Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Inside the Battle of Lincoln: An Interview with Capt. Earl, Old West Historian


If there’s one thing I’ve learned from digging into the Young Guns story, it’s this: real history isn’t clean. It’s messy, raw, and often more brutal than the movies ever show. So when I wanted to get the full story behind the Battle of Lincoln, I knew I needed to talk to someone who wasn’t afraid to tell it how it was.

That someone is Capt. Earl — a guy who’s spent the better part of his life knee-deep in Old West records, cemetery archives, bullet-pocked courthouse walls, and whiskey-soaked legends. We met in a dusty back room at a local museum in Lincoln County — the kind of place where the floorboards creak like old revolvers being cocked — and he didn’t waste time getting into it.


James Davis: Let’s get right to it. People hear “Battle of Lincoln,” and they picture this epic, all-out showdown. But what really kicked it off?

Capt. Earl: Hell, James, you gotta rewind a bit to understand why that house burned and why Billy the Kid came charging out like a devil in the night. This wasn't a spur-of-the-moment shootout. It was a pressure cooker. All of it goes back to the murder of John Tunstall — the young English rancher who dared to challenge the monopoly Dolan and Murphy had over Lincoln County.

James: So it’s about business?

Capt. Earl: And power. Always power. Tunstall and Alexander McSween were trying to introduce fair business practices, credit options, honesty — all that decent stuff that crooks hate. Murphy-Dolan didn’t take kindly to competition. They used the courts, the sheriffs, and even hired thugs. Then they flat-out murdered Tunstall in cold blood.

James: And that’s when the Regulators were born.

Capt. Earl: Exactly. Tunstall’s men — Billy the Kid, Dick Brewer, Charlie Bowdre, Frank McNab, and others — formed a posse under legal authority, at first. They were deputized to arrest Tunstall’s killers. But the law in Lincoln was a bad joke. The courts were run by Murphy’s men. When the law turned on the Regulators, they fought back with bullets.


James: So what made July 1878 the boiling point?

Capt. Earl: Tensions were rising for months. The Regulators had already killed Sheriff Brady, Buckshot Roberts, and others. They were holed up in the McSween house in Lincoln, basically surrounded. The Dolan faction brought in dozens of gunmen, including members of the 9th Cavalry — Buffalo Soldiers under government orders. Officially, they were supposed to keep the peace. Unofficially, they were backing Dolan.


James: That’s wild. U.S. Army helping a corrupt business?

Capt. Earl: It ain’t the first time. Won’t be the last. From July 15 to July 19, it was a full-on siege. The Regulators were stuck in the McSween house, outgunned and outnumbered. Food ran low. Water ran dry. The men were baking inside that wooden house with no escape plan. The smell of gunpowder, sweat, and desperation must’ve been thick.


James: How bad was the fighting?

Capt. Earl: Constant sniping. You couldn’t poke your head out without risking a bullet between the eyes. At one point, McSween’s wife, Susan, was crawling on her belly to deliver messages and bring in what little food she could. A few women and kids were in there too. They weren’t just fighting for pride — they were fighting for their lives.

James: Did the Regulators ever have a chance?

Capt. Earl: Not really. Even Billy the Kid — as sharp and dangerous as he was — couldn’t fight off over a hundred men. They tried negotiating. Tried holding out. But on July 19, Dolan’s men said enough was enough. They torched the place. Flames spread fast, and the men had to make a choice — burn or break.


James: That’s when the escape happened?

Capt. Earl: Yeah. Picture it: walls crumbling, smoke choking your lungs, bullets tearing through windows. Billy led a breakout through the back door. Some were killed instantly. Alexander McSween, unarmed and trying to surrender, was gunned down in the street like a dog. Harvey Morris, McSween’s young law clerk, was murdered trying to crawl away. It was chaos.

James: And Billy gets out?

Capt. Earl: He does. He and a handful of Regulators ran through the alley behind the Tunstall store, firing back as they went. Somehow, by sheer grit and timing, they made it to the hills. But that was the end of the Lincoln County War in any real organized form. McSween was dead. The house was ashes. The Dolan faction took over the town.


James: Did the law ever catch up to the Dolan men?

Capt. Earl: Not in any meaningful way. Dolan stayed in Lincoln. Opened a new store. Got appointed to public office, believe it or not. That’s the twisted part. The bad guys didn’t just survive — they thrived. And Billy? He became the outlaw legend we know today. But back then, he was just another fugitive with a price on his head.

James: That makes it feel more tragic than heroic.

Capt. Earl: That’s exactly what it was. The Regulators weren’t saints, but they were pushed into a corner. They were kids, most of them — teenagers and early 20s — going up against men with money, power, and government backing. The system was never going to let them win.


James: Looking back now, what should we take from the Battle of Lincoln?

Capt. Earl: That justice doesn’t always come from the courtroom. Sometimes the law is just a tool for the people with power. What the Regulators did was desperate, maybe reckless, but in their eyes, it was the only way to fight back. If you want to understand America’s wild history, you’ve got to stop seeing cowboys and start seeing scared, angry young men trying to stand up to corruption.

James: Would you say Billy the Kid was a hero?

