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Okla-homey
2/3/2006, 07:33 AM
February 3, 1889 Belle Starr murdered in Oklahoma

On this day, 117 years ago, Belle Starr is killed when an unknown assailant blows away the famous "Bandit Queen" with two shotgun blasts from behind.

http://img527.imageshack.us/img527/4206/bellestarr2ag.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Belle Starr

As with the lives of other famous outlaws like Billy the Kid and Jesse James, fanciful accounts printed in newspapers and dime novels made Belle Starr's harsh and violent life appear far more romantic than it actually was.

Born Myra Belle Shirley on a small farm near Carthage, Missouri, in 1848, she received an education in the classics and became a competent pianist. Seemingly headed for an unexciting but respectable middle-class life, her fate was changed by the outbreak of the Civil War, which ruined her father's business as a Carthage innkeeper and claimed the life of her brother Edwin. Devastated, the Shirley family abandoned Missouri to try to make a fresh start in texass.

In texass, Belle began her life-long pattern of associating with men of questionable character. She just had a penchant for bad boys. In 1866, she met Cole Younger, a member of the James-Younger gang that was gaining notoriety for a series of daring bank and train robberies. Rumor had it that Younger fathered Belle's first child, Pearl, though the father might have actually been another outlaw, Jim Reed. She later had a son Eddie as well, and just exactly who his father was is a bit murky too.

http://img497.imageshack.us/img497/363/colemugshot1zm.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Mugshot of Cole Younger taken after an 1876 arrest.

Regardless, Belle's relationship with Younger was short-lived, and in 1866 she became Reed's wife. Belle was apparently untroubled by her new husband's reputation and she had become his partner in crime by 1869. She joined him in stealing cattle, horses, and money in the Dallas area. Riding her mare, Venus, and sporting velvet skirts and plumed hats, Belle played the role of a "bandit queen" for several years.

http://img527.imageshack.us/img527/5497/bellestarr6ri.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

In 1874, a member of his own gang killed Reed, and Belle was suddenly on her own. Pursued by the law, she drifted into Indian Territory, where she led a band of cattle and horse thieves. There she met a handsome young mixed-blood Cherokee named Sam Starr, who eventually became her common-law husband and new criminal partner. The Starrs managed to elude capture for nearly a decade, but in 1883 they were arrested for horse theft and both served five months in federal prison.

http://img527.imageshack.us/img527/9316/bellestarr6qm.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Belle with her preferred weapon, a .41 calibre Colt single-action revolver popularly called a "Thunderer"

http://img209.imageshack.us/img209/3971/bilyscolt41dathunderer0yi.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The .41 calibre "Thunderer" was very popular. it was smaller, and thus easier to conceal than the larger Colt SA .45 revolver. Billythe Kid usually carried a couple of them on his person. The "birds-head" grip made it easier to handle by the smaller hands of women too

Freed from prison, the couple immediately resumed their criminal careers. In 1886, Belle again lost a husband to violent death when Sam Starr was killed in a gunfight with an old enemy. Belle wasted no time in finding a third companion, a Creek named Jim July, an outlaw who was 15 years her junior. Belle chose him mostly because as a white woman in the Territory, she needed an indian husband to retain her interest in territorial lands.

http://img235.imageshack.us/img235/4658/bstarr8pe.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Belle aboard "Venus". Beplumed and well dressed, she rode side-saddle as dictated by her respectable upbringing before the Civil War in Missouri

In 1889, July was arrested for robbery and summoned to the federal court in Fort Smith, Arkansas, to face charges. See, Ft Smith was the site of the federal court which had jurisdiction over Indian Territory at the time. As an aside, for a fascinating account of frontier justice, or the lack of it, check out an account of Judge Isaac Parker, the famous "hangin' judge" of that court.

http://img527.imageshack.us/img527/6514/belleparker3er.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Judge Isaac Parker. In his 21 years on the federal bench, Parker handed out 161 death sentences, of which 79 were carried out. The rest either died in prison, escaped, were pardoned or had their sentences verturned. “People have said to me, ‘You are the judge who has hung so many men,’ and I always answer: ‘It is not I who has hung them. I never hung a man. It is the law,’” Parker said.

http://img522.imageshack.us/img522/8757/belle1parker0uw.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The Fort Smith gallows. Designed for multiple executions meant no waiting.

