Legends of the Old West - BILLY THE KID Ep. 1 | “Henry Antrim alias Kid”
Episode Date: April 14, 2021A mischievous boy becomes a petty thief. The petty thief becomes a drifter. The drifter becomes a killer. The mysterious and scattered life of Henry McCarty begins in the American West. Join Black B...arrel+ for bingeable seasons with no commercials: blackbarrel.supportingcast.fm/join For more details, visit our website www.blackbarrelmedia.com and check out our social media pages. We’re @OldWestPodcast on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Rated ESRB E10+. He was described as lean and wiry, with sandy brown hair and clear blue eyes.
He was charismatic and enjoyed a joke.
He liked to gamble, but ignored tobacco and rarely drank whiskey.
He loved to sing and dance, and his abilities came from his mother.
He spoke fluent Spanish and charmed young ladies on the dance floor in two languages.
He could read and write, and he preferred moccasins to boots and a sombrero to a cowboy hat.
moccasins to boots and a sombrero to a cowboy hat.
He never knew his father, and even his name has been debated.
But one thing that is known, in 1877, Henry McCarty, also called Henry Antrim, otherwise known as The Kid, was around 17 years old.
That summer, he killed his first man.
It was a hot August evening in the town of Bonita. The speck of a settlement sat outside
Fort Grant, a small military outpost about 60 miles from Tucson in southern Arizona territory.
On this night, the blacksmith from Fort Grant,
an Irishman named Frank Cahill,
was playing cards at George Atkins' Cantina.
And, as always, he was talking.
Cahill earned the nickname Windy
because he told stories nonstop,
stringing them together one after another.
At his table sat Henry Antrim,
whom everyone called Kid
Antrim. He was no more than seventeen years old, and his baby face and slender frame made
him look younger. The Kid had endured torments from the loudmouthed Windy Cahill on several
occasions. The blustery Irishman liked to knock the kid around and tussle his hair and make fun of him at every opportunity.
But on this night, the kid reached his breaking point.
As they sat at the table, Wendy Cahill continued his loud talk,
and the situation grew heated as the blacksmith and the kid traded insults.
Cahill called the kid a pimp.
The kid called Cahill a son of a bitch.
Cahill dove at the kid a pimp. The kid called Cahill a son of a bitch. Cahill dove at the kid.
They crashed to the floor and wrestled all the way outside and into the dusty street.
Cahill pinned the kid to the ground, but the kid wrenched an arm free and grabbed the.45 caliber pistol that was stuffed into his pants. The kid jammed the gun into Cahill's side and pulled the trigger.
A slug tore through the Irishman's abdomen.
As Windy Cahill collapsed into the dust, the kid realized the severity of his actions.
He leapt to his feet and ran down the street.
He jumped onto a horse that wasn't his and galloped out of Bonita.
He didn't stop riding until he was all the way out of Arizona territory.
The kid had committed other crimes in the last three years,
but none as serious as murder.
If Cahill died, and gutshot men almost always did,
then the 17-year-old drifter would be a murderer, and that label stuck with a person forever.
Cahill lingered for several agonizing hours, during which he dictated his last will and
testament. In it, he said he was born in Galway, Ireland, and died in Arizona Territory,
killed by a young man called Henry Antrim.
After Cahill succumbed to his wound, a coroner's jury of six men declared that the death of
Frank Cahill was criminal and unjustifiable, and they found a single young man guilty of
the act, Henry Antrim, alias Kid.
a single young man guilty of the act, Henry Antrim, alias Kid. Henry never set foot in Arizona again,
and by the time he resurfaced in New Mexico, he had adopted a new name, but the alias stayed with him. Now he called himself William H. Bonney, which was eventually shortened to Billy the Kid.
eventually shortened to Billy the Kid.
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From Black Barrel Media, this is Legends of the Old West.
I'm your host, Chris Wimmer, and this is a 10-part series about the most notorious outlaw in the history of the American West, Billy the Kid.
This is Episode 1, Henry Antrim, alias Kid.
New York City was burning.
It had been burning for four days and nights in the sweltering mid-July heat. Mobs of men in the hundreds rampaged through the streets. They torched homes and
businesses. They beat, stabbed, stoned, hanged, and even burned African Americans who were
unlucky enough to fall into their hands.
These were the New York City draft riots that engulfed a portion of Manhattan in the summer
of 1863. The Civil War was in its second year, and no one thought it would last this long.
