Pete Burleson

{{Short description|19th-Century Western Lawman}}

File:Pete Burleson.jpg

Pete Burleson (September 4, 1848 – December 6, 1925State of New Mexico Department of Health Certificate of Death filed 8 December 1925;) was a cattle drover and rancher, western lawman, farmer and pioneer in the New Mexico Territory and State of New Mexico. He drove cattle from Texas as part of the 1870's I. W. Lacy - L. G. Coleman cattle drive,{{Cite book |last=Porter |first=Henry Miller |title=Penciling of an Early Western Pioneer |publisher=The World Press, Inc. |year=1929 |isbn=1436683874 |location=Denver, Colorado |pages=26 |language=English}} settling in northeast New Mexico as a cattle rancher near Cimarron. He was elected sheriff of Colfax County (1877–1871), serving in this capacity during the bloodiest part of the Colfax County War (1873–1888). In his tenure as sheriff and as a resident of Cimarron, he was close friends with several notorious cowboys including Clay Allison and David John (Davy) Crockett. Burleson was also a deputy sheriff in Colfax County and Lincoln County for seven different sheriffs, his last appointment coming at age 63.Jenkins, Ellen M., United States, National Historical Publications Commission, New Mexico State Records Center and Archives, New Mexico. Territorial Archives of New Mexico. (1974). Guide to the microfilm edition of the territorial archives of New Mexico, 1846–1912, in the Historical Services Division of the State of New Mexico Records Center and Archives. Santa Fe, N.M.: State of New Mexico Records Center and Archives. Western writers Eugene Manlove Rhodes and Emerson Hough both included characters in their novels and short stories based on Burleson.

Early life

Burleson was born in Scott County, Mississippi, to Nathaniel Marion Burleson (1830–1862) and Louisa Walters (1834–1914). He moved to Texas at an early age{{Cite news |date=December 11, 1925 |title=Death of Peter Burleson at Lincoln |pages=3 |work=The Capitan Mountaineer |url=http://archives.lincolncountynm.gov/wp-content/uploads/publications/ |access-date=July 25, 2022}} where in 1862 he was happened upon by fellow rancher Robert. H. Williams in the Bandera, Texas region{{Cite book |last=Williams |first=Robert Hamilton |title=With Border Ruffians: Memories of the Far West, 1852–1858 |publisher=John Murray Publishing |year=1907 |isbn=0803297041 |location=London, England |pages=222 |language=English}} during the theft of Burleson's and Williams' horses. By this time Pete Burleson was skilled horseman and cowboy.

Life in Colfax County

= Ranching in Cimarron =

Burleson left Texas in 1873 as part of a Lacy-Coleman cattle drive along with Clay Allison and Davy Crockett, settling in Cimarron to raise cattle.{{Cite book |last=Yadon |first=Laurence |title=200 Texas Outlaws and Lawmen, 1835–1935 |publisher=Pelican Press |year=2008 |isbn=978-1589805149 |pages=81 |language=English}} Burleson's wife, Mary Eunicia Chittenden Burleson (1862–1938), recalled that her husband came to Cimarron at the head of 1500 cattle and "settled on a place on the Red River, built a two-room log cabin and settled down to raising cattle."Crawford, E. L. & Burleson, M. M. E. Mrs. Mary E. Burleson. New Mexico. [Manuscript/Mixed Material] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/wpalh001186/ .

= Colfax County War =

There are a number of political and economic facets associated with the war. One of the main ones was occupancy and ownership of the Maxwell Land Grant lands.{{Cite journal |last=Murphy |first=Lawrence R. |date=1967 |title=The Beaubien and Miranda Land Grant 1841–1846 |url=https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/nmhr/vol42/iss1/4/ |journal=New Mexico Historical Review |volume=42 |issue=1/4 |via=University of New Mexico Digital Repository}} Upon arrival in Cimarron, Burleson, Davy Crockett, Clay Allison, and others laid claim to lands that they believed to be public domain as the U. S. Department of the Interior had declared the land. Challenges as to the size and claims to the land grant resulted in at least five cases brought to the United States Supreme Court, who eventually ruled in favor of the grant owners.{{Cite book |last=Montoya |first=Maria E. |title="The Legacy of Land Grants in the American West." Translating Property: The Maxwell Land Grant and the Conflict over Land in the American West, 1840–1900 |publisher=University of California Press |year=2002 |isbn=9780520227446 |location= |pages=191 |language=English}} The ensuing struggle between the land owners and their political allies (i.e., the Santa Fe Ring) against the squatters spilled over into years of bloodshed with as many as 200 people being killed over the 15-year period of the war.{{Cite web |title=Colfax County War Colfax County: Legends o America |url=http://www.legendsofamerica.com/nm-maxwell4.html |access-date=July 19, 2022 |website=Legends of America |archive-date=February 6, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160206211529/http://www.legendsofamerica.com/nm-maxwell4.html |url-status=dead }} Burleson sided with the squatters or anti-grant forces, aligning himself with his friend, Clay Allison.

