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Roy Bean

Judge Roy Bean
Born
Phantly Roy Bean Jr.

1825 (1825)
DiedMarch 16, 1903 (aged 77–78)
Burial placeWhitehead Memorial Museum
Del Rio, Texas
29°21′06″N 100°53′53″W / 29.3517°N 100.8980°W / 29.3517; -100.8980
Other names"Only Law West of the Pecos"
Occupation(s)Justice of the Peace/Coroner/Notary Public
Saloon keeper
Years active1882–1903
SpouseVirginia Chavez (divorced)[1]
Children4
RelativesJoshua Bean (brother)

Phantly Roy Bean Jr. (c. 1825 – March 16, 1903) was an American saloon-keeper and Justice of the Peace in Val Verde County, Texas, who called himself "The Only Law West of the Pecos". According to legend, he held court in his saloon along the Rio Grande on a desolate stretch of the Chihuahuan Desert of southwest Texas. After his death, fictional Western films and books cast him as a hanging judge, although he is known to have sentenced only two men to hang, one of whom escaped.

Early life

Roy Bean was born circa 1825 in Mason County, Kentucky, and was the namesake and youngest of five children (four sons and a daughter) of Phantly Roy Bean Sr. (November 21, 1804 – June 13, 1844) and the former Anna Henderson Gore. The family was extremely poor; at age sixteen Bean left home to ride a flatboat to New Orleans, hoping to find work.

After getting into trouble in New Orleans, Bean fled to San Antonio, Texas, to join his elder brother Sam.[2] Samuel Gore "Sam" Bean (1819–1903), who had earlier migrated to Independence, Missouri, was a teamster and bullwhacker.[3] He hauled freight to Santa Fe and then on to Chihuahua, Mexico. After Sam fought in the Mexican–American War, he moved out of San Antonio, where his younger brother Roy had joined him.[2][4]

In 1848 the two brothers opened a trading post in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Soon after, Roy Bean shot and killed a Mexican desperado who had threatened "to kill a gringo".[2] To escape being charged with murder by Mexican authorities, Roy and Sam Bean fled west to Sonora, Mexico. By the spring of 1849, Roy Bean had moved to San Diego, California, to live with his elder brother Joshua Bean. The latter was elected the first mayor of San Diego the following year, after California became part of the Union.[2]

Considered handsome, Bean competed for the attentions of various local women. A Scotsman named John Collins challenged Bean to a pistol-shooting match on horseback. Bean was left to choose the targets and decided that they would shoot at each other. The duel was fought on February 24, 1852, and ended with Collins receiving a wound to his right arm.[2] Both men were arrested and charged with assault with intent to murder.

In the two months that he was in jail, Bean received many gifts of flowers, food, wine and cigars from women in San Diego. Hidden in the final gifts he received there were knives that were encased in tamales. Bean used the knives to dig through the cell wall and escaped on April 17, 1852. He fled to San Gabriel, California, where he became a bartender in his elder brother Joshua's "Headquarters Saloon". After Joshua was murdered in November 1852, Bean inherited the saloon.[2] In 1854 Bean courted a young woman who was subsequently kidnapped and forced to marry a Mexican officer. Bean challenged the groom to a duel and killed him. Six of the dead man's friends put Bean on a horse and tied a noose around his neck, leaving him to hang when the horse moved. When he was hanged, the rope stretched and Bean was able to stay alive.[5] The bride, who had been hiding behind a tree, cut the rope, freeing him and saving his life. This experience left Bean with a permanent rope burn and a stiff neck for the rest of his life.[2]

Shortly thereafter, Bean chose to leave California and migrated to New Mexico to live with Sam, who had been elected the first sheriff of Doña Ana County.[2][4]

In 1861 Samuel G. and Roy Bean operated a store and saloon on Main Street in Pinos Altos (just north of Silver City) in present-day Grant County, New Mexico. It advertised liquor and "a fine billiard table". Roy's cannon, which had been used to repel an Apache assault on the town, was displayed in front of the store.[6]

Move to Texas

During the Civil War, the Confederate Army had invaded New Mexico. During the Battle of Glorieta Pass in March 1862, the Confederates lost their supply wagons and were forced to retreat to San Antonio. After taking money from his brother's safe, Bean joined the retreating army. For the remainder of the war, he ran the naval blockade by hauling cotton from San Antonio to British ships off the coast at Matamoros and returning with needed supplies.[2] For the next twenty years, Bean lived in San Antonio, working nominally as a teamster. During this time he attempted to run a firewood business by cutting down a neighbor's timber. He then tried to run a dairy business but was soon caught watering down the milk. Bean later worked as a butcher, rustling unbranded cattle from other area ranchers for his business.[2][7]

