wrong side and the photo was reversed. He said Billy was right handed and now I know he was right and I took that as irrefutably proof from that day to now.

    • @robertayoder2063
      @robertayoder2063 Před 3 lety +2

      We all know that its widely known

    • @varanid9
      @varanid9 Před 2 lety

      @@robertayoder2063 Any relation to Adam Yoder?

  • @jlbowhunter
    @jlbowhunter Před 2 lety +7

    If you never got to watch Bob Munden, search CZcams and watch him. Fastest draw and shot ever recorded. He is outspoken and he knew he was the best and the fastest. Anyways, he said something along the lines of back in the old west days guys were shot in the back. There were no high noon standoffs outside of a saloon like portrayed in movies. I have no doubt it was like this and I am going to get this gentleman’s book to read. But the fact that Garrett possibly shot Billy like a dog unarmed is very believable.

  • @jaynesager3049
    @jaynesager3049 Před rokem +2

    I’ve loved True West since the seventies. Every article, cover to cover, kept me riveted.

  • @markbliss1311
    @markbliss1311 Před 2 lety +4

    The top tech of that era was photography. Anyone with noteriety would have been immortalised and shown off in a pine box. Pat Garrett would have certainly been paid a reward, and would most certainly have a more lucrative book to sell.

  • @415s30
    @415s30 Před rokem +2

    I'm directly related to Pat Garrett, I have always had a passing interest in the subject. We have a few old revolvers from back then because we had ranchers in the family.

  • @noahcorreiaphotography
    @noahcorreiaphotography Před 3 lety +2

    Just bought my copy today. Keep up the good work Bob!

  • @LarryGenePate
    @LarryGenePate Před 2 lety +3

    I totally agree with you on this!!! I never ever thought Billy was shot by Pat Garrett!!

  • @pjh3066
    @pjh3066 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you. I lived in NM for over 40 years and have been to all those places you spoke of about Billy the Kid. I live in Ohio now and I miss NM.

  • @jerodgriffith337
    @jerodgriffith337 Před 2 lety +2

    Would love to hear more about the life of Pat Garrett, nobody really talks about him out of context of Billy the kid

  • @MrSpacejase
    @MrSpacejase Před 2 lety +1

    This is one of the greatest chat style vids with awesome backdrop ever!

  • @felipevaldez2151
    @felipevaldez2151 Před 2 lety +1

    1. As I stated earlier, I’m fused to your narrative!
    2. There’s going to be a Young Guns III? Sumbidge!
    3. I’m working on a story about a relative who’s passed about ten years ago, but he shared his adventures with me about life and exploits during the Cristero uprising in Mexico. Your storytelling method is very inspiring.

  • @ettaplace6716
    @ettaplace6716 Před 3 lety +4

    Love cave creek .. and ur program !😬 So much to learn about the old west and is many colorful characters !!!

  • @arthurdietrich5182
    @arthurdietrich5182 Před 3 lety +3

    I own a Sports Collectibles Store. People call me for advice all the time on their stuff. I have noticed people get mad when you don't tell them what they want to hear. I always just end the conversation immediately and abruptly once I sense any hostility. Kind of like the people who get mad about their Billy the Kid pics.

  • @williampinner1893
    @williampinner1893 Před 2 lety +1

    I agree with Mckinney's version of the killing of the Kid. Pat Garret was an ambush killer. When the boys rode into town that snowy night Garret and the pose just opened up on the group mortally wounding one of the regulatorsTom O'flanery. The boys hauled out and wound up at the rock cabin @ Stinking Springs. With the snow it was easy to track them. Garrets posse laid low out side & when someone walked out to feed the horses they just opened up mortally woundind Charley Boudre. Apparentley Charley was wearing the Kids sombrero or one like it. The point I'm making is Garret just shot first from cover & I personally find that either cowardly or smart in terms of his quarry. I think if we knew the absolute truth about history in general, we would have a slightly different take on things. Keep up the good work. William

  • @davidroberts5577
    @davidroberts5577 Před 2 lety +1

    So as I sit and watch I am impressed and truly enjoy your post. I'm looking at a a picture of Butch Cassidy as you are talking about Billy's death. What's your feelings on Butch and his death? Just wondering 🤔

  • @dks13827
    @dks13827 Před 3 lety +4

    Can't wait until we can go see Bob and Marshall speak to groups, again !!!!

