Downtown Los Angeles, circa 1983

Downtown Los Angeles, circa 1983
STMcC in downtown Los Angeles, circa 1983

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

“GOODBYE, GOD, WE’RE GOING TO BODIE”

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[This review was originally written in May or June of 2007.]
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GUNFIGHTERS, HIGHWAYMEN & VIGILANTES
by Roger D. McGrath
published: 1984

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Just a few days ago, I received my latest copy of THE NEW AMERICAN magazine and found an excellent article in it by Roger D. McGrath titled, “MAKING OUR SCHOOLS SAFE”. This edition of the fine current events periodical was inspired by the terrible Virginia Tech campus shooting. McGrath wrote:

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“For several decades now, I have said that every 'gun control’ law should be titled a 'Criminal Empowerment Act,’ ... Reality demonstrates that it is all well and good that sheep pass laws requiring vegetarianism, but until the wolves circling the flock agree, those laws don’t mean a thing.”
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His article made me realize how remiss I have been in failing to write, until now, a review for his outstanding book GUNFIGHTERS, HIGHWAYMEN & VIGILANTES.
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McGrath’s publication was used as the textbook for a very popular course he taught on American West history at the University of California, Los Angeles, while I was a full-time employee on that campus. I purchased my copy at the ASUCLA Student’s Store in 1990, and I have gone back to reread sections from it numerous times over the years as GUNFIGHTERS, HIGHWAYMEN & VIGILANTES examines my favorite American epoch and it raises scholarly historical research to an absolute art form!

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Sifting through innumerable newspapers, as well as court records, jail registers, and journal entries from that time, McGrath fashions a nearly comprehensive account of the violent goings-on in the Nineteenth Century California mining camps of Aurora and Bodie. (In its time, Bodie was considered to be perhaps the wildest of all Wild West towns. So pervasive was its reputation in the territory for rowdyism that stories of “The Bodie Badman” were legendary, and it is rumored that one little girl upon learning that her parents were about to move the family to Bodie wrote in her diary, “Goodbye God, we’re going to Bodie.” The town is now a fabulous Historical State Park in a condition of arrested decay – a real “must-see” for any fan of the American West!)
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In the Preface to his book, McGrath asks, “Was the frontier really all that violent? What was the nature of the violence that did occur? Were frontier towns more violent than cities in the East? Has America inherited a violent way of life from the frontier? Was the frontier more violent than the United States is today? This book attempts to answer these questions and others about violence and lawlessness on the frontier and to do so in a new way. Whereas most authors have drawn their conclusions about frontier violence from the exploits of a few notorious badmen and outlaws and from some of the more famous incidents and conflicts, I have chosen to focus on two towns that I think were typical of the frontier -- the mining frontier specifically -- and to investigate all forms of violence and lawlessness that occurred in and around those towns.”
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McGrath’s investigation consumed several years and exhausted every available source, and “The results say much about America’s frontier heritage and offer some real surprises -- several long-cherished notions about frontier violence are thoroughly repudiated while other widely held beliefs, long suspected of being mythical, are demonstrated to be well founded in fact.”

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In the process of learning about the “real” Old West, we meet lawmen and outlaws, cowboys and Indians, highwaymen and petty thieves, soiled doves and gamblers, miners and claim-jumpers, brawlers and gunfighters, vigilance committees and law-and-order associations, pistol-packing women and a brilliant one-armed lawyer who never lost a case.
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Along with saloon keeper George Hand’s authentic and humorous Old West Arizona diary, Whiskey, Six-Guns and Red-Light Ladies: George Hand's Saloon Diary, Tucson, 1875-1878, and Mark Twain’s hilariously exaggerated firsthand account of Old West Nevada, Roughing It -- the funniest book I’ve ever read! -- Roger McGrath’s more sober and scholarly GUNFIGHTERS, HIGHWAYMEN & VIGILANTES ranks as “The Best Of The West” on printed page. But that’s not to say that McGrath’s book is an entirely humorless affair. In the chapter titled “Rough And Rowdy”, for instance, we learn of a “Bogus Billy The Kid” and of Mike “Man Eater” McGowan:
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Even an impostor made a name for himself among the ranks of Bodie’s fistfighters. On a Thursday night in 1882, “a rough looking fellow” entered a saloon and announced to the score of patrons that he was Billy the Kid and that he could stand any man in the room on his head. This boast caused half of the men in the saloon to retreat through the back door. “The balance of the select company of tax payers and Christian statesmen,” said the Bodie Standard, “advanced on the bogus Billy the Kid, and when he struck the sidewalk it sounded as though Berliner had hit a base drum. When the man got up he explained that his name was simply John Smith and that his father went by the same name.” [page 187]
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The most notorious of Bodie’s brawlers was Mike McGowan, known as the Man Eater. McGowan had earned his sobriquet in Virginia City, where he delighted in chomping on the ears and noses of his foes. He obviously received his share of defeats, however, because his head was described as having been “beaten all out of shape.” ... In Bodie, he managed to chomp on Sheriff Peter Taylor’s legs, chase a man down Main Street with a butcher knife, break a pitcher over a waiter’s head, threaten to chew off the justice of the peace’s ears, eat a stray bulldog, and engage in several fistfights. The Man Eater was finally given a choice of a long jail term or exile from Bodie. He chose the latter and wound up back in Virginia City, where he was arrested for vagrancy. “This must be a mistake on the part of the authorities,” said the Bodie Standard, “for Mike has a visible means of support. He has an upper and lower row of teeth.” [page 187]
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I guess this goes to show that EVERY century has had its “Man-Eating” MIKE. And here we thought there was something unique about our own “Evander Holyfield-Eating” MIKE Tyson.
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~ Stephen T. McCarthy
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2 comments:

  1. Hi Reno!

    Funny I should pop in on this one, huh?
    "An upper and lower row of teeth," Too funny!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Howdy, dIEDRE! ~
      Nice to see you in my neighborhood again. And, yeah, you picked an appropriate review to get reacquainted on.

      If you have a chance, maybe check out my last two posts at BOTB, as those are about my favorite 1800s frontier town.

      If you've never read George Hand's Saloon Diary, you really should. It's fascinating! And his saloon was in Tucson, which is a town you may have heard of.

      I think maybe I'll post my review of George Hand's Saloon Diary next on this blog, just so you can see what I had to say about it.

      I hope things are going well for ya.

      ~ D-FensDogG
      STMcC Presents 'Battle Of The Bands'

      Delete

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