Some said it would be a 90-day war that would feature very little bloodshed.
But the First Battle of Bull Run, or Manassas as the Confederates called it, proved otherwise.
And then one battle after
another showed the country that this would be a war of attrition. Two massive armies would maul
each other across a thousand miles of American territory until one side or the other could not
continue. But that outcome was still two years in the future. Now, in 1863, the President of the United States,
Abraham Lincoln, instituted the first military draft in American history.
It took effect in April, and it's said that any able-bodied man between the ages of 20 and 35
was eligible, and any man from 35 to 45 who was not married was also eligible. But there were two
loopholes. A man could hire a substitute to take his place, or he could pay $300 to the government
to avoid enlistment. In July, the draft came to New York City. The wealthy bought their way out
of service, so the burden of being forced into a war fell on
the lower classes, many of whom were Irish immigrants who had fled their home country
after it had been devastated by famine. They had come to America just simply to survive,
and now they could be drafted and sent to war. And they increasingly saw the war as a fight to liberate slaves, which was the last
thing they cared about. In cities like New York, immigrants competed with African Americans for
the lowest paying jobs. Now, immigrants were eligible for the draft, and African Americans
were not, because they weren't citizens. Anger and resentment exploded into five days of riots
as mobs tore through the streets, destroying property
and killing those they blamed for their troubles.
The violence finally stopped
when Union soldiers rushed into the city.
Those soldiers were fresh off the battlefield
at Gettysburg.
The largest battle ever fought in the Western Hemisphere
had taken place just
ten days earlier. When the New York City draft riots finally died down,
Billy the Kid was around four years old, and he might have witnessed the entire thing.
The most common theory is that Billy was born in the slums of New York in 1859,
possibly in the squalid and crime-ridden district known as the Five Points.
If you read the book Gangs of New York or saw the movie, that's the neighborhood we're talking about.
His mother's name was Catherine, and she was a refugee from Ireland. She probably settled somewhere in Lower Manhattan, which was home to scores of
Irish immigrants. History records her last name as McCarty, but she told a census taker in Indianapolis
that the name had come from her husband, Michael McCarty, who was also an Irish immigrant and who
had died in the Civil War. If that was true, then we don't know her maiden name. Sometime between
the New York draft riots of 1863 and the end of the war in 1865, she escaped New York and turned
up in Indianapolis. By that time, she had two boys, Henry and Joseph. Henry was small and slight.
Joseph was bigger, which caused most people at the time to believe he was the older of the two
brothers, but no one knows for sure. During the few years that Catherine and her two boys spent
in Indianapolis, she met a new suitor, William Antrim. Catherine
was 13 years older than William, but they grew close and developed some sort of relationship
because, by 1870, the informal family unit had moved to Wichita, Kansas.
Wichita was a raw frontier town that seemed to sprout out of the Kansas prairie like a weed.
William Antrim bought land outside of town and began farming, while Catherine and the boys lived in town.
Catherine began a laundry business that quickly gained respect in the community.
When the first issue of the Wichita Tribune newspaper rolled off the presses March 15th, 1871, the
publisher listed her laundry on the roster of businesses in town. It was
called City Laundry and the paper said it was a good place to get your linens
cleaned. With the arrival of the first herds of Texas cattle that were driven
north along the Chisholm Trail, the dusty little village of
Wichita exploded into a full-blown boomtown. The population surged, new buildings rose in
record time, and rowdiness increased exponentially as Texas cowboys blew off steam after weeks on
the trail with nothing for company but dirty, stinking cows. Fifteen to
twenty thousand cattle passed through Wichita every week in the spring and summer, and they
brought with them hordes of flies beyond counting. Around that time, Catherine decided the bustling
city center was no place for two young boys who were somewhere between the ages of ten and fifteen.
no place for two young boys who were somewhere between the ages of 10 and 15. She and the boys moved several miles outside of town to a cabin that William built on a plot of land. She and
William had been frequent and successful investors in land in the area. They bought and sold plots
almost constantly during their time in Wichita. But living outside the chaos of town was no picnic.
The prairie was unforgiving.
Settlers contended with droughts, floods, blizzards, wind, rain, hail, snakes,
and plagues of frogs and grasshoppers.
And worst of all, fire.
Prairie fires scorched the earth black
and ate everything in sight at seemingly impossible speeds.
So it may have been for all of these things, or none of them, that Catherine, her two boys, and William Antrim abandoned Wichita less than three years after arriving.