On October 28, 1866, he married eighteen-year-old Virginia Chavez.[3] Within a year after being married, he was arrested for aggravated assault and threatening his wife's life.[2] Despite the tumultuous marriage, they had four children together: Roy Jr., Laura, Zulema and Sam.[2] The family lived in what was described as "a poverty-stricken Mexican slum area called Beanville".[8] Beanville would have been centered near the present-day corner of South Flores Street and Glenn Avenue not far from Burbank High School.[2] By the late 1870s Bean was operating a saloon in Beanville and had heard that many construction camps were opening as several railroad companies were working to extend the railroads west.[2] A store owner in Beanville "was so anxious to have this unscrupulous character out of the neighborhood" that she bought all of Bean's possessions for $900 so that he could leave San Antonio. At the time, Bean and his wife were separated and he had left his children with friends as he prepared to go west.[2]

Justice of the peace

With the money he received, Bean purchased a tent, some supplies to sell, and ten 55-gallon barrels of whiskey. By the spring of 1882, he had established a small saloon near the Pecos River in a tent city he named Vinegaroon.[9] Within 20 miles (32 km) of the tent city were 8,000 railroad workers. The nearest court was 120 miles (190 km) away at Fort Stockton, and there were few means to stop illegal activity. A Texas Ranger requested that a local law jurisdiction be set up in Vinegaroon, and on August 2, 1882, Bean was appointed justice of the peace for the new Precinct 6 in Pecos County.[2] His first case, however, had been heard earlier, on 25 July 1882, when Texas Rangers brought in Joe Bell to be tried.[10]

One of his first acts as a justice of the peace was to "shoot [...] up the saloon shack of a Jewish competitor".[2] Bean then turned his tent saloon into a part-time courtroom and began calling himself the "Only Law West of the Pecos".[2] As a judge, Bean relied on a single law book, the 1879 edition of the Revised Statutes of Texas, and when newer law books showed up he used them as kindling.[2][8] Bean did not allow hung juries or appeals. Jurors, who were chosen from his best bar customers, were expected to buy a drink during every court recess.[2] He was also known for his unusual rulings. In one case, an Irishman named Paddy O'Rourke shot a Chinese laborer. During the trial, a mob of 200 angry Irishmen surrounded the courtroom and saloon, threatening to lynch Bean if O'Rourke was not freed. After looking through his law book, Bean ruled that "homicide was the killing of a human being; however, he could find no law against killing a Chinaman" and subsequently dismissed the case.[2][11][12]

By December 1882, railroad construction had moved farther westward and Bean moved his courtroom and saloon 70 miles (110 km) to Strawbridge (now Sanderson). He sent for his children, who then lived with him at the saloon, with his youngest son Sam sleeping on a pool table.[2] A competitor who was already established in the area laced Bean's whiskey with kerosene.[7] Unable to attract customers, Bean left the area and moved to Eagle's Nest, 20 miles (32 km) west of the Pecos River, which was soon renamed Langtry.[2]

Roy Bean holding court while sitting on a barrel and holding his law book at his Jersey Lilly Saloon, 1900s
The Jersey Lilly Saloon in September 2005

The original owner of the land, who ran a saloon, had sold 640 acres (2.59 km2) to the railroad on the condition that no part of the land could be sold or leased to Bean. O'Rourke, the Irishman whose case Bean had previously dismissed, told Bean to use the railroad right-of-way, which was not covered by the contract, and for the next 20 years Bean squatted on land he had no legal right to use.[2][8][9] Bean named his new saloon The Jersey Lilly in honor of Lillie Langtry, who recounted in her autobiography that she had visited the area after Bean's death.[2][8][13] She did, however, send to Bean a pair of Colt .45 pistols.[14] Langtry did not have a jail – although it is reported that outside The Jersey Lilly was a large oak tree with a heavy log chain that served as a "jail" for those unable to pay their fines; all cases were settled by fines. Bean refused to send the state any part of the fines, and kept all of the money.[11] In most cases the fines were made for the exact amount the accused person was carrying.