Capt. Earl: I’d say he was a survivor. Smart, quick, loyal to his friends — and a killer when he needed to be. But a hero? That depends on who’s writing the story. I don’t think he ever saw himself that way. He just wanted to live.


I walked out of that interview with my head spinning. Not because of the facts — though those were brutal — but because of the raw humanity of it all. We like to think of the Old West as black hats and white hats. But in Lincoln, it was mostly gray. Gray morals. Gray justice. And the smoke that rose over McSween’s house was the color of dreams burning out.

The Battle of Lincoln wasn’t a Hollywood shootout. It was a small war. A last stand. And it proved one thing beyond a shadow of a doubt: sometimes, the most dangerous place to stand is between a man and his money.


Monday, April 21, 2025

The Real Regulators: The Outlaw Posse Behind the Legend


Long before Emilio Estevez and Lou Diamond Phillips lit up movie screens as Billy the Kid and Chavez y Chavez in Young Guns, there was a real group of young men who rode into the chaos of the Old West with guns drawn and vengeance in their hearts. They called themselves The Regulators, and their story is bloodier, messier, and in many ways more fascinating than Hollywood ever let on.

Let’s ride into history and meet the true Regulators — the men who rode with Billy the Kid and left a trail of legend across the New Mexico Territory.


The Origins: A War for Power and Cattle

The Regulators were born out of conflict. In the 1870s, Lincoln County, New Mexico, was ruled by a group of wealthy and corrupt businessmen — most notably James Dolan, who monopolized trade through the Murphy-Dolan faction. Then came John Tunstall, a young Englishman who wanted to start his own cattle operation and business. His arrival threatened the old guard’s grip on power.

Tunstall hired a group of ranch hands and gunmen to protect his property and his interests. These men — mostly young, tough, and loyal — would become the nucleus of what would soon be known as the Regulators.

When Tunstall was ambushed and murdered on February 18, 1878, everything changed. His hired hands didn’t just grieve. They swore revenge.



Who Were the Regulators?

The Regulators weren’t your typical gang of outlaws. In fact, for a short time, they were legal deputies, appointed by a local justice of the peace to arrest those responsible for Tunstall’s murder. But what started as justice quickly spiraled into full-blown violence.

Here are some of the most notable real-life Regulators:


Billy the Kid (Henry McCarty, aka William H. Bonney)
Arguably the most famous outlaw in American history. Fast with a gun and faster with a smile, Billy was young, scrappy, and dangerous. He joined the Regulators to avenge Tunstall — a man he saw as a mentor. Though controversial, Billy was deeply loyal and believed he was on the right side of the law.


Jose Chavez y Chavez
Of Mexican and Native American descent, Chavez was one of the few non-Anglo members of the Regulators. Known for his loyalty and quiet intensity, he was involved in several key shootouts. After the Lincoln County War, he continued to drift through the outlaw world, eventually landing in prison before being pardoned.


Dick Brewer
The first leader of the Regulators and a close friend of Tunstall. Brewer was more disciplined than Billy and tried to hold the group together with some sense of order. He was killed in a gunfight with “Buckshot” Roberts during the Battle of Blazer’s Mill.


Doc Scurlock
A former teacher turned gunslinger, Scurlock was intelligent and deadly. He survived the Lincoln County War and later settled down to live a quiet life as a rancher and father — a rare peaceful ending for a Regulator.


Charlie Bowdre
A close friend of both Billy and Scurlock. He fought in several key battles but was eventually killed by Pat Garrett’s posse in 1880 during the chase for Billy the Kid.


George and Frank Coe
Cousins who joined the Regulators after Tunstall’s murder. Both survived the war and later became respected ranchers, though they carried the scars of their violent past.


The Violence Erupts: The Lincoln County War

Between March and July of 1878, the Regulators went from lawmen to outlaws. Armed with warrants, they began rounding up (and often executing) those responsible for Tunstall’s death. Some of these killings were seen as justified — others, not so much.

One of the most infamous events was the Battle of Lincoln, a five-day shootout between the Regulators and the Murphy-Dolan faction. It ended with the death of Alexander McSween (Tunstall’s business partner) and the effective collapse of the Regulator cause.

The war was over, but the blood kept flowing.


What Happened to the Regulators?

The Lincoln County War didn’t end with a clean victory for either side. Many Regulators were hunted down, killed, or forced to go into hiding. Others tried to resume normal lives.

Billy the Kid famously kept fighting — stealing cattle, breaking out of jail, and dodging the law until Pat Garrett finally caught up with him in 1881.

Chavez y Chavez served time in prison but lived into the 1920s. Doc Scurlock lived to see the 20th century, raising a family in East Texas. The Coe cousins managed to avoid prosecution and went on to become prominent citizens.


Legacy of the Regulators

The Regulators were a rare blend of lawmen, outlaws, and avengers — young men trapped in a corrupt system with few ways out. Their story isn’t black and white. It’s a murky, dusty trail of justice, revenge, and survival.

Hollywood made them legends. History reveals them as something more raw and real.

The Regulators weren’t just gunfighters — they were brothers in arms, fighting a war they didn’t start, with loyalty as their only badge.


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