= Sheriff Burleson =

Burleson's entry into local law enforcement came in 1875 when his future father-in-law, Sheriff O. K. Chittenden, deputized Burleson and Clay Allison's brother, John, to serve arrest warrants to county probate judge Dr. Robert H. Longwill, attorney Melvin M. Mills, and postal contractor Florencio Donoghue who had been implicated in the murder of Reverend Thomas J. Tolby.{{Cite journal |last=Rasch |first=Philip J. |date=1972 |title=The People of the Territory of New Mexico VS. The Santa Fe Ring |url=https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/nmhr/vol47/iss2/6/ |journal=New Mexico Historical Review |volume=47 |issue=2 |pages=192 |via=University of New Mexico Digital Repository}} Tolby's murder served as a catalyst, fueling the passions of the Colfax County War. In a politically-charged maneuver, Sheriff Chittenden was removed from office in April 1876 by the Ring-controlled Territorial Governor, Samuel Axtell, in favor of Isaiah Rhinehart, a Ring ally.

Burleson was persuaded by O. K. Chittenden and Clay Allison to oppose Rhinehart in the November 1877 county election, which Burleson won by a large majority. His years as sheriff were characterized by the events and people that made Cimarron and Colfax County such a turbulent place. The Las Vegas Times best characterized 1870's Cimarron stating, “Everything is quiet at Cimarron. Nobody has been killed in three days.”{{Cite web |last=Weiser |first=Kathy |date=November 2019 |title=Cimarron, New Mexico – Wild & Baudy Boomtown |url=https://www.legendsofamerica.com/nm-cimarron/ |access-date=July 20, 2022 |website=Legends of America}}

Sheriff Burleson's tenure was marked with a number of high-profile events. On March 27, 1878, Burleson and his deputies were involved in a shootout at Stepp's and Morgan's Saloon with outlaws Joe Hill, Bill May, and John Ringo (Dutch John).{{Cite book |last=Thrapp |first=Dan L. |title=Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography, Volume III, P-Z |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |year=1988 |isbn=978-0803294202 |location=Lincoln |pages=1373 |language=English}} Burleson and Joe Hill were wounded and Deputy Doc Stokes was killed.{{Cite book |last=Wilde |first=Jeanne Wilkins |title=Tell Me About - A Collection of Memoirs |publisher=iUniverse |year=2009 |isbn=9781440171345 |location=Bloomington, IN |pages=74 |language=English}}

One month later, "Sheriff Peter Burleson was constrained to kill an Indian from the nearby reservation after the man became drunk and resisted arrest."{{Cite book |last=Ball |first=Larry D. |title=Desert Lawmen: The High Sheriffs of New Mexico and Arizona 1846–1912 |publisher=University of New Mexico Press |year=1992 |isbn=9780826325013 |location=Albuquerque |pages=184 |language=English}} The Las Vegas Gazette noted the Natives had beaten local resident Pablo Torres and abused his wife.{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1878-04-27 |title=Las Vegas gazette. [volume] (Las Vegas, N.M.) 1872–18??, April 27, 1878, Image 4 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84027457/1878-04-27/ed-1/seq-4/ |access-date=2022-07-25 |issn=2375-6233}} This appears to be the first time Sheriff Burleson killed someone in the line of duty.

Two weeks later, in May 1878, Burleson conducted the first legal hanging in Colfax County, New Mexico Territory. William Breckenridge, a Buffalo Soldier from Fort Union, was convicted of killing a county resident and his twelve-year old son. Burleson had to appeal to the mob in Cimarron, seeking their own justice; he persuaded the gathered crowd to allow the sentence to be legally conducted.

