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LTC Stephen F.
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Thank you, my friend Maj Marty Hogan for making us aware that February 5 is the anniversary of the birth of notorious American outlaw Myra Maybelle Shirley Starr better known as Belle Starr. First married to James C. Reed in 1866 who was killed in 1874. She married Samuel Starr in 1880 [member of the outlaw Cherokee - Starr clan].

Images:
1. Belle Starr
2. Blue Duck and Belle Starr, May 24, 1886
3. Jim Reed and Belle Starr in 1866

Belle Starr the Bandit Queen: Mini Documentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih28QebFu5s


Background from encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=2406
"Belle Starr (1848–1889) aka: Myra Maybelle Shirley

In the late 1800s, Belle Starr was known as a notorious female outlaw in America’s “Old West.” As a resident of Indian Territory, now Oklahoma, she came under the jurisdiction of Judge Isaac C. Parker in Fort Smith (Sebastian County). Her close friends included the legendary American outlaws Cole Younger and Frank and Jesse James. Her reputation as an outlaw, the novelty of being a woman outlaw, and her violent, mysterious death led to her being called “The Bandit Queen.”

Belle Starr was born Myra Maybelle Shirley near Carthage, Missouri, on February 5, 1848. Her father was John R. Shirley, a farmer who later owned a local inn. Her mother, twenty years younger than her husband, was Elizabeth (Eliza) Hatfield Shirley, who was related to the Hatfield family of the infamous Hatfield-McCoy feud. As a child, Shirley attended Carthage Female Academy. She enjoyed the outdoors and horseback riding, becoming a better rider than most women of her time. Among Shirley’s childhood friends in Missouri was Cole Younger, who after the Civil War joined neighbors Frank and Jesse James in robbing trains, stagecoaches, and banks. Fleeing the law, they sometimes hid on the Shirley farm, and the teenage Shirley became influenced by their life of crime.

In 1866, she married another childhood acquaintance, James C. Reed, the son of Solomon Reed, a prosperous local farmer. James and Myra Reed had two children, daughter Rosie Lee, called “Pearl,” and son James Edwin, called “Eddie.” After trying unsuccessfully to become a farmer, her husband joined with the Starr clan, an outlaw Cherokee family in Indian Territory who stole horses, rustled cattle, and bootlegged whiskey. James Reed was accused of robbery in 1874, and Myra Reed was accused of being an accomplice. They fled to Texas, and in 1874, he was killed while trying to escape the authorities.

After his death, Myra Reed joined the Starr clan and lived in Indian Territory west of Fort Smith. She married one of them, Samuel Starr, in 1880, at which point she began calling herself “Belle.” She was said to act as a front for bootleggers and to harbor fugitives. With Fort Smith having the nearest court of law, she came to the attention of Judge Isaac Parker, who was known as the “Hanging Judge” for his severe sentences. On November 9, 1882, she and Sam Starr were charged in the U.S. Commissioner’s Court at Fort Smith with the larceny of two horses. On March 8, 1883, a jury returned a guilty verdict, and Judge Parker sentenced the Starrs to a year in prison. It was a surprisingly lenient sentence; Judge Parker was said to have taken into consideration the fact that it was the first conviction for both, and he expressed hope that they would “decide to become decent citizens.” After arranging the care of her children with friends and relatives, they were transported from Fort Smith to Detroit on a railroad prison car, where Belle was the only woman among nineteen other convicts. The good behavior of the Starrs in prison led to their release within nine months.

After the 1886 death of Sam Starr in a gunfight, Belle and one of his relatives, Jim July Starr (also known as Bill July), began living together and announced their common-law marriage under Cherokee custom. Some sources say Belle decided to do this to maintain ownership of her property on Cherokee land.

At first, she was suspected whenever neighbors’ horses and cattle turned up missing or when it was believed she was harboring criminals, but she was not convicted. She settled into a relatively quiet life, announcing that fugitives were no longer welcome at her home, and was known to help her neighbors when they were ill. She often visited Fort Smith, posed for one of her several photographs there, and told the Fort Smith Elevator, “I regard myself as a woman who has seen much of life.”

Starr’s life of crime ended when she was shot in the back as she returned from a general store to her ranch. She died on February 3, 1889. Though suspects included an outlaw with whom she was feuding, a former lover, her husband, and her own son, the killer of Belle Starr was never identified.

