The town of Tascosa was once known as The Cowboy Capital of
the Texas Panhandle. Unofficially, it was also known as the Gunfighter Capital
of the Texas Panhandle. Tascosa came into being in the mid-1870’s on the vast
prairie of the Texas Panhandle. It was surrounded by huge ranches
like the LS Ranch which grazed 50,000 head of cattle and covered 4 counties as
well as part of New Mexico and the 3-million acre XIT Ranch. The Dodge City Trail
ran right through the middle of town which was there strictly to serve the cattle
drovers and cowboys who worked the ranches – supplies, whiskey and girls. Less
than a mile east of Main Street was “Hogtown,” so named for the collection of “less
beautiful” girls who serviced the cowboys.
Homely Ann, Gizzard Lip, Rowdy Kate, Boxcar Jane, Panhandle Nan,
Slippery Sue, Frog Lip Sadie and Big Dog Jenny all were kept busy by the boys
who came to town after spending weeks out on the lonely trail or riding the
prairie with none but other men and cattle for company.
In the 1880’s, the population reached a high of 400, but the
entire region was lawless. Billy The Kid escaped his pursuers from New Mexico to
spend time playing cards, racing horses and having shooting matches with Bat
Masterson. The first permanent resident of Boot Hill was Bob Russell, a former
cowboy who quit to open a saloon in town. Unfortunately, Bob was by all
accounts a mean drunk and he all too frequently imbibed in his own product. He
got into an argument with a local store owner, Jules Howard, and a few evenings
later, after a large amount of liquor, he staggered into Howard’s store, pulled
his gun and fired off a shot, missing Jules by a wide margin. The store owner,
who was stone cold sober, had seen Bob heading his way and was waiting with his
6-shooter drawn. After Bob’s wild shot, Jules fired three shots, hitting his
target in the chest, head and trigger finger. Bob was placed in a pine box and buried
the next day, minus one finger.
Tascosa's Boot Hill |
In 1886, a gunfight erupted over a girl. A cowboy was caught
flirting with the girl another cowboy considered his. He shot and killed his
rival, but then the dead man’s friends came after the killer and then his
friends got involved. By the time it was all over, there were four dead,
including an innocent shop owner, and four more men badly wounded.
Still maintained, but rather sad and lonely out in the middle of nowhere |
During the late 1890’s, Tascosa began to decline as cattle
drives ended and roads made it easier to go elsewhere. In 1915 the county seat
was moved to Vega and Tascosa’s business owners and residents went with it. The
adobe buildings were abandoned and began to crumble into dirt piles.
Cal Farley’s Boys Town now occupies the old town site. All
that remains is the 1884 stone courthouse, the reconstructed schoolhouse and
Boot Hill, the forever home of pioneer Tascosans who lived, fought, and died in
the Cowboy /Gunfighter Capital of the Texas Panhandle.
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