Belle accompanied her young lover for part of the journey but turned back before crossing into Arkansas. On her way home, someone ambushed and fatally wounded her with two shotgun blasts to her back on the banks of the Canadian River about 70 miles west of Ft Smith. Her young stud husband Jim July always believed the murderer was a neighbor with whom the couple had been feuding, but no one was ever convicted of the crime.

http://img234.imageshack.us/img234/7995/bellestarr0ca.gif (http://imageshack.us)
Belle Starr became a legendary figure and has been the subject of a movie or two.

After Belle was gunned down, her son Eddie was convicted of horse theft and receiving stolen property in July 1889 and Judge Parker sent him to prison in Columbus, Ohio. Pearl subsequently went into prostitution to raise funds for his release resulting in a presidential pardon in 1893. He eventually became a police officer and was killed in the line of duty in December, 1896.

Belle's daughter, Pearl Starr, operated a group of wh0re houses in Van Buren and Fort Smith, Arkansas, from the 1890s until World War I.

http://img70.imageshack.us/img70/1206/insane7zo2es.jpg

TUSooner
2/3/2006, 07:52 AM
Did I read somewhere that some folks suspected Belle's son Eddie of being her killer?

Okla-homey
2/3/2006, 07:54 AM
Did I read somewhere that some folks suspected Belle's son Eddie of being her killer?

I never heard that. You think daughter Pearl would have whored herself out to raise money in order to seek his parole or pardon if she thought he had killed their mom?:eek:

TUSooner
2/3/2006, 08:08 AM
And did someone say Gene Tierney?

http://img209.imageshack.us/img209/4885/tierney1kh.jpg

I'm sure Belle never looked so good.

TUSooner
2/3/2006, 08:10 AM
I never heard that. You think daughter Pearl would have whored herself out to raise money in order to seek his parole or pardon if she thought he had killed their mom?:eek:
Apparently, I was misinformed.

Harry Beanbag
2/3/2006, 09:22 AM
Wouldn't 70 miles east of Fort Smith actually be in Arkansas?

Okla-homey
2/3/2006, 09:24 AM
Wouldn't 70 miles east of Fort Smith actually be in Arkansas?

you are correct sir, I meant west.

captain_surly
2/3/2006, 09:26 AM
February 3, 1889 Belle Starr murdered in Oklahoma


Belle's daughter, Pearl Starr, operated a group of wh0re houses in Van Buren and Fort Smith, Arkansas, from the 1890s until World War I.





My Grandfather, born in the same year Belle died, was a customer. He said Pearl was about the ugliest woman he ever saw but had some quality employees.

Harry Beanbag
2/3/2006, 09:35 AM
you are correct sir, I meant west.


That's right about where Lake Eufaula is now.

KaiserSooner
2/3/2006, 09:45 AM
My Grandfather, born in the same year Belle died, was a customer. He said Pearl was about the ugliest woman he ever saw but had some quality employees.

Heh.

Taxman71
2/3/2006, 09:57 AM
My Grandfather, born in the same year Belle died, was a customer. He said Pearl was about the ugliest woman he ever saw but had some quality employees.

Grandfather of the year! All I ever get is fishing tales.

LoyalFan
2/3/2006, 10:00 AM
And did someone say Gene Tierney?

http://img209.imageshack.us/img209/4885/tierney1kh.jpg

I'm sure Belle never looked so good.

When I was posted to Fort Riley, Manginoland, there was an old bar in nearby "Junktown" (Junction City) which was owned by an ancient couple who had virtually raised young Miss Tierney. The place was full of memorabilia re Miss T.
She was a beautiful woman, to be sure, but her life was not the happiest. She had severe emotional and mental issues, y'see.
Ya'll can do a search and learn more, should you desire.

LF

critical_phil
2/3/2006, 10:06 AM
homey, maybe you can solve the Etta Place mystery in a future Good Morning......

TUSooner
2/3/2006, 10:06 AM
When I was posted to Fort Riley, Manginoland, there was an old bar in nearby "Junktown" (Junction City) which was owned by an ancient couple who had virtually raised young Miss Tierney. The place was full of memorabilia re Miss T.
She was a beautiful woman, to be sure, but her life was not the happiest. She had severe emotional and mental issues, y'see.
Ya'll can do a search and learn more, should you desire.

LF
So I've heard; too bad.