Bean was noted for his unusual verdicts, some of which are reported to have been:[12]

  • Upon finding the corpse of a Southern Pacific railroad workman who had been killed after he fell from a high bridge over the Pecos River, the man having been carrying a pistol in his pocket and $40 on his person when he had died, the judge rendered a verdict of accidental death and then imposed a posthumous $40 fine[12] [a $20 fine upon the man for having carried the concealed weapons. Bean, whose court/saloon was in need of money at the time, and was also a Coroner collected a burial fee of $10 and $10 in court costs].[5]
  • When a train passenger tossed a $20 gold piece for a beer, Bean refused to give any change. When the stranger protested, Bean fined him $19.95 for contempt of court and threatened to double the fine if the stranger said another word; the stranger left on a train.
  • Although only district courts were legally allowed to grant divorces, Bean did so anyway, and pocketed $10 for each divorce.[7] He charged $5 for weddings, and ended all wedding ceremonies with the phrase "and may God have mercy on your souls" (a traditional saying when a death sentence is carried out).[2][7] After Bean performed the marriage of two Mexican couples, they later came before Bean and asked to be divorced and remarried to the other person's spouses; Bean agreed to the demand, charging each $10 for the marriages and $40 for the divorces.
  • When a Mexican man received permission for one day off from his boss to marry his future wife but there was not enough time for a license, Bean married them anyway and proclaimed that the marriage license would arrive by the next day's mail after charging them his usual $5 marriage fee.
  • A rival saloon owner named Torrano was brought before Bean on an assault charge; a jury of six men found the accused guilty and fined him two dozen bottles of beer. Bean stopped his rival from buying beer at his own saloon and instead had him pay the fine at The Jersey Lilly.
  • A railroad contractor named Howard who had some law training was brought into court and read from the latest revised law statutes; Bean remitted the fine but rendered a verdict that no law books were to be brought into his court.
  • When a young ranchman was fined $5 for fighting, he produced witness that he had not been fighting but had held the other person off. Bean remitted the fine but fined the other man $10 – who had skipped town. The ranchman was committed until the fine was paid; the ranchman paid the fine.

Bean won re-election to his post in 1884, but was defeated in 1886. The following year, the commissioner's court created a new precinct in the county and appointed Bean to be the new justice of the peace. He continued to be re-elected until 1896. Even after the election defeat, he "refused to surrender his seal and law book and continued to try all cases north of the tracks".[2]

  • On April 16, 1897, there was an accidental collision between two trains in which one man was killed and four scalded;[15] Bean presided over an inquest concerning the train wreck of the G.H.& S. railroad between Bean and Langtry finding one man had formerly been a fireman on the Southern Pacific Railroad. The dead man was identified as Robert Beckman; Bean had him brought to Langtry and buried in the Langtry graveyard.[16]
  • During his term as a judge, Bean is known to have sentenced only two men to hang, one of whom escaped. Horse thieves, who were often sentenced to death in other jurisdictions, were always let go if the horses were returned to their owners.[2][7] Prior to May 1897 Leslie's Weekly printed an item "The picture in your publication of March 11 of Judge Roy Bean is all right, except the collar and cravat. He was once trying a Mexican on a charge of horse stealing and his charge was the shortest on record: Gentlemen of the Jury, there's a greaser in the box and a hoss missing. You know your duty, and they did.".[17]

Later years and death

Jersey Lilly historical marker

In 1890, Bean received word that railroad developer and speculator Jay Gould was planning to pass through Langtry on a special train. Bean flagged down the train using a danger signal. Thinking the bridge was out, the train engineer stopped the train. Bean then invited Gould and his daughter to visit the saloon as his guests. The Goulds visited for two hours, causing a brief panic on the New York Stock Exchange when it was reported that Gould had been killed in a train crash.[2]

In 1896, Bean organized a world championship boxing title bout between Bob Fitzsimmons and Peter Maher on an island in the Rio Grande because boxing matches were illegal in both Texas and Mexico.[8] The fight, won by Fitzsimmons, lasted only 1 minute and 35 seconds, but the resulting sport reports spread Bean's fame throughout the United States.[2]

As he aged, Bean spent much of his profits helping the poor of the area and always made sure that the local schoolhouse had free firewood in the winter.[2] In January 1901 Bean stated that a claim for damages of $13,000 from Apache depredations of his mules would certainly be allowed.[18]

Bean died peacefully in his bed on March 16, 1903, after a bout of heavy drinking in San Antonio. He and his son, Sam Bean (1874–1907), are interred at the Whitehead Memorial Museum in Del Rio.[2][19] In 1965, as part of the Civil War Centennial commemoration in Texas, an official Texas Historical Marker honoring Bean was erected on the museum grounds.[20]

Films

Television

Roy Bean's Opera House in Langtry

Literature

  • Echo Burning (2001), a novel by Lee Child, has the main character looking for a grave and sees a replica of Judge Bean's courthouse.
  • West of the Pecos (1937), a novel by Zane Grey, features Bean as a minor character.
  • Streets of Laredo (1993), a novel by Larry McMurtry depicts a fictionalized version of Judge Roy Bean.
  • Roy & Lillie: A Love Story (2010), a novel by Loren D. Estleman, which has the fictitious "lost letters" that Judge Bean and Miss Langtry exchanged.
  • Vinegarroon : The Saga of Judge Roy Bean "The Law West of the Pecos"(1936) by Ruel McDaniel
  • Four Against the West: The True Saga of a Frontier Family That Reshaped the Nation - And Created a Legend (2024), a true saga by Joe Pappalardo.

