Roy Bean

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Image:Roybean.jpg

"Judge" Phantly Roy Bean (c. 1825March 16, 1903) was an eccentric US saloonkeeper and arbitrary judge who called himself "The Law West of the Pecos".

The legend says that "Hanging Judge Roy Bean," held court sessions in his saloon along the Rio Grande River in a desolate stretch of the Chihuahuan Desert of West Texas.

Contents

Early life

Roy Bean was born to a senior Phantly Roy Bean (November 21, 1804 - June 13, 1844) and his wife Anna Gore in Mason County, Kentucky about 1825, (some records suggest Roy Bean was born in 1823). His paternal grandparents were Benjamin Bean (November 19, 1781 - September 19, 1781) and his wife Fernetta Johnston, daughter of Archibald Johnston. Both grandparents were born in Virginia.

At about the age of 15, Roy left home seeking adventure in the American Old West and to follow his two older brothers, Sam and Joshua. With Brother Sam, he travelled by wagon train to what would later become New Mexico, then crossed the Rio Grande and set up a trading post in Chihuahua, Mexico. After killing a local hombre, Roy fled to California, to stay with his brother Joshua, who would soon become the first mayor of San Diego.

Roy worked as a bartender in his brother's saloon, "The Headquarters" and was later appointed by Josh as a lieutenant in the state militia. In 1852, Roy was arrested after wounding a man in a duel. He escaped, and when Mayor Josh was killed a few months later by a rival in a romantic triangle, Roy headed back to New Mexico where Sam had become a sheriff.

Roy tended bar in Sam's saloon for several years and supplemented his income by smuggling guns from Mexico through the Union blockade during the American Civil War.

Marriage and children

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On October 28, 1866, Roy married Maria Anastacia Virginia Chavez (c. 1845 - November 26, 1922). His wife was a Mexican. They settled in San Antonio, Texas. They had five children:

  • Roy Bean (born 1869/1870).
  • Laura Bean (born 1871).
  • Zulema Bean (born 1873).
  • Sam Bean (born 1875).
  • John Bean. Unknown year of birth. May have been adopted.

Throughout the 1870s, Roy supported his family of 5 children by peddling stolen firewood and selling watered-down milk. His notorious business practices eventually earned his San Antonio neighborhood the nickname Beanville.

In 1882, the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railroad hired crews to link San Antonio with El Paso. Fleeing his marriage and illegal businesses in San Antonio, Roy headed to Vinegaroon an "end of track" tent city to become a saloonkeeper, serving railroad workers whiskey from a tent. As his own best customer, he was often drunk and disorderly.

Justice of the peace

County commissioners, eager to establish some sort of local law enforcement, appointed him as the justice of the peace for Pecos County. Roy packed up and moved north from Vinegaroon to a small tent city on a bluff above the Rio Grande named Langtry (in honor of George Langtry, a railroad boss who had run the Southern Pacific Railroad's tracks through it).

The name also happened to belong to a beautiful British actress, Lillie Langtry. Roy had read about her and had become enchanted with her. Roy built a saloon he named the Jersey Lilly that also served as his home. He hung a tattered picture of Miss Lillie behind the bar. Above the door he posted signs proclaiming "ICE COLD BEER" and "LAW WEST OF THE PECOS." From there Roy Bean dispensed liquor, justice and tall tales, including that he himself had named the town in honor of the actress Lillie Langtry. He was elected to office in 1884 and re-elected many times.

His court methods were arbitrary and comical and inspired many outrageous tales. His court paraphernalia included only one revolver, one law book and a pet bear. He once assessed a dead man a $40 USD fine (all the money the corpse had) for carrying a concealed weapon. He also knew next to nothing about the real law, since he reputedly considered habeas corpus a profanity.

In legend, Judge Roy Bean is a merciless dispenser of justice, often called "The Hangin' Judge." But that title arguably goes to Isaac Parker of Fort Smith, Arkansas, who sentenced 160 (156 men and 4 women) to hang between 1875-1896, leading to the executions of 79 men. In his book "Judge Roy Bean Country," Jack Skiles says that although Bean threatened to hang hundreds, "there's no evidence to suggest that Judge Roy Bean ever hung anybody."

One of Bean's most outrageous rulings occurred when an Irishman was accused of killing a Chinese American worker. Friends of the accused threatened to destroy the Jersey Lilly if he was found guilty. Court in session, Bean browsed through his law book, turning page after page, searching for a legal precedent. Finally, rapping his pistol on the bar, he proclaimed, "Gentlemen, I find the law very explicit on murdering your fellow man, but there's nothing here about killing a Chinaman. Case dismissed."

In 1896 Bean organized the world championship boxing title bout between Bob Fitzsimmons and Peter Maher on an island in the Rio Grande, because boxing matches were illegal in Texas. The resulting sport reports spread his fame throughout the United States.

As for Lillie Langtry, he never actually met her – though he claimed otherwise. He did write her many times and even received letters in reply. He claimed that she had sent him two pistols. Unfortunately, Langtry only found time to visit the town some ten months after Roy Bean's death.

Judge Roy Bean died in March 16, 1903, peacefully in his bed, after a bout of heavy drinking. Later legend claimed he was shot by a Mexican outlaw in his porch. He was buried at the Whitehead Museum in Del Rio, Texas.

Quotes

"You have been tried by twelve good men and true, not of your peers but as high above you as heaven is of hell, and they have said you are guilty. Time will pass and seasons will come and go. Spring with its wavin’ green grass and heaps of sweet-smellin’ flowers on every hill and in every dale. Then sultry Summer, with her shimmerin’ heat-waves on the baked horizon. And Fall, with her yeller harvest moon and the hills growin’ brown and golden under a sinkin’ sun. And finally Winter, with its bitin’, whinin’ wind, and all the land will be mantled with snow. But you won’t be here to see any of ‘em; not by a damn sight, because it’s the order of this court that you be took to the nearest tree and hanged by the neck til you’re dead, dead, dead, you olive-colored son of a billy goat." -- attributed

References and external links

  • C.L. Sonninchsen. Roy Bean: The Law West of Pecos. 1943. (ISBN 0826308465)
  • Jack Skiles. Judge Roy Bean Country. Texas Tech University Press ISBN: 0-89672-369-0


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