In December 1878, Burleson served as one of the two New Mexico dignitaries selected to drive the railroad spike at the ceremony marking the entry of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad into New Mexico.{{Cite web |date=December 21, 1878 |title=The New Era |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87090075/1878-12-21/ed-1/seq-2/> |access-date=July 24, 2022 |website=Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.}}

Burleson was re-elected in November 1879. In 1880 Sheriff Burleson and Deputy Mason "Mace" Bowman confronted Frank Coe and his cousin George Coe concerning tampering with local cattle.{{Cite book |last=Stephen. |first=Peters, James |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/894669399 |title=Knight errant : the undoing of George Woods |date=June 2010 |publisher=Xlibris Corporation |isbn=978-1-4535-0619-6 |oclc=894669399}} Dora Allison, Clay Allison's wife stated, “Pete and Mace [Bowman] had driven the Coe Gang from Colfax County, they being notorious pistoleros and cattle thieves.”{{Cite book |last=F. |first=Serna, Louis |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/144342650 |title=Robert Clay Allison and the Colfax County War |date=2000 |publisher=[L.F. Serna] |oclc=144342650}} In response to Cimarron residents pleas that he deal with Texas cowboys who had "hurrahed" the town, "[Sheriff] Burleson, Deputy Mason Bowman and a posse reportedly killed 4 Texans on 4 July 1880. The cowboys had terrorized Cimarron the previous night. The sheriff was wounded (again) in this last incident."{{Cite book |last=Ball |first=Larry D. |title=Desert Lawman: The High Sheriffs of New Mexico and Arizona, 1846–1913 |publisher=University of New Mexico |year=1992 |isbn=9780826313461 |location=Albuquerque |pages=184 |language=English}} Author J. S. Peters gives a more detailed account of the incident noting, "By this time the camp had turned into a minor battleground, but it was a short one also, over in seconds. Results, four Texans and one deputy dead, and a slight arm wound for Sheriff Burleson. The four cowboys were unknown."{{Cite book |last=Peters |first=J. S. |title=Incident on the Red River and Other True Stories of New Mexico |publisher=Peters |year=1971 |pages=5–6 |language=English}}

Burleson did not run for a third term. He directed his energies toward ranching with his father-in-law and his growing family. Burleson did serve as a deputy sheriff to Mace Bowman in 1882.{{cn|date=November 2023}}

Lincoln County

Burleson left Colfax County in 1885 and took up residence and ranching in Socorro County, New Mexico Territory. His wife stated that his cattle ranching efforts were not successful and Burleson became a ranch manager for the American Valley Cattle Company based in Quemado. A few years later he moved to Lincoln County and became the ranch manager for the Angus VV Ranch, succeeding Pat Garrett. Author Roberta Key Haldane wrote of Burleson as "A man with much experience in cattle troubles," and for diffusing an potentially hostile situation in 1896 between the rival Block Ranch and Texas Park ranch hands.{{Cite book |last=Haldane |first=Roberta Key |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/930039347 |title=Gold-mining boomtown : people of White Oaks, Lincoln County, New Mexico Territory |date=2012 |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |isbn=978-0-87062-410-0 |location=Norman, Okla. |oclc=930039347}} Area newspapers, The Lincoln Independent and The Santa Fe Daily New Mexican included articles attesting to Burleson's success as a ranch manager.{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1895-06-13 |title=Santa Fe daily New Mexican. [volume] (Santa Fe, N.M.) 1885–1897, June 13, 1895, Image 1 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84020631/1895-06-13/ed-1/seq-1/ |access-date=2022-07-24 |issn=2474-4379}}

Sometime before 1895, Burleson began working for Susan McSween Barber's Three Rivers Ranch. Mrs. Barber was the widow of Alexander McSween who was killed in the Lincoln County War. By 1888, this 1000-acre ranch ran 8000 cattle, earning McSween Barber the title Cattle Queen of New Mexico.{{Cite web |title=Susan McSween Barber Historical Marker |url=https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=103652 |access-date=2022-07-25 |website=www.hmdb.org |language=en}}

With Burleson's end of ranch foreman duties, he settled in Lincoln beginning pursuits in new directions including operating a saloon,{{Cite web |date=February 22, 1901 |title=The Capitan Progress, Local and Personal |url=http://archives.lincolncountynm.gov/wp-content/uploads/publications/THE%20CAPITAN%20PROGRESS/1901-02-22.pdf |access-date=July 24, 2022 |website=archives.lincolncountynm.gov}} managing a hotel{{Cite book |last=Siringo |first=Charles Angelo |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1273977723 |title=Riata and Spurs The Story of a Lifetime spent in the Saddle as Cowboy and Detective. |date=2007 |publisher=Sunstone Press |isbn=978-1-61139-081-0 |location=La Vergne |oclc=1273977723}} and becoming a fruit and vegetable farmer.

