You
have to admit Belle Starr was the
perfect name for an outlaw queen. It emblazoned perfectly the covers of dime novels, titillated the readers of
the original scandal sheet The
Police Gazette, and set off fantasies of a bewitching bandit beauty celebrated in generations of movies, TV shows, and songs. The allure was so strong that in the back
yard westerns we enacted every
summer day in Cheyenne my cousin Linda was always Belle to my brother’s Roy Rogers and my Hopalong Cassidy. The
stories we played out were just about as real as any associated with Starr.
Myra Maybelle Shirley doesn’t
quite cut the same ice. But that was her
name at birth on a farm near Carthage,
Missouri on February 5, 1848. Her
father John Shirley was a prosperous
farmer. Her mother was a member of the Virginia (later West Virginia) Hatfield clan.
But it would be a mistake to read too much into that—Hatfield-McCoy feud did not break out until after the Civil War and the family was not
particularly then identified with violence.
Myra
got a quite proper upbringing for a young lady of her class. She was a graduate of the Carthage Female Academy, a finishing school where she learned a
little Latin, how to play the piano, and all of the social graces.
About
the time Myra graduated, all hell was breaking loose along the Kansas-Missouri Border. The well-to-do Shirleys were slave owners. Her father and uncles may have ridden
with the Border Ruffians or Bushwhackers who attacked Free Soil settlers in Bloody Kansas. The family was close to other pro-slavery
clans in the area of south eastern Missouri including the James and Younger
families. Myra was said to be
particularly close to the Younger boys.
After
the war broke out Confederate Missouri
Guard forces under Governor
Claiborne F. Jackson and General
Sterling Price whipped a Union force
under the command of Colonel Franz Sigel,
in the First Battle of Carthage, the
first important engagement in the West which
gave control of most of the state south and west of St. Louis to the Rebels. The Shirley family decided to sell the farm
and move to Carthage which was becoming a major regional hub for the
Confederacy. John Shirley opened an inn and livery stable on
the town square.
Teen age Myra Shirley in a Civil War era tintype. |
It
was probably during this period when young Myra mastered the difficult use of
the side saddle which was becoming
the “proper” way for a young gentlewoman
to ride. The saddle accommodated the
voluminous skirts and petticoats of the day by allowing a
lady wrap one leg around a pommel draping
both to the same side of the horse. The
seat was not as secure as a conventional saddle ridden with legs astride the
horse. It took a skilled horsewoman to
do much more than amble along at a walk in such a contraption. Myra could reportedly keep in the saddle at a
full gallop. She continued to use the side saddle
almost exclusively the rest of her life.
In
1863 the tide of war turned in the region at the Second Battle of Carthage, a smaller but significant skirmish in which Union forces repulsed
an advancing force sending them scurrying back to Arkansas. Yankee troops occupied the town. Myra’s brother John A. M. “Bud” Shirley joined the partisan irregulars harassing Union troops. He became a Captain of his own band of
Bushwhackers. He may have ridden when
partisans attacked the occupied town in September 1864 and burned the Courthouse
and much of the Square. With a Yankee
price on his head, Captain Shirley was ambushed and killed as he ate at a
sympathizer’s house in near-by Sarcoxie soon after.
The Shirley family became refugees. They fled the area and
made their way to Scyene,
Texas near Dallas where other Missouri guerillas, including
the Younger Brothers and Frank and Jesse James also settled.
In 1866 Myra, now generally called May, married James Reed, a young man from back home in
Carthage on whom she once had a teen age crush. No
contemporary accounts remark on her beauty, although once or twice she
was called handsome. What May might have lacked in conventional
attractiveness, she made up with a sense of style, even when they young family
struggled on a farm near town. She cut a swath in riding habits
and plumed hats when she rode into town.
James did not take much to sod busting and his wife’s
taste in finery compelled him to find extra income. He fell in with her
old chums the Younger Brothers and began to ride with their gang.
He may also occasionally have ridden with the James Gang—the two groups were
friendly and often shared personnel. All were former Confederate
guerillas and at least at first considered their robberies as an extension of
the war.
