Newman Haynes Clanton

Newman Haynes Clanton (c. 1816 August 13, 1881), also known as "Old Man" Clanton, was a cattle rancher and father of four sons, one of whom was killed during the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Two of his sons were involved in multiple conflicts in Cochise County, Arizona Territory including stagecoach robbery and cattle rustling. His son Ike Clanton was identified by one witness as a participant in the murder of Morgan Earp. Billy Clanton and Ike were both present at the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in which Billy was killed. "Old Man" Clanton was reportedly involved with stealing cattle from Mexican ranchers and re-selling them in the United States. Records indicate he participated in the Skeleton Canyon Massacre of Mexican smugglers. In retaliation, Mexican Rurales are reported to have ambushed and killed him and a crew of Cowboys in the Guadalupe Canyon Massacre.

Newman Haynes Clanton
Newman Haynes Clanton c.1880
Bornc.1816
DiedAugust 13, 1881(1881-08-13) (aged 64–65)
Cause of deathKilled in an ambush
NationalityAmerican
Other namesOld Man Clanton
OccupationRancher and outlaw
Known forCattle rustling
Spouse(s)
Mariah Sexton Kelso
(m. 1840)
Children
AllegianceThe Cowboys

Early life

Newman Clanton was born around 1816 in Davidson County, Tennessee, and married Mariah Sexton Kelso in Callaway County, Missouri on January 5, 1840. Newman and Mariah had five sons and two daughters: John Wesley, Phineas "Fin" Fay, Joseph "Ike" Isaac, Mary Elsie, Ester Ann, Peter Alonzo, and William "Billy" Harrison.[1] Peter Alonzo died as an infant.

Newman Clanton had been a slaveholder and planter in Tennessee before moving the family to Missouri. Over the next 20 years, he moved the family across the west and southwest. He tried gold mining in California[1] before relocating the family to Dallas, Texas around 1853, where they ran a ranch for a time, and where their last two children, Ester and Alonzo were born. While in Texas, both Newman and his oldest son John enlisted in the Confederate Home Guard at the outbreak of the American Civil War. Newman was eventually released due to his age.

At the end of the war in 1865 Newman moved the family to Arizona Territory and settled for a time near Fort Bowie near Willcox, Arizona. In 1866, they moved to San Buenaventura, California and after 26 years of marriage his wife Mariah died. In 1871, he moved the family to Port Hueneme, California.

Ranching and smuggling in Cochise County

Newman returned to the Arizona Territory in 1873 to the Gila River valley where he purchased or squatted on a large tract of land outside Camp Thomas, but his plans for a new town failed to materialize. He resumed cattle ranching and most of his children followed him to Arizona.[1]

During these many moves, the Clantons had repeated scrapes with the law. Both Newman and his oldest son John Wesley were convicted of desertion during the Civil War. They developed a reputation for theft and thuggery that followed them to Arizona.[1] Newman Clanton sold the ranch near Camp Thomas in 1877, but Billy Clanton used to return often to visit the old homestead. Melvin Jones, whose father bought the ranch from Newman, wrote that Billy Clanton first met Frank and Tom McLaury at the ranch in 1878, at the time the McLaury brothers had located land for a cattle ranch in the Sulphur Springs Valley.[1]

After leaving Camp Thomas, Newman Clanton bought land on the San Pedro River, in Lewis Springs, where he built a large adobe house.[2] The home became the headquarters of the Clanton Ranch. Phin obtained work as a freight driver.[3] In the same year prospector Ed Schieffelin discovered silver in the hills east of the San Pedro River on a plateau known as Goose Flats, less than 15 miles (24 km) from the Clanton ranch. The family was very well situated to meet the demands for beef from the booming town of Tombstone. From its founding in March 1879, Tombstone grew from 100 residents to upwards of 15,000 citizens at its peak less than a decade later.[4]

The Tombstone Mill and Mining Company opened a stamping mill about 5 miles (8.0 km) from the Clanton's ranch in 1879 to take advantage of the ready water supply. Another mill soon followed and both began operations in 1879,[5] The Clanton Ranch grew into a successful enterprise for many reasons. The Clantons also supplied beef to Bisbee and other nearby towns. During his testimony after the shootout at the O.K. Corral, Ike Clanton claimed to have raised and purchased about 700 head of cattle during the past year,[6] and the Clanton ranch was one of the most profitable cattle ranches in that part of the country.[7]:193 However, the Clantons never registered a brand in either Cochise County or Pima County which was required to legally raise cattle.[7]:193

The Clantons were reputed to be among a group of outlaw Cowboys who crossed the border into Mexico where they stole cattle and re-sold them to the hungry miners in Cochise County. Tom and Frank McLaury worked with the rustlers buying and selling stolen cattle.[8] The Mexican government at the time placed high tariffs on goods transported across the border, making smuggling a profitable enterprise.[9][10]

The large numbers of men required to work the fast-growing mines led to a rapid increase in the demand for beef cattle. Although some of the cattle ranching was legitimate, the Clantons stole cattle from across the nearby border in Mexico. Clanton and his sons brokered the sale of the stolen animals in the United States. Other ranchers in the area like that owned by Henry Hooker raised their own beef in the relatively dry area around Tombstone, but required far more manpower to the same number of animals and protect them from Indian attack in the time it took to raise them.