She probably didn't like Wichita's transformation into a hell-raising cow town that would need the services of a young
lawman named Wyatt Earp two years from now. But she also had a more serious need for change.
She had developed tuberculosis. The disease was a slow killer, but it always won. In the 1800s,
it was a death sentence. Doctors simply said, go west. Find a dry climate with clear air at high altitudes.
That'll buy you some time.
But that's all it would do.
So that's what Catherine did.
She and her two sons and William Antrim left Wichita and headed west.
But for two years, they disappeared from the record.
Little Henry McCarty's brother Joseph said later in life that they went to Denver,
but his memory was notoriously bad and there are no accounts of the Klan in the Mile High City.
Wherever they spent their missing years, when they popped back up on the grid again,
it was cause for celebration.
Billy Antrim and Catherine McCarty were getting married.
It was March 1st, 1873, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Henry and Joseph were witnesses to their mother's marriage,
and at that time, their names changed from McCarty to Antrim.
Not long after the ceremony, the family moved to its final destination,
Silver City in the southwest corner of New Mexico territory.
This is where Henry McCarty, now called Henry Antrim, would spend his formative years.
He would learn to read and write.
He would make friends and play with other boys and get into mischief.
He would be drawn to Hispanic culture and tradition.
But he would also lose his mother. His stepfather would drift away, and without their guidance,
he was easily influenced by the criminal element in Silver City. It wouldn't be long before he felt
the bite of shackles on his wrists for the first time, and escaped from jail for the first time,
and ran away from the law for the first time, and escaped from jail for the first time, and ran away from the law for the first time.
Silver City was a classic boomtown of the American West, and its name was literal.
A wealthy silver deposit had been found in the area, and as always,
miners flocked to the site and began ripping the ore out of the ground as fast as possible.
Silver City didn't so much grow as it erupted along the banks of a creek that would eventually
run through the center of town. By the time the Antrim family arrived in the summer of 1873, it would have looked eerily
familiar, at least to some extent. Silver City and Wichita would have felt like two sides of the same
coin. Wichita was a hell-raising boomtown built on the cattle industry, and Silver City was a
hell-raising boomtown built on the mining industry. In Silver City, the saloons were open 24 hours a day and were packed with dirty men straight from the mines.
But unlike many boomtowns, Silver City had staying power.
Businesses of every kind lined the dusty streets, and William Antrim worked odd jobs around town after the family's arrival.
and William Antrim worked odd jobs around town after the family's arrival.
He did some carpentry and worked in a butcher shop while he learned the mining business.
The Antrims moved into a cabin on the corner of Main and Broadway,
and Catherine quickly took up some of her old labors.
She ran an informal laundry service and baked cakes for sale.
During the last year of her life,
Catherine made an impression on the town of Silver City.
She was known as a lively woman who loved to sing and dance,
and she passed these talents to her son Henry.
Henry and his brother Joseph made friends with the local boys, and they ran the streets looking for entertainment when they weren't doing chores
or getting an education in Silver City's first public school.
Henry must have been a natural student, because there are numerous accounts of him being an avid reader.
He seemed to enjoy books of all kinds, including dime novels and the Police Gazette.
And it was said he had another quality that set him apart from his friends. He could write with both hands. In a couple years,
his compatriots known as the Regulators would also comment on this quality,
but they referred to his ability to shoot with both hands. Henry Antrim's routine of school,
chores,
and playing with his friends in the streets of Silver City didn't last long.
His mother's health was failing.
She probably tried everything to delay the effects of tuberculosis,
including an extended stay at a Hot Springs hotel,
but nothing worked.
By the summer of 1874,
a little over a year after the family's arrival in Silver City, Catherine was bedridden. She was dying and there was nothing anyone could do but
wait. To make matters worse for Henry and Joseph, their stepfather William Antrim had been spending
more and more time out of town at his mining claims.
William was determined to strike it rich, and it seemed to be the only priority in his life.
On Wednesday, September 14, 1874, Catherine died in her bed.
She was 45 years old.
Henry, Joseph, and a neighbor, Clara Truesdell, were there.
William Antrim was not.