May took to the life style. She soon added a pair of Colt
revolvers to here riding gear and was known to display her marksmanship to
admiring locals.
Scyene served as a safe haven and base for the outlaw
gangs’ far flung raids, bank, and train robberies. Reed
would be gone for weeks at a time, return, and resume what looked like an
ordinary life on the farm. May gave birth to the couple’s first child, Rosie
Lee who they called Pearl in 1868.
Outlawry was dangerous work and was apt to disrupt family life
sooner or later. In 1871 Reed was charged with robbery and murder in
Arkansas and wanted posters with a price on his head began to circulate in Texas—a sure
invitation to some greedy or ambitious neighbor to turn him in. The
couple fled to California where a son, James Edwin—Eddie—was
born.
When things cooled off, they returned to Texas. Reed soon
fell in with a new gang, the Starrs, a Cherokee clan based in Indian
Territory who specialized in running whiskey to the tribes, cattle
rustling, and horse thievery. Strong arm robbery, Reed’s
specialty was a side line.
It is unclear if Mrs. Reed actively took part in the commission
of her husband’s crimes during these years, or was merely an accomplice.
But her continued show of being an armed and her swagger did nothing to discourage
a notion that she was an active participant. In April 1874 that
supposition was enough despite a lack of any evidence placing her on the scene,
to get a warrant issued along with her husband and members of the Starr gang
for a Stagecoach robbery.
The Reeds shifted their base of operations to Paris, Texas
where James was shot and killed that August.
A widow with two children and no means of support, May
continued her association with her old outlaw pals, many of whom evidently
helped support the family. She may have become more directly involved in
some of their operations, particularly the sale of rustled cattle and
horses. She was evidently spared the fallback occupation of many a widow
in her position—prostitution.
In the late 1870’s she may have entered a brief
relationship—some say a marriage—with Charles Younger, uncle of Cole.
But this is unsubstantiated by any known records and may simply be rooted in gossip
which took root in lore.
In 1880 31 year old May married Sam Starr and settled
with him on a ranch, renamed Younger’s Bend, on the Canadian River
near present-day Eufaula. It was there that she finally became
something like the bandit queen of legend. She adopted the name of Belle, probably to obscure her
identity, but perhaps as a pet name given to her by her new husband. In Texas
she was still known as Mrs. Reed or May.
Belle turned out to be a woman of great organizational skill
and was soon assuming a leadership position among the Starrs. She
organized and directed cattle raids and planned robberies. She
regularized the clan’s business dealings, cultivating markets and
keeping lawmen on the payroll for protection. She was seen
in her full regalia in company of the boys, her brace of pistols now upgraded
to a nickel-plated, pearl handle
horse pistol and a lighter .38.
She kept a shotgun in a saddle boot. But whether she actually led
any of the gang’s crimes is doubtful. No reliable witness ever put her on
the scene.
But in 1883 Belle and Sam were found in possession of stolen
horses by a Federal Marshall operating in Indian Territory. The
pair was dragged before the notorious Hanging Judge Isaac Parker’s Federal
Court at Fort Smith, Arkansas. Both were convicted. Belle
was sent to the Detroit House of Corrections in Michigan because
the Feds had no facilities for women. There she was regarded as a model
prisoner, was made a trustee, and won the admiration and affection
of the supervising Matron. The rebellious Sam served time at hard
labor, much of it on a chain gang and in the hole for various infractions.
Belle was released after nine months. Sam rejoined her in
Indian Territory when his sentence was up. Then they were back in
business.
Belle and her husband Sam Starr in Fort Smith,Arkansas in 1886 months before Sam was killed in a shoot out with an Indan Police Officer. She is shown riding side saddle and heavily armed. |
In 1886 Belle was again hauled before Judge Parker on a theft
charge but escaped conviction. While in Ft. Smith she posed on horseback
fully armed for her most famous photograph. It was a triumphant moment,
but Belle’s happiness was cut short when Sam and Indian Police Officer Frank
West shot each other to death in a gunfight on December 17 of that
year.
A
widow with two children and no means
of support, May continued her association with her old outlaw pals, many of
whom evidently helped support the family.
