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Lester Moore -- No Les No More
The American Cowboy Chronicle ^
| June 1, 2017
| Tom Correa
Posted on 06/04/2017 8:27:40 AM PDT by Texas Fossil
Boothill Graveyard in Tombstone, Arizona, is the final resting place for over a couple of hundred people. They include gunmen, outlaws, lawmen, gamblers, cowboys, a man wrongly hanged, blacksmiths, soiled doves, miners, business men and women, housewives, children, and those only known to God "who died with their boots on."
Those buried there includes Marshal Fred White who was 31 years old when he was accidentally shot and killed by Curly Bill Brocius on October 30th, 1880. The reason I say "accidentally" is because that's what Marshal White said before he died.
Tom McLaury, Frank McLaury, and Billy Clanton are there. We all know they were killed in the shootout near the O.K. Corral on October 26th, 1881.
James "Tex" Howard, William E. "Billy" Delaney, Dan "Big Dan" Dowd, Omer W. "Red" Sample, and Daniel "York" Kelly are buried there. All were the perpetrators of the Bisbee Massacre. All were legally hanged on March 28th, 1884.
Then there's the story of how William Kinsman ended up in Boothill. The story goes that someone put a notice in the Tombstone Epitaph that William Kinsman intended to marry May Woodman. Since they were already living together, this made Kinsman angry. His anger obviously overrode his better judgement and he made the big mistake of running his own ad in the Epitaph stating that he had no intentions of ever marrying May Woodman.
On February 23rd,1883, William Kinsman was standing in front of the Oriental Saloon on Allen Street when May Woodman walked up and shot him dead. And yes, this goes to the heart of not publicly embarrassing a woman. After all, it's one thing to be talked about in whispers and a whole nother thing to be made a fool of in the local newspaper.
Woodman was sentenced to five years in Yuma Territorial Prison for killing Kinsman. The acting governor pardoned her after she had served less than one year. And while Kinsman is in Boothill, there's no telling whatever happened to May Woodman.
Jack Dunlop, the bandit known as "Three Fingered Jack," died of gunshot wounds on February 24th, 1900, after an attempted holdup. And yes, he's there.
George Johnson's marker can be found there. It states "Here lies George Johnson, hanged by mistake 1882. He was right we were wrong. But we strung him up and now he's gone." Of course the only problem with his marker is that no one can verify that a man named George Johnson was lynched in Arizona in 1882.
As for John Heath, he was accused of organizing the robbery that led to the 1883 Bisbee massacre. He has a grave marker near the grave of the five perpetrators of the massacre. Heath was arrested and convicted, and was later removed from the Tombstone jail by an angry group of 50 citizens.
Those citizens lynched Heath on February 22nd, 1884, from a telegraph pole on Second Street. And though there is a grave marker there for him, he was not buried in Boothill Cemetery. In fact, John Heath's body was returned to his wife in Terrell, Texas, and buried in the Oakland Cemetery there.
Thomas Harper is an outlaw supposedly buried in Tombstone's Boothill Cemetery. He was said to be a friend of Curly Bill Brocius. Harper was hanged for murder by Sheriff Bob Paul in Tucson on July 8th, 1881. And though he too has a marker there in Tombstone's Boothill, Harper is actually buried in Tucson.
One marker that is there simply reads, "DUTCH ANNIE 1883." It is an epitaph too short for someone known by the broke and desperate as a true friend. She is said to have grub-staked many. She is also said to have gone to her eternal rest with more than 1,000 people following her coffin. All paying tribute to "Dutch Annie Queen of the Red Light District."
In Tombstone's Boothill Graveyard, there is a plot in row six that has become famous. It has become famous more for the marker that says who's there, than for the soul that's buried there.
Lester Moore has become forever known for the epitaph inscribed on his headstone. It reads,
Here Lies
Lester Moore
Four Slugs
From a .44
No Les
No More
When was he born? No one knows. As for his death? It's said to be 1880, but no month or day is known. Then again, it could be a year other than 1880. Supposedly there was a Lester Moore who was a Wells Fargo Station Agent in the Mexico-United States border town of Naco, Arizona. in the early 1880s. As the station agent, Moore was responsible for delivering items shipped. Yes, he worked the window and dealt with all sorts of customers.
It's said that Hank Dunstan arrived at the Wells Fargo station to pick up a package he was expecting. Dunstan was surprised to see that the package was badly handled and was actually a shambles when Moore handed it to him. And as expected, Dunstan wasn't happy with the condition of his delivery and soon became angry over the poor condition of the battered package.
Dunstan voiced his complaint to Moore, and soon enough they were arguing. Their argument quickly escalated to where both men reached for their guns. And yes, soon shots were fired.
The rest of the story goes that Hank Dunstan shot Lester Moore four times with his .44 caliber revolver. Moore didn't go down without a fight since it's said that he managed to fire at least one shot. It hit Dunstan in the ribs. So when the smoke cleared, Lester Moore lay dead behind his window and Hank Dunstan lay mortally wounded. All in all both men ended up dead.