The next year of Henry's life was a slow downward spiral. He didn't sink into a deep depression as might be expected, but he gradually fell under the influence of petty criminals that would change his life
forever. After Catherine's death, Henry moved in with the Truesdell family. Gerald and Clara
Truesdell were pillars of the community. Their son Chauncey was good friends with Henry,
and Clara had been a friend to Catherine in the final year of the community. Their son Chauncey was good friends with Henry, and Clara had been a
friend to Catherine in the final year of her life. Henry worked in the hotel that Gerald had recently
bought and generally helped out where he could in exchange for his room and board. Henry's brother
Joe went to live with Joseph Dyer, the man who owned a popular saloon called the Orleans Club.
Joe Antrim became an errand boy for Mr. Dyer and spent much of his time around the saloon.
As the winter of 1874 passed into the spring of 1875, Henry Antrim began to have problems.
He was 15 or 16 years old and started to become an independent young man.
years old and started to become an independent young man. In the summer of 1875, he was forced to move out of the Truesdell home for a reason that has never been fully explained, but it
probably wasn't good. He moved in with a Mrs. Brown, who was probably the wife of a local
bartender. Henry worked in a butcher shop and attended school, and when he wasn't at either
of those places,
he was in the Orleans club with his brother receiving an education of a different type.
He quickly learned to play poker, and he was good at it.
He was a smart young man, bright and alert.
And at this time in his life, another physical characteristic brought him attention.
He was said to have dancing eyes, and that trait was explained by a man He was said to have dancing eyes,
and that trait was explained by a man who was about to have an unintended
but profound impact on Henry's life.
Harvey Whitehill said,
His eyes never were at rest, but continually shifted and roved,
much like his own rebellious nature.
Henry's rebellious nature was about to be put to use by a petty thief,
which would put the teenager on a collision course with Mr. Whitehill,
who had just been named Sheriff of Silver City.
The previous sheriff, Charles McIntosh, had disappeared, likely running off to Mexico.
likely running off to Mexico.
And when he did, he stole maybe as much as $3,000 from the county.
In the spring of 1875, voters elected Harvey Whitehill to take McIntosh's place.
Over the course of the summer, Henry's life at the Truesdale home deteriorated and he moved into Mrs. Brown's home.
Also boarding at Mrs. Brown's home was a stonemason named George Schaefer
who wore a sombrero
and loved to get drunk and steal things.
Henry quickly fell under the spell
of the hard-drinking thief.
In early September,
George Schaefer,
nicknamed Sombrero Jack because of his hat,
broke into the home of the owner of a Chinese laundry.
He stole about $200 worth of goods that included clothing, guns, and blankets. He hid the loot
outside of town and then offered Henry a cut of the profits to be made by selling the stolen
merchandise if Henry would smuggle some of it into town. Henry agreed, and he naively kept the stolen goods in his room,
where Mrs. Brown promptly found them. Mrs. Brown told Sheriff Harvey Whitehill that she had
discovered stolen stuff in Henry's room, and Sheriff Whitehill arrested Henry.
It was actually the second time the sheriff arrested the young man.
Henry had stolen several pounds of butter
earlier in the summer and sold it to local merchants. His guilt was clearly established,
but he seemed to be genuinely apologetic for the crime. Sheriff Whitehill let him go when Henry
promised to stay on his best behavior. He did, for a few weeks, until Sombrero Jack robbed the home of the laundry owner.
Now Henry had been caught red-handed again, and this time the sheriff had to punish him.
Whitehill took Henry to the town jail and locked him up.
Whitehill only meant to scare the boy into staying out of trouble, but of course, Henry didn't know that.
But of course, Henry didn't know that.
All he knew was that the next court session in Silver City wasn't until mid-December, three months from now, and he was not going to sit in jail that long.
After a couple days in jail, Henry complained that he needed exercise.
Sheriff Whitehill and his jailer let Henry out of his cell and allowed him to walk up and down the corridor.
Then the two men left the jail and locked the doors behind them. When they returned a little while later, Henry was gone. He could not have escaped by using the door, so the two men were
baffled. The sheriff ran outside and saw a man standing on a ridge behind the jail. He asked the man if he had seen anyone running away from the jail.
The man said yes.
A young man crawled out of the chimney and ran away.
Sheriff Whitehill hurried back to the jail.
He went to the old fireplace against the wall and peered up the chimney.
He saw handprints and footprints smeared into the dark soot
that covered the inside of the chimney.
Henry Antrim, a small, skinny teenager, had squeezed up the chimney and scaled down the outside to freedom.
After his jailbreak, Henry fled to Arizona, but there are conflicting stories about how he got there.
Several people said they helped him after his escape.