She may have become more directly involved in some of their operations,
particularly the sale of rustled cattle and horses. She was evidently spared the fallback
occupation of many a widow in her position—prostitution.
In
the late 1870’s she may have entered a brief relationship—some say a
marriage—with Charles Younger, uncle
of Cole. But this is unsubstantiated by any known
records and may simply be rooted in gossip
which took root in lore. Widowed once again, Belle was rumored
to have had several short relationships with member of her outlaw circle—Blue
Duck, Jack Spaniard, and Jim French. In order to be
able to remain on her land in the Indian
Nation, Belle married the much younger Jim Starr a/k/a Jim July.
Despite these relationships, her active leadership in the Starr
gang had ended with Sam Starr’s death.
On February 3, 1889 just two days before her 41 birthday Belle
was riding home from a visit to neighbors in Eufaula when she was ambushed.
She was hit in the back and neck with a blast of buckshot from a shotgun.
She was knocked off of her horse. He assailant turned her over on her
back and finished her off with a second blast directly in the face, and act of
such rage and savagery that suspicion was immediately drawn on those closest to
her.
Those suspects
included her husband, and her son. A tenant sharecropper named Edgar
J. Watson, a Creek, was charged with her murder supposedly because
Belle had threatened to turn him into the law on an outstanding murder charge
in Florida. But Belle, who had harbored many outlaws at her ranch
including Jesse James himself once for several months, would be unlikely
to betray anyone. Evidence was slim to non-existence and the jury did not
believe the prosecutor’s case. Watson lived until 1910 when he was
shot and killed.
Jim Starr may not have been entirely happy in his marriage to a
dominating older woman, but he had little motive to murder her since he had no
claim on the land on which he was living comfortably. Most historians
discount him as a suspect.
Eddy, however, had recently been beaten by his mother for
abusing a horse and was known to be furious with her. The fact that the
shotgun used in the murder probably belonged to Belle also linked him to the
crime. But there was never enough evidence to charge him. Belle’s
murder remains officially unsolved.
Eddie Reed was convicted of horse theft and receiving stolen
property in July 1889 and the family nemesis Judge Parker sentenced him to
prison in Columbus, Ohio. Like many former outlaws Eddie
switched sides, becoming a lawman in Fort Smith. He was involved in a
famous gun battle with two outlaw brothers named Crittenden in 1895 who
he killed. He died in another shoot out in a Claremont, Oklahoma
saloon on December 14, 1898.
Pearl Starr turned to prostitution to raise money to try and
secure her brother’s release from the 1889 prison sentence. Her efforts
did earn him a pardon which opened the door to his law enforcement
career. Pearl continued to ply her trade and operated brothels
in Van Buren and Fort Smith, Arkansas, up to and through World War I.
At the time of her death Belle was locally notorious in Indian Territory, Texas, and Arkansas, but
unknown in the rest of the country. Richard K. Fox, editor and
publisher of the Police Gazette, always on the look-out
for exciting yarns, picked up the story of Belle’s murder from the Western
press. Intrigued he did a modicum of investigation into her life and launched a
series of lurid articles in his magazine. These were consolidated and
expanded into a Dime Novel, Bella Starr, the Bandit Queen, or the Female
Jesse James published late in the year of her death. Some Western
historians continue to cite the book as a source on her life although it is
riddled with errors and exaggerations.
But it did prove popular. More Dime Novels followed along
with the inevitable stage melodrama. Woody Guthrie was just
one of those who immortalized her in song.
Amoung the many movies and TV show based on Belle Starr with this 1968 spaghetti western with a feminist twist starring Elsa Martinelli. |
Belle has been portrayed, rarely very realistically, in dozens
of films. Actresses portraying her included Betty Compton in
1928, Gene Tierney opposite Randolph Scott in 1941, Jane
Russell in 1953, Elsa Martinelli in a spaghetti western with
a feminist touch directed by Lina Wertmüller in
1968, Elizabeth Montgomery in a 1980 made-for-TV movie, and
Pamela Reed in the same year’s The Long Riders.
Belle is commemorated in the former Indian Territory where she
spent much of her life with a gun-toting life size statue at Woolaroc, Oklahoma.
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