The Okie Legacy: An Old Gang of Horse Thieves Story

Soaring eagle logo. Okie Legacy Banner. Click here for homepage.

Moderated by NW Okie!

Volume 17 , Issue 43

2015

Weekly eZine: (366 subscribers)
Subscribe | Unsubscribe
Using Desktop...

Sections
Alva Mystery
Opera House Mystery

Albums...
1920 Alva PowWow
1917 Ranger
1926 Ranger
1937 Ranger
Castle On the Hill

Stories Containing...

Blogs / WebCams / Photos
NW Okie's FB
OkieJournal FB
OkieLegacy Blog
Ancestry (paristimes)
NW Okie Instagram
Flickr Gallery
1960 Politcal Legacy
1933 WIRangeManuel
Volume 17
1999  Vol 1
2000  Vol 2
2001  Vol 3
2002  Vol 4
2003  Vol 5
2004  Vol 6
2005  Vol 7
2006  Vol 8
2007  Vol 9
2008  Vol 10
2009  Vol 11
2010  Vol 12
2011  Vol 13
2012  Vol 14
2013  Vol 15
2014  Vol 16
2015  Vol 17
2016  Vol 18
2017  Vol 19
2018  Vol 20
2021  Vol 21
Issues 43
Iss 1  1-5 
Iss 2  1-17 
Iss 3  1-26 
Iss 4  2-2 
Iss 5  2-9 
Iss 6  2-16 
Iss 7  2-23 
Iss 8  3-2 
Iss 9  3-23 
Iss 10  4-1 
Iss 11  4-6 
Iss 12  4-28 
Iss 13  5-4 
Iss 14  5-11 
Iss 15  5-18 
Iss 16  5-25 
Iss 17  6-2 
Iss 18  6-9 
Iss 19  6-15 
Iss 20  6-22 
Iss 21  6-29 
Iss 22  7-6 
Iss 23  7-14 
Iss 24  7-20 
Iss 25  7-25 
Iss 26  8-4 
Iss 27  8-10 
Iss 28  8-17 
Iss 29  8-24 
Iss 30  8-31 
Iss 31  9-7 
Iss 32  9-15 
Iss 33  9-22 
Iss 34  9-29 
Iss 35  10-5 
Iss 36  10-13 
Iss 37  10-20 
Iss 38  10-27 
Iss 39  11-2 
Iss 40  11-10 
Iss 41  11-16 
Iss 42  11-23 
Iss 43  11-30 
Iss 44  12-7 
Iss 45  12-14 
Iss 46  12-21 
Iss 47  12-28 
Other Resources
NWOkie JukeBox

An Old Gang of Horse Thieves Story

It was a Thursday, 19 April 1909, page 5, in The Beaver Herald, out of Beaver, Oklahoma, that we found this story entitled: "An Old Gang of Horse Thieves." The story unfolds out in Texas county, in "No Man's Land" during the early pioneer days of 1885. Maybe you might have heard this before through your pioneer ancestors.

Found on Newspapers.com

One day the first of the week Lyman Savage was telling about some of the pioneer days of Texas county. Into his recollection came the remembrance of one of the old time horse thief gangs that infested the old territory of "No Man's Land" about 1885. The gang's headquarters were at Sod Town, an old stopping place, long since disappeared and forgotten, except in the memory of the real old timers of the country. Sod Town was located in the southeastern part of what is now Beaver county. The real rendezvous of the thieves was a couple miles from town. The gang was composed of something like fifteen members, five of which were brothers, named Chitwood, and who were in reality the leaders of the band. These brothers were outlaws from Kansas, somewhere up in the Medicine Lodge neighborhood and were familiar with practically all the sections within a radius of five hundred or a thousand miles.

At times they had as high as fifty and seventy-five horses, some of them as fine specimens as you ever saw. One evening a vigilance committee from Kansas slipped into the Chitwood home, which was a couple of miles from Sod Town and in the absence of male members of the Chitwood family, ordered the mother of the boys to prepare supper. They had arms of all descriptions and while waiting for the meal stacked their tools of warfare in a corner. A young brother happened to be at home and sneaking out, rode off to warn the brothers. The leader of the gang immediately started for home and upon his arrival found the committee at supper. He used the but end of a rifle and put the whole bunch to of commission in short order, sending them home minus their firearms. He afterwards called at Mr. Savage's place of business and offered him any kind of fire arm he might desire in styles manufactured since the war. Lager on bad luck seemed to get in its work on the gang. Kit Chiswick, the leader, was overtaken in a storm and his feet frozen, which afterwards left him a cripple. One day he and his father and two others of the gang were jerked by the authorities. The evidence against the Chitwoods and one member was insufficient to convict in the opinion of those prosecuting, but in the case of the fourth member it was different. They hauled him up to the scaffold, the boards of which was a cracker box, and after allowing him to say his last good bye, kicked the box from under him, and he was left to die by strangulation.

The team, wagon and effects of the Chitwood's were confiscated on general principles and they were ordered to leave forthwith, which they did. This was one of the mean gangs of the wild days of "No Man's Land" and its passing was noted with considerable gratification by all who knew of it. This was the only hanging that ever occurred in "No Man's Land," according to the best of Mr. Savage's recollections. The name the man hanged had escaped his memory in the lapse of subsequent years, although he was of the opinion that Fred Tracy of beaver would remember it. When the indignant citizens ran the last of the gang out of the country Mr. Tracy was among the number who helped rid the community of the members and the pleasure it afforded the citizens had not likely been entirely forgotten. ~ Guymon Herald.
  |  View or Add Comments (0 Comments)   |   Receive updates ( subscribers)  |   Unsubscribe


© . Linda Mcgill Wagner - began © 1999 Contact Me