  • @planca3430
    @planca3430 Před 2 lety +2

    pat garret and billy the kid were friends actually. i think garrett only said he killed the kid was to get his bounty and get the law off his back. and is also why the kid when to Texas and hid out there.

  • @cassie7093
    @cassie7093 Před 3 lety +2

    The real question should be is just how connected was Billy? Billy came into my real life living mystery in 2013 when an El Paso Police Officer advertised to people visiting the cemetery my great uncle is buried in that he was a companion to Billy. My 1st step after finding out various things was calling the social security office to look for clues on my great grandfather. He had a sideshow he travelled our country with. It was called "The Hollywood Sideshow." He was written about in a book titled "Freaks, Geeks, and Vagabonds." The story of one handshake away notables of their time is enough to keep my mind spinning and searching. As my uncle was the miner for the man over the 1st holding company in all America. This man was William Collins Whitney. His 1st wife was Flora Payne. Sister of Oliver Hazard Payne. His 2nd wife was Edith Randolph. The daughter of the Doctor who examined both Abe Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth. When I called the social security office my grandfather used both names as last names for him and his father. John Edward Sundstrom or stage name of "Johnny Howard." Trailing any of them has been a ride out of this world. :As he put his mother down as a world famous fictional character. Definitely a fluke right! Not I finally figured out the other day not only did my uncle's son date the daughter of Evangeline Crawford-Daughter of Captain Jack Crawford but that I have a picture of my great grandmother( the supposedly fictional one) in a picture with Evangeline Crawford-meaning there was more than one family member connected to the Crawford's. Then like one of the partners in my uncles oil company was a judge that had a law partner who was the attorney for Harry Ford Sinclair. The Mc Kinney Family is a tie in. But not from there. From when Billy was a kid in school. The Mc Kinney family was also connected to Collin Mc Kinney. The Mc Kinney Family had a son that worked in Tom Green county for the MS Ranch. Who was in partnership with Adam Schuster of St. Joseph MO. Whose business associates were the men who brought about "The Pony Express" The history of entanglements in my story seems to be never ending. The world famous fictional character I get the HONOR of being named after in this one life to live? Katie O'Hara as in Gone with the Wind. The connections. Figuring them out who and why they would do this to any one? Say their family never existed!? Come to find out Buffalo Bill used to live south of me here near St. Louis. Boy oh boy how about the Sierra Madre Trading Company? My uncle was involved with the quarry that provided the stone for most of the courthouses, post offices, and other buildings in Texas~ with "The Peco's Red Sandstone Company. The man who paid to say my great grandmother never existed was the grandson of Mr. Whitney. His mom was Helen Hay. The daughter of John Hay. Abe'synopsis

    • @TheReal1953
      @TheReal1953 Před 8 měsíci

      You have a lot of interesting information. You should do some sort of a flowchart to explain all these connections. And to your credit, you should show accurate provenance whenever you can.

    • @cassie7093
      @cassie7093 Před 7 měsíci

      I have a blog that is dedicated to the American people. I used to be one of America's top mortgage collectors til I found out my employer lied when they told me I had signatory authority to settle or sell mortgage notes for both Chase and Citi. Thereafter I lost my job and the only way I could be responsible is if I could get honest biz done. Then I found out I never needed a way as if they didn't lie to us everyday i"d be a billionaire. But money doesn't make a person. In America if you go to court with a way to be responsible they don't want you to be. The judges are full of bias with no impartiality. I faced two separate federal recusals back to back here in the Eastern District of Missouri then faced another corrupt judge. We've figured out two separate ways to build our families instead of coming after people like this. DNA tracking isn't allowed that I"m aware of. Neither is theft! At any rate everything may not be on my blog but if info is requested I can get it.I also have a video. Provenance can be verified :) czcams.com/video/870afUu6bS0/video.html mortgagefraudclosure.blogspot.com

    • @Snarkapotamus
      @Snarkapotamus Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah, but where does Kevin Bacon figure into all of that?

