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Armstrong,
John
Aten, Ira
Baylor,
George
Brooks, J.
Abijah
Burton,
Marvin
Crowder, Robert
A.
Doherty,
Bobby Paul
Ford, John S.
Gillett,
James B.
Gonzaullas,
Manuel T.
Guffey, Stanley
Keith
Hall, Jesse
Lee
Hamer, Francis
A.
Hays, John Coffee
Hickman,
Thomas R.
Hughes, John
R.
Jones, John
B.
Klevenhagen,
John J., Sr.
Marsh, Bryan
Miller,
Charles E.
McCulloch,
Benjamin
McDonald,
William J.
McNelly,
Leander
Peoples,
Clinton T.
Riddles,
James E.
Rogers, John
H.
Ross, Lawrence
S.
Walker,
Samuel H.
Wallace,
William
Wright,
William L.
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John
B. Armstrong
1850 - 1913
John
B. Armstrong was born January 1850 in McMinnville, Tennessee. After
having spent time in Missouri and Arkansas, Armstrong moved to Texas
in 1871and settled in Austin.
In the early 1870s, Armstrong was
a member of the Travis Rifles. On May 20, 1875, he enlisted in the Texas
Rangers, becoming a member of Capt. Leander McNelly's Special Forces.
He was soon made Sergeant, and took part in the Las Cuevas War. He was
also involved in the killing and capture of several suspected criminals
in the area between Eagle Pass and Laredo. After McNelly retired from
the Ranger service, Armstrong continued to serve under Lee Hall working
in the Eagle Pass area.
Armstrong's most famous exploit was his
capture of John Wesley Hardin. It was Hardin's killing of Comanche County
Deputy Sheriff Charles Webb in May 1874, that put the Rangers on his
trail. Captured in Louisiana in September 1874 and returned to Texas,
Hardin soon escaped and remained out of sight until August 1877. Recuperating
from a gunshot wound, and walking with a cane, Armstrong still applied
to the Adjutant General for permission to work the Hardin case.
Detective John Duncan was assigned to
work with him. Learning of Hardin's whereabouts in Alabama, Armstrong
got a warrant for him, and with Duncan went in pursuit. Hardin's gang
had been menacing the railroad and the railroad was happy to assist
the Ranger in way possible to capture the outlaw. Tracking Hardin to
Florida, the Ranger enlisted the aid of local lawmen in Pensacola to
assist them in the capture. When the train carrying Hardin came into
the station, Armstrong entered the front of the coach.
Switching his cane to his left hand,
he drew his Colt .45 with his right and confronted Hardin and four members
of his gang. One of the men drew and shot at Armstrong who returned
the fire killing the man. Hardin's gun had hung up on his suspenders
allowing the Ranger time to hit Hardin over the head, knocking him unconscious.
He unarmed the other three men. Returning to Alabama, Armstrong awaited
extradition papers and returned Hardin to Texas.
In 1882 he
established a cattle ranch in Willacy county. He died 1 May, 1913,
and is buried at Armstrong in Willacy County.
Suggestions for further reading:
- Chuck Parsons, John B. Armstrong,
Texas Ranger and Pioneer Ranchman, College Station, Texas A & M University, 2007;
- Walter Prescott Webb, The Texas Rangers,
Boston, 1935;
- Fred Wilkins, The Law
Comes to Texas,
Austin, 1999;
- James B. Gillett, Six Years With the
Texas Rangers, Austin, 1921;
- Dora Neill Raymond, Captain Lee Hall
of Texas, Norman, 1940.
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