Lester Moore's body was transported to the town of Tombstone, where he was buried in the Boothill Graveyard. As for Hank Dunstan, no one knows where he is buried. That's the tale of Lester Moore as repeated for years. But frankly, there may be more to this story.
For example, as for his name, the name of Lester Moore doesn't appear in a 1880 Census. But, a Lewis Moore does show up. A reader sent me information showing that while the 1880 Census doesn't have Lester Moore listed, it does list a Lewis Moore who is said to have lived in Tombstone, Pima County, Arizona Territory. It also states that Lewis Moore was born in Illinois in 1828.
So was Lester Moore really Lewis Moore who lived in Tombstone, and was he born in Illinois in 1828? Or, could there really have been a Lester Moore that arrived before the 1880 Census? Since it's only speculation that Moore was killed in 1880, could a Moore have been killed earlier during that time period?
Since Cochise County wasn't founded until 1881, and subsequently their records only start that year, could there have been a Lester Moore that arrived before the 1880 Census and was killed there? If so, than why is it that it's said there was never anyone named Lester Moore who was killed in Arizona Territory? As for a Lewis Moore being killed, who knows?
Of course, what if it's simply a case of a grave marker being wrong? Was it changed at some point because it became too weathered to read? As I said, who really knows? Fact is, we don't have answers to this mystery as well as for the names of all of the unknown buried in Boothill. Yes, the same as how we also don't know who penned Lester Moore's famous epitaph. No one knows if it was the local undertaker, or just someone else good with words.
Maybe it was someone when the cemetery was being cleaned up in the 1940s? During the 1940s, the Tombstone City Council is said to have sponsored a group to restore and preserve their Boothill. It's said that metal markers were used to replace the old wooden markers that had actually disappeared in many cases.
During that time, it's said that as new markers were put into place, the preservation group actually researched as many of the graves as possible by contacting relatives, friends, older residents, and historical records. I can't him but wonder how they would explain Lester Moore's grave mystery? I can't help but wonder if it's true, that no Moore existed?

TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: cemetery; lestermoore; records; tombstone
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To: Texas Fossil
Silver City is nice. I don’t live too far from there, used to go there pretty often to shop but these days I go in a different direction so I can visit kids and grand kids when I go to town. I grew up near Flagstaff, AZ and Silver City reminds me of Flagstaff or at least the Flagstaff I remember.
41
posted on
06/04/2017 3:25:37 PM PDT
by
Tammy8
(Please be a regular supporter of Free Republic !)
To: discostu
My dad sold a ranch in 1961 and in the 1980s he was contacted because when the people he sold to began the process to sell it there was a little piece of it that was still in my dad’s name. It was pretty odd, he signed off on it with no issue to help them settle it because as he told the man he intended to sell him the whole ranch and it was just an error at the clerk’s office when it was recorded. I often wonder how much that used to happen years ago. The man was lucky my dad was honest and willing to just sign off on it to correct the error; it could have been a legal mess I imagine.
42
posted on
06/04/2017 3:31:55 PM PDT
by
Tammy8
(Please be a regular supporter of Free Republic !)
To: Tammy8
The entire industry of title insurance is built around how poor the records are. It’s still happening, records traces can be complicated as people divide and combine parcel, and mean to combine parcels but don’t get all the i’s dotted (probably what happened in this case). And parcels get abandoned, my grandmother had bough some “spec” land in New Mexico that civilization was going to grow to any day, 30 years later she dies we poke around on the internet trying to decide if the land is worth anything, find the entire “development” is in a state of chaotic nothing where things are still being sold and nothing built, and town is still 20 miles away, so we just say “forget it” and toss the deeds. Someday someone will hate us for that.
43
posted on
06/04/2017 3:46:58 PM PDT
by
discostu
(You are what you is, and that's all it is, you ain't what you're not, so see what you got.)
To: Texas Fossil
Here lies dentist Jones
We'll feel his loss with much gravity
We also realize that he had to go
And fill this one last cavity.
44
posted on
06/04/2017 3:55:50 PM PDT
by
Know et al
( Keep on Freepin'!!!)
To: Tammy8
We were there from 1973-1986. We loved it.
We lived in Las Cruces for 9 months when I first moved to NM. My wife hated it. So I showed her this small town in the mountains called Silver City, we moved and she never complained again. smile.
I got a promotion to the Home office in 1986. Left the company in 1988. smile. (swore I’d not be back in the same business, changed industries, 3 months later I would up with another company like the first. Spent 35 years in the business.)
45
posted on
06/04/2017 4:57:59 PM PDT
by
Texas Fossil
((Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!))
To: PJ-Comix
I’m not an authority, but Tom is pretty good at this.
46
posted on
06/04/2017 5:02:17 PM PDT
by
Texas Fossil
((Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!))
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