    • @TheReal1953
      @TheReal1953 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Snarkapotamus 🤣

  • @ajdogcurr1
    @ajdogcurr1 Před rokem +2

    You tell wonderful true stories about the old west Mr Bell. They are so interesting.

  • @davesteller6301
    @davesteller6301 Před 2 lety +1

    In the past week I've watched so many different videos on Mr. Bonnie. And each has their own take. All brilliant. I would love for all these people to get together, in good cheer, and have a discussion, or maybe even a debate, over some of these details...like did Billy really live on.

  • @davidlarned4315
    @davidlarned4315 Před 2 lety +6

    Concerning Bob Olinger using dimes in his shotgun. I don't know if he did or not but I saw a video of someone shooting a side of hog ( i believe it was hog ) and many of the dimes bounced off with only a few penetrating. Dimes did not perform as well as buckshot,,,

  • @melvinmayfield470
    @melvinmayfield470 Před 2 lety

    Mr. Bell, as always, Great Stuff! Many Thanks!

  • @boblevey
    @boblevey Před 2 lety +3

    Not sure you know this but Koch built a replica in a western town in Paonia CO about 10yr ago which I did most of the interior finishes on. I also worked for David in Aspen

  • @rebcotton3679
    @rebcotton3679 Před rokem +1

    I just started watching your videos and I love them

  • @Sheltowee1775
    @Sheltowee1775 Před 2 lety

    It might not have been your idea but I hope you see that people LOVE these FB/YT chats you do.

  • @hobiecat901
    @hobiecat901 Před 2 lety +1

    Bob, You are such a Great teller of these Western Stories. I am going to buy the Book of the Saga of Billy the Kid. Will be looking for Your Book as well. Thanks.

  • @davidellis4416
    @davidellis4416 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello Bob, from Bethungra Australia in 2013 I was in San tan valley visiting my daughter, dam I wish I knew you were around the corner.

  • @victoriakalberg9590
    @victoriakalberg9590 Před 7 měsíci

    I really enjoy ur True West Magazines and books! Keep up the good work, Bob! 👍❤😁

  • @johnpearson429
    @johnpearson429 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for your stories Mr. Bell

  • @1lthrnk
    @1lthrnk Před rokem +1

    Another part of history of Billy the kid, his mother. Catherine (Devine) Antrim (abt. 1830 - 1874) ... Wife of Patrick McCarty before moving to New Mexico she was a very powerful person in Wichita Ks. She owned her own property ran a laundry mat and she was the only woman to sign the petition that helped incorporate the town.

  • @ScoopDogg
    @ScoopDogg Před 2 lety +2

    would love to know if you've seen the Red Dead Redemption console games and what do you think about them. They Introduced a new generation to Westerns, me included and I bet helped in the sales of your books too lol. love your artwork and stories you write.

  • @ericwilliams6915
    @ericwilliams6915 Před 3 lety +6

    Fact is nobody today knows what really happened Garrett was a crook and liar so is it possible he killed the wrong man yes is it possible he killed Billy sure is anyone claiming to be a expert on this issue today is not they can only retell stories they have heard

  • @buddylobos5277
    @buddylobos5277 Před 2 lety

    Today on that corner in Santa Fe is EVANGELO'S BAR. There is a brass plaque that was moved from the sidewalk to the building wall. Same bar "Bad Blake' (Jeff Bridges in Crazy Heart) and I have played. LOL.