Brothers John and Phin Clanton worked the family ranch. Phin was arrested several times for cattle rustling and once for robbery but was never convicted.[11]:46 During the early 1880s a number of outlaw Cowboys worked on the Clanton Ranch. These included Pony Diehl, "Curly Bill" Brocius, and Frank and Tom McLaury, until the McLaurys bought their own ranch. Johnny Ringo who had participated in the Mason County War, siding with Texas Ranger and gunman Scott Cooley, became associated with the Clantons.

First Skeleton Canyon massacre

In July 1879 several rustlers attacked a rancho in northern Sonora, Mexico, killing several of the inhabitants. Hunting the murderers, Mexican Rurales led by Commandant Francisco Neri illegally crossed the border into Arizona and were ambushed. The posse leader was executed. Johnny Ringo later said that he was among the murderers, who also included Old Man Clanton, his sons Ike and Billy, along with "Curly Bill" Brocius, Indian Charlie, brothers Frank and Tom McLaury, Jim Hughes, Rattlesnake Bill, Joe Hill, Charlie Snow, Jake Guage, and Charlie Thomas.[12]

Clanton left his sons to run the San Pedro River ranch and moved to a new ranch in the Animas Valley of New Mexico, only a mile from the U.S.-Mexican border. This ranch served as a staging ground for cross-border cattle raids into Sonora, Mexico.

Second Skeleton Canyon massacre

Two years later, in July 1881, "Curly Bill" learned that several Mexican smugglers carrying silver were heading to the United States through Skeleton Canyon. He along with Johnny Ringo, Old Man, Ike and Billy Clanton, brothers Frank and Tom McLaury, Billy Grounds, and Zwing Hunt hid in the rocks above the trail. As the smugglers rode through the canyon the outlaw Cowboys opened fire and killed six of the nineteen men. They killed the rest when they tried to escape.

Death at Guadalupe Canyon

On August 12, 1881, Clanton and six other men began a journey herding stolen cattle sold to him by Curly Bill through Guadalupe Canyon near the Mexican border.[13] Around dawn after the first day and night on the trail, they were ambushed by Mexicans dispatched by Commandant Felipe Neri,[14]:110 in what was later dubbed the Guadalupe Canyon Massacre. Five men were killed in the ambush. Clanton, who was cooking breakfast when he was shot, fell dead into the cook-fire.

Drovers Harry Ernshaw and Billy Byers survived. Along with Dick Gray, who helped bury the dead, all said that the attackers were Mexican. The Byers family received a picture of Old Man Clanton from Ike and Phin Clanton, on the back of which they wrote, "Mr. Clanton killed on Aug 13—81 by Mexicans with 4 other Americans in Guadalupe Canon [sic] New Mexico." Both men signed the inscription. Another photograph of Will G. Lang, who was killed in the ambush, bears a similar inscription: "Will G. Lang killed by Mexicans—Animas Valley New Mexico Aug 13, 1881 together with Gray, Cranton, Clanton and Snow and Byers wounded."[15]:457 Along with Behan's involvement in King's escape, this was the beginning of increasingly bad feelings between the Earp and Cowboy factions.[16]:38[17]

Snow was buried where he fell due to decomposition. The others were taken back by wagon and buried about ten miles east of Cloverdale, New Mexico.[18]:73–74

Reburial

Grave in Tombstone

In 1882 Ike and Phin Clanton exhumed their father's body and moved it to the Boot Hill cemetery in Tombstone, where he was re-interred alongside his youngest son, Billy Clanton, who had been killed two months after his father's death, in the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

In the summer of 1887, Ike Clanton was indicted for cattle rustling and was killed resisting arrest in a gunfight with lawmen. His unmarked grave, near present-day Eaglecreek in Greenlee County, Arizona, may have been located by a descendant in 1996. He unsuccessfully proposed to Tombstone town officials that the remains should be exhumed and reburied near Newman Haynes and Billy Clanton's graves at Boot Hill in Tombstone.