Comics

Video games

Namesake locations

Judge Roy Scream at Six Flags Over Texas

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Texas History Headlines - 1866 - Roy Bean and Virginia Chavez wed". Texas Landmark Legacies. howdyyall.com. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Davis, Joe Tom (1985). Legendary Texians: Volume II (1st ed.). Austin, Tex.: Eakin Press. pp. 158–173. ISBN 0-89015-473-2.
  3. ^ a b Allen, Paula (March 29, 2013). "History: Scoundrel Bean, bride wed San Fernando". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Thrapp, Dan L. (1991). Encyclopedia of frontier biography : in three volumes (1. Bison Book print ed.). Lincoln [u.a.]: Univ. of Nebraska Press [u.a.] p. 80. ISBN 978-0-8032-9418-9.
  5. ^ a b "Judge Roy Bean dies – Mar 16, 1903". HISTORY.com. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  6. ^ Anderson, George B. (1907). History of New Mexico: Its Resources and People. Los Angeles: Pacific States Pub. Co. pp. 565, 726. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e House, Marguerite (September 9, 2015). "Judge Roy Bean-Law West of the Pecos - Buffalo Bill Center of the West". Buffalo Bill Center of the West. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c d e Storng, W. F. (November 29, 2017). "The Surprising Lesson Of Judge Roy Bean's Life: It's Never Too Late". Texas Standard. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  9. ^ a b Boardman, Mark (May 3, 2017). "The Planting of Judge Roy Bean". True West Magazine. Archived from the original on January 18, 2018. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  10. ^ Hook, Charles M. Robinson III; illustrated by Richard (2005). American frontier lawmen, 1850-1930. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 9781841765754.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ a b Cochran, Mike (July 6, 1986). "Judge Roy Bean: A Crude, Drunk Bigot--and a Folk Hero". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  12. ^ a b c Humanities, National Endowment for the (August 28, 1897). "El Paso daily herald. (El Paso, Tex.) 1881-1901, August 28, 1897, Image 3" – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  13. ^ Langtry, Lillie (1925). The Days I Knew. Hutchinson.
  14. ^ See Robert Elman's Fired In Anger. A 3rd 44/40 Colt Pistol owned by Bean was put up for auction in March 2009 see Proxibid
  15. ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the (April 16, 1897). "El Paso daily herald. (El Paso, Tex.) 1881-1901, April 16, 1897, Image 4" – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  16. ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the (April 20, 1897). "El Paso daily herald. (El Paso, Tex.) 1881-1901, April 20, 1897, Image 2" – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  17. ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the (May 21, 1897). "El Paso daily herald. (El Paso, Tex.) 1881-1901, May 21, 1897, Image 3" – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  18. ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the (January 21, 1901). "El Paso daily herald. (El Paso, Tex.) 1881-1901, January 21, 1901, Last Edition 4:30 p.m., Image 3". p. 3 – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  19. ^ "Sam Bean". Archived from the original on March 19, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2011.
  20. ^ "Roy Bean". vvchc.net. Texas State Historical Survey Committee. February 26, 1965. Archived from the original on February 9, 2018. Retrieved January 19, 2018.
  21. ^ "Law West of the Pecos". Colt .45. Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
  22. ^ ""Death Valley Days" A Picture of a Lady (TV Episode 1965)". IMDb. Retrieved May 16, 2015.
  23. ^ ""A Sense of Justice" on Death Valley Days". Internet Movie Data Base. October 6, 1966. Retrieved May 30, 2015.
  24. ^ Mark Calametti. "Judge Roy Bean." Mobile Bay. 30 May 2018. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  25. ^ "Judge Roy Bean Saloon [homepage]". Judge Roy Bean Saloon. Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  26. ^ BBQ, Judge Beans. "Judge Beans BBQ". Judge Beans BBQ.
  27. ^ "About Judge Roy Beans". Archived from the original on January 24, 2022. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  28. ^ Mather, Ciarán (November 30, 2021). "UPDATE: Judge Roy Beans in Newbridge, Kildare announces reopening date". www.leinsterleader.ie.

Further reading