  • @jimmyknight1609
    @jimmyknight1609 Před 2 lety +1

    I enjoy listening to you speak, I enjoy the magazine, I thank you for your time and knowledge, much appreciation!

  • @jonkeathley3772
    @jonkeathley3772 Před 3 lety +5

    Huge fan and follower thank you for all the stories and research youve done.. Ive always been skeptical of the death of Billy i dont doubt he died but the hows and why..

  • @NickAlati
    @NickAlati Před 2 lety

    Bob Bell, great Radio Face lol. Nice to see you again!

  • @RedStingrayy
    @RedStingrayy Před 2 lety

    Hey thanks soooooooooo much for your wonderful information and your amazing, infectious story-telling!!!

  • @44hawk28
    @44hawk28 Před 2 lety +4

    Let me preface this by saying that because of the John Kennedy assassination I learned an awful lot about ballistics and how firearms at how bullets work and subsequently the physics and physical realities of gunfights. I never understood the Pat Garrett creation of the death of Billy the Kid. It still doesn't make sense that he just decided to shoot somebody that he couldn't possibly have known who they were when he shot them. Then he doesn't even go to the trouble of verifying the death by having the body photographed. That is hugely unusual for that period of time. As a result that the very best I can tell you that Billy the Kid did not die the way by Pat Garrett, a close friend of his, said he did.
    Whether or not he lived in obscurity because Pat Garrett killed whoever he chose to kill that night is a completely different question. There are people who knew Billy the Kid who verified that bushy bill was Billy the Kid he had the same scars and the same places and he had the body build that definitely was consistent with Billy the Kid. The photograph comparison doesn't work for me because I've seen people that in their 40s change their facial structure enough to look enough different that their photographs will not align.
    Surprisingly, I did study the background and verification of the croquet photo. And that isn't Billy the Kid in that photograph, that Billy the Kid had an identical twin. I believe that photo to be absolutely genuine. The thought that the second photo of Billy the Kid is going to sell for twice as much as the tintype sold for is a Fool's dream.

    • @dks13827
      @dks13827 Před 2 lety +3

      Was there a photographer in Ft Sumner ? ( sure, I wish there was )

    • @LuisGomez-pg2qk
      @LuisGomez-pg2qk Před 2 lety

      AT 44 HAWK -IM NOT DISRESPECTING U BUT HOW IN THE HELL WOULD U KNOW WHAT KIND OF BALLISTICS TOOK PLACE THAT NIGHT WHEN U WEREN'T THERE OR EXAMINED KIDS BODY WOUNDS.I WISH PEOPLE WOULD JUS COME OUT N SAY IT "I DON'T WANT BILLY DYING OR THAT HE'S STILL ALIVE IN NEW MEXICO" JESUS, MARY N JOSEPH!! .FT SUMNER IS SMALL ASS TOWN MUCH SMALLER BACK IN 1882 FILLED WITH HUNDREDS OF MEXICANS THAT DIDN'T LIKE GARRETT OR THE LAW, PERFECT PLACE FOR THE KID TO HIDEOUT UNFORTUNATELY HE WAS SHOT IN DARK, NO PICTURES IT WAS SMALL TOWN N GARRETT PROBABLY WANTED TO GET HELL OUTTA DODGE ( I WOULD'VE) IN A HURRY. KID NEVER POPPED UP AGAIN BECAUSE HE WAS DEAD.IVE NEVER SEEN A PICTURE OF WILD BILL HICKOCK DEAD YET HE TOOK ALOTTA PICTURES OR MAYBE HE LIVED TO OLD AGE OF 100 N IT WASN'T HIM KILLED BY MCCALL- JESUS PEOPLE WILL BELIEVE ANYTHING!!

  • @henryriddle7891
    @henryriddle7891 Před 2 lety +3

    It's my life dream to see the places and artifacts that you've saw in the old west over the years. I'm from east Tennessee but really interested in the old west, thank you for this.

