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Arresting a Murderer

by Emerson Bennett


During the early settlement of Texas, it was my fortune, whether good or bad, to be made sheriff of the County of —. At that time, as all know who are conversant with the history of the “Lone Star,” the whole country was filled with outlaws and desperadoes of every description, from the common gambler and thief, down to the highway robber and cold-blooded assassin. In every settlement of note they could be found by scores, and sometimes by hundreds; and in many places they formed by far the largest portion of the population. Where this was the case they ruled in blood, might made right, and woe to him who dared to breathe of law and order. Texas at that time was to some extent composed of the refuse of creation, the scum of the earth, the dregs of society—scoundrels and villains of various nations and climes. Of course there were many honest, upright, pure-minded people in the country—or it might perhaps have remained a land of robbers and murderers to this day—but I think the majority had more sins than virtues, and I know that a large portion of the floating population was absolutely bad, wicked, and fiendish.

Now it happened that the county of which I had the honor to be sheriff, and which for reasons of my own I do not care to name, was one of the worst in the State—by which I mean that it contained more bad men and less good men than any other. In two or three of the principal settlements, there was a fearful representation of every kind of wickedness, beginning with drinking, and going down through fighting, gambling and stealing, to burglary, robbery, arson and murder.

In one of the largest and most populous of these settlements, the one in which I resided, and which contained the courthouse and jail, it had been the custom, previous to my introduction into office, to average at least one homicide per night, besides a goodly number of… Read More