Newman's second son Phineas ("Fin") Clanton survived the cattle wars. He was convicted of cattle rustling and served seventeen months in prison. After his release, he ran a goat ranch and married. He was involved in a wagon accident and his exposure to the cold weather led to a fatal case of pneumonia in 1905. He is buried in Globe, Arizona.[19]

Family

  • Mary Sexton Kelso Clanton: Wife born 1824 in Missouri, died in 1882 at aged 57 or 58 in Arizona. Buried at Old Fort Thomas Cemetery.[20]
  • John Wesley: Son, born 18 July 1841 in Missouri and died on April 19, 1916 at aged 74 in Santa Rosa, California. Married Nancy Rose Kelsey in California on January 14, 1869.[21]
  • Phineas "Fin" Fay: Son, Born December 1843 in Missouri, died January 5, 1906 at aged 62 in Webster Springs, Arizona from pneumonia.[22]
  • Joseph "Ike" Isaac: Son, born 1847 in Missouri, died June 1, 1887 ar aged 39 or 40 in Springerville, Arizona. Shot by "Jake" V. Brighton for cattle-rustling and murder of Isaac Ellinger.[23]
  • Mary Elsie: Daughter born Dec 22, 1852 in Illinois, died March 29, 1916 at aged 63 in Naco Arizona. Married Andrew Jackson Slinkard in 1872.[24]
  • Ester Ann: Daughter born June 16, 1855 in Texas, died February 15, 1919 at age 63 in Los Angeles. Married August M. "Gus" Smith.[25]
  • Peter Alonzo: Son, born in 1859 in Texas, died shortly after birth or in 1877, at age 18 in Arizona.[26]
  • William "Billy" Harrison: Son, born November 28, 1862 in Texas, died on October 26, 1881 at age 18 in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

In the 1946 Henry Fonda movie, My Darling Clementine, the part of "Old Man Clanton" is played by Walter Brennan, who, unhistorically, is killed at the end of the OK Corral gunfight (that actually took place two months after Old Man Clanton's death).[27] From 1958 to 1961, the actor Trevor Bardette played Clanton in twenty-one episodes of the ABC/Desilu fictionalized western television series, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, with Hugh O'Brian as Wyatt Earp.[28] Carol Thurston played his daughter Emma, though the real Clanton's daughters were named Mary Elise and Ester Ann.[29]

References

  1. Johnson, Paul Lee (2012). The McLaurys in Tombstone, Arizona: an O. K. Corral Obituary (First ed.). Denton, Tex.: University of North Texas Press. p. 416. ISBN 978-1574414509.
  2. "6". Law and Disorder. Booktango. ISBN 1468920723.
  3. Clanton, Terry. "Phin Clanton 1843-1905". TombstoneArizona.com. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  4. "A Brief History of Tombstone". TombstoneWeb.com. Archived from the original on 25 June 2011. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  5. Clements, Eric L. (October 1, 2003). "1". After The Boom In Tombstone And Jerome, Arizona: Decline In Western Resource Towns (1st ed.). University of Nevada Press. p. 23. ISBN 0-87417-571-2. Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  6. Douglas Linder (2005). "Testimony of Ike Clanton in the Preliminary Hearing in the Earp-Holliday Case". Famous Trials: The O. K. Corral Trial. Archived from the original on 2010-12-15. Retrieved 2011-02-06.
  7. Barra, Allen (2008). Inventing Wyatt Earp: His Life and Many Legends. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. p. 440. ISBN 978-0-8032-2058-4.
  8. Linder, Douglas O. (2005). "The Earp-Holliday Trial: An Account". Archived from the original on 2011-01-13. Retrieved 2011-04-14.
  9. "History of Old Tombstone". Discover Arizona. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
  10. "Skeleton Canyon". Ghost Towns of Arizona. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
  11. Udall, Cameron. (2008). St. John. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Pub. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-7385-5628-4.
  12. Traywick, Ben (December 11, 2009). "Showdown: Wyatt Earp vs. Curly Bill". Archived from the original on 9 April 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2011.
  13. Traywick, Ben (1994). Tombstone's Boothill. Red Marie's Bookstore. ASIN B0006P8HDG.
  14. Casey Tefertiller (1997). Wyatt Earp: The Life Behind the Legend. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-18967-7.
  15. Roberts, Gary L. (2007). Doc Holliday: The Life and Legenc. New York, NY: Wiley, J. p. 544. ISBN 978-0-470-12822-0.
  16. Lubet, Steven (2004). Murder in Tombstone: the Forgotten Trial of Wyatt Earp. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-300-11527-7. Retrieved 2011-04-14.
  17. "The Life and Times of "Old Man" Clanton 1816 - 1881". Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  18. Traywick, Ben T. (1996). The Clantons of Tombstone. Red Marie's Bookstore. ISBN 0-9631772-7-3.
  19. Globe Arizona History
  20. findagrave.com, Mary Sexton Kelso Clanton
  21. findagrave.com, John Wesley
  22. findagrave.com Phineas "Fin" Fay
  23. findagrave.com Joseph "Ike" Isaac
  24. findagrave.com Mary Elsie
  25. findagrave.com Ester Ann
  26. myheritage.com Peter Alonzo
  27. Brode, Douglas (1 January 2010). Shooting Stars of the Small Screen: Encyclopedia of TV Western Actors, 1946–Present. University of Texas Press. p. 33. ISBN 9780292783317.
  28. Mayer, Geoff (7 February 2017). Encyclopedia of American Film Serials. McFarland Publishing. p. 45. ISBN 9781476627199.
  29. Aaker, Everett (16 May 2017). Television Western Players, 1960–1975: A Biographical Dictionary. McFarland Publishing. p. 2063. ISBN 9781476628561.
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