  • @aridian7787
    @aridian7787 Před 3 lety +43

    It’s a fallacy to say that if the kid survived then he must be Brushy Bill. Not so! The kid could have escaped and lived out his life and Brushy Bill could be an imposter also. Both CAN be true. In other words, discrediting Brushy Bill doesn’t prove the Kid died in 1882.

    • @ancestorstalker1707
      @ancestorstalker1707 Před 3 lety +5

      I agree with you. Just like all the so called photos of him. None look like the same person. Everyone wanted a claim to fame. And the "outlaws" who came out claiming stories i don't believe either. Maybe 20-40% of what they claim.
      Feel strongly on the information about the sundance kid too. Jesse Evans... hardly any facts and can't even confirm what their names actually were.
      With Billy tho, I have to wonder with all the fame around him, how many different people claimed to be him back in 1880s for the sheer "fun" of it, which would have made his stories and adventures even more spread out.
      Rumors.

    • @donaldoneill2117
      @donaldoneill2117 Před 2 lety +2

      Died in 81 nitwit

    • @attilathehun0
      @attilathehun0 Před 2 lety +6

      Nobody is trying to prove that Billy the Kid died in 1882 he was killed in 1881.

    • @44hawk28
      @44hawk28 Před 2 lety +8

      @@donaldoneill2117 has nothing to do with the point he was making, who in the hell is the nitwit. There was never any validation of the death of Billy the Kid. Ever. 1881 1882 1883 or ever. The story made no sense whatsoever. And it wasn't until I was doing gunfight investigations and understanding what happens in and out of gunfights and understanding that in the 1870s and 80s if somebody even semi-famous was killed there was always a photograph. Not only was Pat Garrett a friend of the Maxwell family he was a close friend of Billy the Kid. It would have been easy for Mr Bonnie to disappear. They killed anybody at the Maxwell Ranch it was probably one of the workers and they quickly buried him and covered it up.

    • @VideoGameSlang
      @VideoGameSlang Před 2 lety +9

      The Kid suriving is a perfectly valid theory but Brushy Bill was 100% not Billy.

  • @richardbeaton7324
    @richardbeaton7324 Před měsícem

    Loved this man please do more live chats answering questions ! Much love and respect from the UK.

  • @kieranjones433
    @kieranjones433 Před 2 lety +9

    I’m such a fan of billy the kid I watch so many documentary’s on him it’s unreal! I read so much about him as well, best film about him was young guns! It’s unreal how much that film had so much real facts about he’s killings with bell, rob loads it’s unreal

    • @bidensucks6806
      @bidensucks6806 Před 2 lety

      Great movie! The Kid is a great movie also.

    • @susanmccormick6022
      @susanmccormick6022 Před 2 lety +1

      Kieran Jones: I loved Young Guns too.But accurate it was not!Wonder if Billy would've recognised himself.

  • @harryasstruman3101
    @harryasstruman3101 Před 2 lety +1

    That's a nice stove imagine buying that from the Sears catalog and having it delivered straight to the farm. Now with the way the supply chain is going we can't even get one at the store

  • @JamesMarkin-fv2dw
    @JamesMarkin-fv2dw Před rokem

    Always very Interesting and informative.

  • @MrSkiptracy
    @MrSkiptracy Před 3 měsíci +1

    In 1963 I was in the United States Air Force stationed in New Mexico I was talking to a man in his early '90s and really the kids subject came up and he swore to God that he never was killed the way it's gone down in history that he end up going to Mexico for a while before moving back to Texas and down of old age and I've always believed him That's all I got

  • @larryviator7925
    @larryviator7925 Před 3 lety +4

    the irony here for me is that both billy and jesse james were unarmed at their times of death. both being on the run and yet both caught with their guards down.

