imjin138
US Veteran
This morning whilr getting my daughters ready for school I was watching the History channel and they had a program on called 'Cowboys and Outlaws' This episode was on Tom Horn.
I have read a few books about him and saw a few more documentaries and naturally the Steve McQueen movie. I have always found Horn a fascinating character. From cowboy/Scout to Lawman/Stock detective to killer. This program was actually pretty good they had Chip Carlson, Paul Hutton and Roger McGrath as the sources and they kept to the facts as much as possible.
I know in th emovie he used an 1876 in 40/60 but in real life he used a Model 94 in 30/30. One of the statements made was that he and other men like him kept up with technology and that he was a 'gun guy' and kept his tools in working order and clean. Which makes sense since he bet his life on them.
It is pretty clear he was a killer some 17 men at least with the Pinkertons and possibly up to 40 all together with the cattle barons. and he kept his mouth shut even when on trial, while his employers left him to hang.
They re-did his trial in the early 90's I beleive and he was found not guilty, but I am sure it didn't do him to much good. The evidence against him was circumstantial at best and would not have held up in a trial today but on the frontier it was good enough for the jury.
I still enjoy reading anything new about him, and just watched the movie a few Sundays ago.
Well that s all for this morning, take care.
I have read a few books about him and saw a few more documentaries and naturally the Steve McQueen movie. I have always found Horn a fascinating character. From cowboy/Scout to Lawman/Stock detective to killer. This program was actually pretty good they had Chip Carlson, Paul Hutton and Roger McGrath as the sources and they kept to the facts as much as possible.
I know in th emovie he used an 1876 in 40/60 but in real life he used a Model 94 in 30/30. One of the statements made was that he and other men like him kept up with technology and that he was a 'gun guy' and kept his tools in working order and clean. Which makes sense since he bet his life on them.
It is pretty clear he was a killer some 17 men at least with the Pinkertons and possibly up to 40 all together with the cattle barons. and he kept his mouth shut even when on trial, while his employers left him to hang.
They re-did his trial in the early 90's I beleive and he was found not guilty, but I am sure it didn't do him to much good. The evidence against him was circumstantial at best and would not have held up in a trial today but on the frontier it was good enough for the jury.
I still enjoy reading anything new about him, and just watched the movie a few Sundays ago.
Well that s all for this morning, take care.