In
the winter of 1896, Texas' most famous prizefight nearly took second
place to an unscheduled and potentially much more violent match
in Sanderson.
Gov. Charles Culberson had sent 30 Texas Rangers to El
Paso to stop a scheduled championship fight between Robert Fitzsimmons
and Peter Maher, two bare-knuckle pugilists. When it became clear
to promoter Dan Stuart that he would not be able to pull off what
he dubbed a "Fistic Carnival" in Texas (he had tried Dallas
before looking to far West
Texas as a venue), he hit on another idea. He would stage the
fight on an island in the Rio Grande across from the small town
of Langtry
an international no-man's land where state lawmen would have
no jurisdiction.
Its engineer sounding two long blasts to signal "brakes released,
proceed," the special Texas and Pacific train moved slowly out of
the El Paso
depot at 9:45 p.m. on February 20. Filling 10 passenger coaches,
Stuart and a contingent of cronies, die-hard fans, gamblers and
reporters headed east for Langtry,
the rail stop best known for its most colorful resident, saloon
owner and justice of the peace Judge
Roy Bean. Hearing that Stuart had given up on the City at the
Pass, the Rangers had gotten on the train as well.
When the T&P Special rolled into Marathon
for a water stop, Fitzsimmons saw someone's pet bear chained outside
a house. To the delight of his fans, the fighter jumped off the
train and charged the frightened bear. The bruin backed up, but
Fitzsimmons kept coming, soon embracing the animal in a literal
bear hug. The dapper Stuart, visions of the bear getting a knock
out on Fitzsimmons with one swing of a clawed paw, pulled him off
the bear and got him back on the train.
Next stop, at 1 p.m. on February 21, was Sanderson.
The conductor said the train would only be in town for 10 minutes,
but the passengers were hungry and the train had no dining car.
Ignoring the conductor, 200 hungry men piled off the train to hunt
up lunch.
One of the growling stomachs belonged to Stuart's chief of security,
Bat Masterson, former buffalo hunter, one-time Dodge City policeman
and current boozer-gambler.
Dissatisfied with the level of service in the crowded eatery, Masterson
pulled a castor from the leg of the table where he had been seated
and hit the Chinese waiter on his head as he walked by. Several
people laughed, but two Ranger captains sitting nearby did not.
Captain Bill McDonald, as legendary a lawman as Masterson was legendary
as a gunman, stood and grabbed Masterson's arm. Also on his feet
was Captain John B. Rogers. Both rangers at various times in their
careers had come out first in gunfights in which there had been
no second place winner.
"Don't hit that man," McDonald said, easily heard in the suddenly
dead quiet restaurant.
Standing, Masterson's light eyes met McDonald's.
"Maybe you'd like to take it up," Masterson said.
"I done took it up," McDonald replied.
Even out in the middle of nowhere, carrying a pistol was illegal
in Texas unless a man had a badge or was on his own property. In
his capacity as security guard, Masterson may or may not have had
a pistol tucked in his waist under his coat. But McDonald and Rogers
definitely were wearing six-shooters.
If Masterson had made a sudden furtive move, the prize fight would
have been delayed by a coroner's inquest. But like any good card
player, Masterson knew when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em. He
smiled at the lithe Ranger captain and sat back down to wait for
his meal.
McDonald let go of Masterson's arm and took his seat as well.
Lunch went on and so did Masterson. Had he not had the good sense
to shut up and quit harassing the waiter, he could have died of
instant onset lead poisoning right there in Sanderson. Instead,
he lived another quarter century. Eventually he vacated the West
and settled in New York, where he became a well-followed sportswriter
for the New York World.
After the meal in Sanderson,
the train proceeded to Langtry.
Near there, to the disappointment of everyone, Fitzsimmons KO-ed
Maher in the first round on the international island. Having nothing
official to do, the rangers took in the fight from the Texas side
along with everyone else on the train.
As for Masterson, on Oct. 21, 1921, while lighting a cigarette at
his desk in the World's news room, he fell over dead on his typewriter.
He had just finished writing what would be his last column.
After they moved his body, someone pulled Masterson's last piece
of copy from his typewriter and noted the unintended appropriateness
of his last sentence:
"There are many in this old world of ours who hold that things break
about even for all of us. I have observed, for example, that we
all get about the same amount of ice. The rich get it in summer
and the poor get it in the wintertime."
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