  • @victorbradshaw7359
    @victorbradshaw7359 Před 3 lety

    Love your pronunciation of Prescott 😂 my friend lives there great story telling verbal history is always impressive to me

  • @jamesperuski2217
    @jamesperuski2217 Před 2 lety +1

    Nowadays if billy the kid would’ve done the same things people would think he’s a monster but to have it happen so long ago people love him

  • @andrewbobro3374
    @andrewbobro3374 Před 2 lety

    I think that your take is more worldly and thus more realistic, but i would like to see a debate with the " original" view with someone who also knows their stuff. You do a great job by the way!

  • @clsybear
    @clsybear Před 3 měsíci

    Great video, thanks for sharing. DO MORE

  • @bluesteeltraining
    @bluesteeltraining Před 3 lety +3

    The similar strategy used by Garret when he and his deputies killed Tom O’Foliard.

  • @corycole3474
    @corycole3474 Před 2 lety +2

    The confessionals Episode 307 The man who died twice. I started doing my own research after I listened to these guys and Holy shit yall. The truth is crazier than you could ever imagine.

  • @rosemaryfarell5264
    @rosemaryfarell5264 Před 2 lety +5

    Love the Legend and Stories of the Kid. Without doubt my FAVOURITE Old West Hero. So much to admire about this Young Man. Id love to believe he survived.

    • @Gutslinger
      @Gutslinger Před rokem +1

      Hero?

    • @susanmenegus5543
      @susanmenegus5543 Před rokem

      Me to 👍 I always wanted to believe he lived to a old age. 🤠

    • @earlclue
      @earlclue Před rokem

      huh?, he was a gambling killer& thief, his name "kid", just attached to all "kids"

  • @johnwrinkle3443
    @johnwrinkle3443 Před 2 lety

    thank you from Roswell, love how you story tell.

  • @albertvonschultz9137
    @albertvonschultz9137 Před 2 lety

    I enjoyed hearing the old western history listening to my dad and my grandmother talked about what it was like. I was in a small truck stop in Oregon back in the early 90s and ran across a few old copies of the magazine. Found out it was still in print and subscribe to it

  • @222fireant
    @222fireant Před rokem +1

    I never was interested in the old west but your videos have made me a fan.

  • @nigelpearson7617
    @nigelpearson7617 Před 2 lety +5

    Why was there no photo of the body which was the practiced at the time

  • @KingsleykSkorzeny
    @KingsleykSkorzeny Před 2 lety +1

    Thanx for that, very informative.

  • @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation
    @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation Před 2 lety +2

    Paulita claimed in an interview that she had never dated or been involved with Billy, oddly she had a bullet wound scar to the left side of her abdomen, that some say was the first shot and went through Billy, the remaining four were chest shots as Billy turned, and before daybreak a blood-soaked down filled mattress was burned that came from Paulita’s brother’s bedroom. Jose Jaramillo married Paulita, and she had a reputation, but that bullet scar was the one thing at the center of all their arguments, it was a reminder that he was not the first one to ride that spoiled rich girl. My last issue is this, suppose this happened at your home, would you really shop for and buy a mattress the following day? And why would law enforcement run this errand, a man named Thomas McKinney purchased the new mattress and arranged immediate delivery. No one finds this odd, or the blood-soaked quilt in her hope chest thrown away after her death, believed to be and described as a birthing souvenir. No midwife would leave a mess like that.

    • @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation
      @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation Před 2 lety +2

      Poe is the one who dragged Billy off of the bed and put the gun in one hand and a knife in the other, Garret was in shock thinking he may have killed Paulita as well, You don't need to be a genius to figure out that no one gets a shot to their chest and holds on to a pistol and a knife, but that is how that night went, crafting a story threatening a Navajo slave girl, making sure Billy had been dressed to hide the bullet wounds, especially the one in his back before he was taken to a carpenters shop for a wake. And Paulita was not seen in public for six weeks, she had a bullet wound to nurse. Poe got a new job from this, funded in part by Maxwell influence.