She was buried on her ranch near today’s Eufaula Dam in Oklahoma. Her tombstone was engraved with a bell, a star, her horse, and a poem by her daughter, Pearl, who lived much of the rest of her life in Fort Smith and Van Buren (Crawford County). Starr became a legend in “dime novels,” beginning in 1889 with Belle Starr, the Bandit Queen, or the Female Jesse James by reporter Richard K. Fox. She was also the subject of films such as 1941’s Belle Starr with Gene Tierney and the 1980 television movie Belle Starr with Elizabeth Montgomery. While the facts of her life may have been embellished by legend, she was known in her time as a notorious female outlaw and a nemesis of Fort Smith’s Judge Parker.

For additional information:
Rascoe, Burton. Belle Starr: The Bandit Queen. Lincoln, NE: Bison Books, 2004.

Shirley, Glenn. Belle Starr and Her Times: The Literature, the Facts and the Legends. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1990.

Steele, Phillip W. Starr Tracks: Belle and Pearl Starr. Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing, 1989."

FYI LTC Stephen C. LTC (Join to see) Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen Lt Col Charlie Brown Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price Maj Marty Hogan SCPO Morris Ramsey SGT Mark Halmrast Sgt Randy Wilber Sgt John H. SGT Gregory Lawritson CPL Dave Hoover SPC Margaret Higgins SSgt Brian Brakke 1stSgt Eugene Harless CPT Scott Sharon SSG William Jones
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SSgt Boyd Herrst
SSgt Boyd Herrst
6 y
I liked reading the old west stories of the bad guys as well as the good.. of course I pulled for the good.., I scoured the used book stores and yard sales to see if they had any old books about.the terrrors of the west .. I even had dAd digging through them when I brought them home.. Mom found out why we took an interest in those sales.. Mom was looking for cast iron pans and kettles.. she’d find one or two .. as for dad and I we found some good ol’ cowboy books.. $.50 a piece.. there were 7 and the woman gave them to me for $5.. Mom said put those back....dad said he didn’t purchase them, Boyd did ! “Put them back anyway ! .. I hid them under the spare tire .. mom wanted that $5..
I had another fiver I seen a 3 legged kettle $4 with a semi deep lid.., So I got it for her and hid under my jacket, I’d give it to her when we got home.. All the way
She talked about she should of got it first... we still had a ways to go and dad pulled over.. got out and stretched a little .. a couple knee bends .. He told me to take the wheel.. I already had a special restricted license so I could drive some neighbors to go shopping..
in their dodge desoto, a ‘49 model.
I was surprised., non of his children lived in the state.. he showed proof his pension was small.. as waa the wife.. they still had the car in good condition, so why take public transportation .. Insurance was low and would cover me at no extra cost to just drive them locally( I was given A 50 mile limit by the insurance co. The state didn’t put no mileage limit.. all I needed was a adult in the car.. I was in town one time and a former neighbor came out of a bar quite soused.. Here’s my chance to do good.. He knew me well.. I put my bike in the back of his truck.. a studebaker with 3 on the tree.... hmm ? Got in and realized it then.. I remembered
What dad taught me on grandpa’s dodge truck.. they’re all the same right? Mr. B had parked it down at the end of the lot. I got the truck and sucessfully drove it w/o grinding gears.. I drove him the 4 miles home and got him in the house... I got my bike and rode home.. what an experience ! I didn’t know the adult had to be sober. I found that later. I walked in the door, Mom and dad sitting at the table.. then the clapped their hands.. Mom told me Jessie called and told her what I did.. I had an answer if we gotstopped, thankfully
We did not .. Dad says it was easiest to tell the truth.. so that’s what i’d Do.. Next year I’d take a formal class.. frigging insurance requirements... yet I got a special restricted license w/o the class..
It was dad’s Driver school.. Dad had been a sworn officer of the law up to ‘61 and crossed to be a full time Fireman .. there were not EMTs
Then .. not for a while. ..I think ‘67 and he changed jobs again .. mainly to earn enough go pay for my bro’s special education... the
Law that allowed him the right to be incorporated into public education was but a Dream.. I’ve managed to incorporate different going’s on into my original story about western stories about people like Belle Starr and the other bad and good cowboys of them days in the 1880’s..? It’s what life is about.
One story turning into another .. ?..
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SPC Douglas Bolton
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Maj Marty Hogan Interesting western lady.
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SMSgt Thor Merich
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Interesting old west share. Thanks for the history lesson.
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