Politics

Burleson made an entry into Lincoln County politics shortly after his arrival in 1890. The legacy of the Lincoln County Wars were still a recent memory and the Santa Fe Ring held sway in Lincoln politics until statehood in 1912.

Burleson's political activities ranged from small precinct level positions to leading the Democratic Central Committee for Lincoln County. In all of his Lincoln County political activities, he aligned himself with the Democratic Party. He was a regular appointee to the Democratic County Convention holding a number of positions such as Committee of Permanent Organization, Rules and Order of Business, representing Precinct 13. This committee identified the size of delegations to district, territory, and senatorial conventions as well as nominations for county offices. In 1892 Burleson was named as one of the 12 delegates to the District Convention in Roswell as well as one of 5 delegates to the 53rd U.S. Congress held in Santa Fe.{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1892-08-25 |title=The old Abe eagle. (White Oaks, Lincoln County, N.M.) 189?-189?, August 25, 1892, Image 1 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn93061407/1892-08-25/ed-1/seq-1/ |access-date=2022-07-24 |issn=2375-7299}} In 1894 he served as the Democratic County Convention President.{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1894-07-12 |title=The old Abe eagle. (White Oaks, Lincoln County, N.M.) 189?-189?, July 12, 1894, Image 4 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn93061407/1894-07-12/ed-1/seq-4/ |access-date=2022-07-24 |issn=2375-7299}}

For the election of 1898, Burleson was nominated as the Democratic Party candidate for the Lincoln County Sheriff. On 27 October 1898, The White Oaks Eagle reported that Burleson arrived from Lincoln to interview the voters of the precinct regarding his candidacy for Sheriff. The author noted “He need have no worry about No. 8 as a little Republican liquid enthusiasm cannot do the work here, that it does in other parts of the county.{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1898-10-27 |title=White Oaks eagle. (White Oaks, N.M.) 189?-190?, October 27, 1898, Image 2 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87090065/1898-10-27/ed-1/seq-2/ |access-date=2022-07-24 |issn=2375-8767}} The Board of Canvassers reported the results for the 1898 election. Burleson lost the election to Demetrio Perea by 48 votes: 588-540.{{Cite web |title=24 Nov 1898, 1 - White Oaks Eagle at Newspapers.com |url=http://www.newspapers.com/image/465096784/?terms= |access-date=2022-07-24 |website=Newspapers.com |language=en}} The last reported political post he held was in 1919; Burleson at age 71, served as the Road Foreman for Precinct 1 in Lincoln.{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1919-08-08 |title=Carrizozo outlook. [volume] (Carrizozo, N.M.) 1910-1945, August 08, 1919, Image 5 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn94056939/1919-08-08/ed-1/seq-5/ |access-date=2022-07-25 |issn=2327-1264}}

Burleson's appointments as deputy sheriff in Colfax County has been previously noted. After moving to Lincoln County, he served several terms as a deputy to Sheriffs George Curry (1888–1890), Dan W. Roberts (1890–1892), Emzy (Emil) Fritz (1896–1897), James W. Owen (1902 and 1905) and Porfirio Chavez (1912–1913).

Family life

Burleson was married to Mary Eunicia Chittenden (1862–1938) who was born in Maryville, Nodaway County, Missouri. In April 1865, she traveled with her parents from Missouri via wagon train led by Wagon Master Tom Boggs, settling in the Cimarron Valley. He and Mary had two children while residing in Colfax County: James O. (1879–1909) and Clara (1882–1885). Mae Mary was born in Socorro County (1886–1956) and sons Frederick "Fred" (1893–1979) and Thomas J. (1897–1977) were born in Lincoln County.{{cn|date=November 2023}}

References