    • @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation
      @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation Před 2 lety

      Paulita died aged 65 in Fort Sumner, New Mexico. The cause of her death was nephritis (inflammation of the kidney)

    • @susanmccormick6022
      @susanmccormick6022 Před 2 lety

      @@ChacoteOutdoorRecreation The Navajo slave girl,is that Deluvina?I wasn't aware Paulina was a spoilt madam either.Food for thought.

    • @striperking6083
      @striperking6083 Před 2 lety +1

      Chacote Outdoor Recreation
      I always wondered what happened to the gun that Billy allegedly had that night . That gun should be the most sought after gun in western history . But no one brings it up .
      And I agree 100% that it’s not possible to hold on to a knife and a gun after getting shot in the heart area and then falling . It just doesn’t add up

    • @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation
      @ChacoteOutdoorRecreation Před 2 lety

      @@striperking6083 Shooting a man in the back while he is engaging in coitus is not something to be proud of, the gun and holster rig, the mattress, the address book, wallet, pocket Watch, all disappeared as part of the cover story, the only thing I am certain of is that blood soaked quilt in Paulita's hope chest, and now it is gone.

  • @bluesteeltraining
    @bluesteeltraining Před rokem

    I just managed to get my hands on the last copy of Billy the kids Illustrated final words! I should have it by the end of the month, I am so excited to get my hands on this. I bought the first edition nearly 30 years ago, maybe I could get Bob to sign this one the next time i head out to Mesa? Hey there’s nothing wrong with hoping!😅

  • @alisonwonderland5610
    @alisonwonderland5610 Před 2 lety +1

    I think that authors always want to find something new about a famous person so they can sell their books. It's the same thing that happens with men like Hitler from people who say he escaped. They want to "keep legends alive." But anyone who's really studied the personality and actions of Hitler knows that his biggest fear was being captured alive by his enemies and humiliated in front of the whole world. Hitler was also not someone who could remain obscure since he also had a desire for power and fear of obscurity. So escaping and remaining obscure was untenable for men like Hitler. So in order to get the truth about famous people, an author has to study that person's personality and motives, not just interview witnesses since a lot of "facts' about historical figures also comes from gossip and a desire to embellish their stories.

  • @stanleybest8833
    @stanleybest8833 Před rokem +1

    You're correct that history and humor don't necessarily mix. I'm dismayed that you never picked up on the Billy the Kid story. Henry Mc Carty was hated by postmaster Ash Upson long before the Lincoln County Regulators, before John Tunstall, and even before Mc Carty/Antrim ever fled New Mexico. Henry is described in Robert Utley's book as handsome, which is a Victorian catchword for distinctly ugly but endearing. When Mc Carty surrendered his family photos to photography collector Sally Chisum, there were teenage paper photos of Henry, taken hard off center, in Victorian politeness, to hide the alignment of his eyes, ears, and nose. Upson's animal hatred spread to friend, Lew Wallace, territorial governor, who imported buffalo hunter Pat Garrett, famous for strangling Indian children. Wallace upgraded Garrett to Roman Gladiator sadism. Now look at the deaths of Bill Bowdre, and especially, hitherto, Tom O'Folliard, as they were candidates of the Roman Chicken Chase, which is why Billy the Kid can never be a cheerful movie. In the 1870's and 1880's, Henry Mc Carty or anybody could hardly scratch their bellybuttons without winding up in a male newspaper, Hispanic lady stories, or a government document. 140+ years later, pictures, library memoirs, and recorded stories emerge intact from the 1880's pulp fiction and depression era hype.

  • @hettro-cv6082
    @hettro-cv6082 Před rokem +1

    Brad Meltzer's show " decoded" show about that Billy the kid was not dead. In that show it said that Pat Garret may have helped Billy the kid escape from jail, why then did Pat Garret shoot Billy? How much time past between the kid escaping from jail and Pat Garret killing the kid? This does not make sense! If Pat shot the wrong person, why did he say he killed the kid if he helped the kid escape from jail before? And If Pat Garret lied about shooting the wrong man what made Pat Garret think that no one would question it? Very interesting!