The Truesdell family claimed he ran to their house
and spent the night with them before Clara put him on a stage the next day.
Mrs. Brown said Henry had come to her house and she had put him on a stagecoach.
Other people who knew Henry told similar stories.
Whomever he stayed with, and however he made it out of Silver City, two things were certain.
He was a criminal on the run for the first time in his life, and he was headed for Arizona.
No one knows the location of Henry's first stop in Arizona,
but it was most likely the small mining town of Clifton.
That was the end of the line for the stagecoach,
and that was where Henry's stepfather William was prospecting for riches.
Sheriff Whitehill always thought that Henry found his stepfather and asked for help,
but William refused.
History might have been completely different if William Antrim had been willing to assist his runaway stepson, but he wasn't.
So Henry found himself alone, homeless, and penniless in a land he didn't know.
Just like the span of time between Wichita and Santa Fe, Henry Antrim virtually disappeared from the record.
For about two years, he was just another one of the uncountable young men who drifted through the American West after the Civil War.
He would have looked for any kind of work wherever he could find it.
One account says he briefly found a job at Henry Hooker's Sierra Bonita Ranch.
The foreman said he hired Henry, but the teenager didn't last very long because he was too small and slender to handle the physical work of a ranch hand.
If Henry stopped at Hooker's ranch, it would have been just a handful of years before Hooker became a friend and ally of Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday as they tracked
the killers who had attacked Wyatt's family after the gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
None of the jobs that Henry tried lasted very long, and soon enough he teamed up with a
horse thief named John Mackey. Mackey was a former soldier who was ten years older than
Henry and once the pair joined forces, they started stealing
horses from the army. Soldiers were often easy targets. When they left their forts,
they rode down to the rough and rowdy saloons and dance halls that inevitably sprang up near
army camps. While the soldiers occupied themselves inside, they tied their horses outside.
themselves inside, they tied their horses outside. Henry and John unhitched the horses and slipped away into the night. But they weren't the greatest horse thieves in the world.
They were caught numerous times, and each time they were allowed to go free, or in Henry's case,
escaped custody. Henry proved to be a much better escape artist than a thief,
and it was his final jailbreak in Arizona that put him on a collision course with a long-winded Irishman named Frank Cahill.
At some point while Henry was locked in the guardhouse at Fort Grant,
an officer requested a set of shackles to be made to prevent the kid from escaping.
The blacksmith who made those shackles was Frank Cahill.
Cahill had delighted in messing with the slender young man since his arrival in the Fort Grant area,
and he no doubt took great pleasure in slamming a set of leg irons around Henry's ankles.
But the ankle bracelets didn't stop Henry, who at this point was known as Kid Antrim.
Somehow, Henry escaped from the Fort Grant guardhouse, shackles and all.
But as was his habit, which would get him killed a few years from now,
the Kid stayed in an area where he was comfortable, despite his troubles.
That's how he found himself at George Atkins' cantina on Friday, August 17, 1877, sitting across a card table from
Frank Cahill. As always, Cahill spat verbal abuses at the kid, but this time, the kid spat them right
back. Cahill wasn't a tall man, but he was thick and burly. After they traded insults, Cahill bull rushed the kid outside.
He pinned Henry to the ground and was about to start pummeling him when the kid grabbed a pistol
out of his pants and shot Cahill in the side. Cahill toppled off the kid, clutching his bleeding
wound. The kid jumped to his feet and sprinted away from the scene. He stole a horse and galloped out of the Fort Grant area and clear out of Arizona territory.
The next day, Frank Cahill used his final words to swear a statement that listed, among other things, the name of his killer, Henry Antrim, alias Kid.
Next time on Legends of the Old West, rival forces align themselves in southeastern New Mexico with a town called Lincoln at the center of a pattern of violence and lawlessness.
A group of ruthless Irishmen form a corrupt organization that rules Lincoln with an iron fist. Then a Scotsman and an Englishman team up to compete with the Irishmen,
and their actions set in motion a new wave of destruction that won't stop for three years.
That's next week on Legends of the Old West.
for three years.
That's next week on Legends of the Old West.
Research assistance
for this season
was provided by
Aaron Aylsworth.
Original music
by Rob Valliere.
Editing and sound design
by Dave Harrison.
I'm your writer and host,
Chris Wimmer.
If you enjoyed the show,
please leave us a rating
and a review
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or wherever you're listening.
Please visit our website, blackbarrelmedia.com, for more details and join us on social media.
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