  • @spacecatboy2962
    @spacecatboy2962 Před 2 lety +3

    HELLO BOB

  • @clintperry799
    @clintperry799 Před 2 lety +2

    No one knows , now days how he died. Sad but true.

  • @kellievenable9372
    @kellievenable9372 Před 2 lety

    My grandpa grew up in southwest Arkansas/southeast Oklahoma. He use to talk about Jesse James family and visiting his mother often when he was child.

  • @erwinadams6848
    @erwinadams6848 Před 3 lety +2

    Nothing show exactly. What happened other than the people there. I just still want to know why the deputy could not identify Billy if most people in that community knew most every one.

  • @susanmccormick6022
    @susanmccormick6022 Před 2 lety +1

    I am glad the Kid wasn't totally forgotten.And I don't think he would have gone outlaw if his mother lived.Or if his step father had been a true father to him.

  • @earlclue
    @earlclue Před rokem +1

    i was always stuck on the part about garret being able to walk into dudes house &bedroom, and sit on edge of his bed, no dogs? wide open door?..alot was going on for him to be in such a deep sleep, with front door wide open

  • @clarencefancher9091
    @clarencefancher9091 Před 2 lety +3

    The only history that you know is what you see with your own eyes everything else is hear say and that's the truth God Bless you

  • @outdoorlife5396
    @outdoorlife5396 Před 2 lety +3

    I like the story, where the kid got away and lived in TX. I don't believe it, but I like it. I also like were Butch and Sundance got away, maybe. Or the one were they killed the wrong guy and he was not Jesse James. It is true maybe. I also like the stories about Pirate treasure and Confederate gold. Is it true, maybe, but I am a sucker for a good mystery. Some of this stuff is up to question, will ever know the truth, I would bet not

  • @Gene-kl1br
    @Gene-kl1br Před 7 měsíci

    Thank-you to who covered Bob Olinger

  • @coolaidmachine3
    @coolaidmachine3 Před 2 lety

    Any suggestions on finding any information of Jose Chavez??

  • @kevbullock8313
    @kevbullock8313 Před 11 měsíci

    Unfortunately this mystery will never be solved..I am 50/50 with the situation...Thankyou for sharing👍👍🇦🇺

  • @spacecatboy2962
    @spacecatboy2962 Před 2 lety

    what year did charley seringos billy the kid book come out

  • @ScoopDogg
    @ScoopDogg Před 2 lety +1

    His grave was left unmarked for 40years until a pal and some others tried to locate and place a cross,. Wasnt there a missed opportunity of an interview with joe his brother and the reporter said "why, who is he, i dont ned to talk to him" or something like that.

  • @erwinadams6848
    @erwinadams6848 Před 3 lety +1

    I would like to know why the deputy would say it doesn't like Bill the kid and was buried before anyone could say it was or wasn't the kid

  • @linayer
    @linayer Před 2 lety

    Hello from England, just found this video it's all good stuff thank-you

  • @armandopereira8513
    @armandopereira8513 Před 3 lety +1

    Por favor ntd. Em português por favor. E importante essas informações sobre velho oeste

  • @steveneely6475
    @steveneely6475 Před 2 lety +1

    Have you ever seen William Tunstill’s interview of Ola Everhard? It’s on CZcams, somewhat poorly done and rather lengthy but Ola seems very sharp. She’s either a crazy lady or she really has a lot of personal knowledge. Interested in what you have to say about it.

  • @bojowers1048
    @bojowers1048 Před 2 lety +2

    I would love for you to do one about my favorite John Westley harden

  • @dks13827
    @dks13827 Před 2 lety +3

    That old true Billy photo was sometimes shown as a mirror image............................... hence the confusion. Hard to believe it took decades for someone with a brain to spot that.

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 Před 2 lety

      I just wrote about that, even Hollywood photographers didn’t know that was a negative? So crazy.?