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Terror In The West: The 20 Scariest Outlaws History Never Forgot


Terror In The West: The 20 Scariest Outlaws History Never Forgot


The Frontier Got Too Comfortable With Bad Men

The Old West had plenty of famous troublemakers, and it’s easy to think back on tumbleweeds and saloon doors when you picture historical cowboys—but the truly unsettling names remain hidden just outside the spotlight, where the reputations get nastier. These weren’t all polished folk legends with clean movie endings; some were killers, robbers, scalp hunters, corrupt lawmen, and wandering predators so gruesome they became legends in their own right. So if you thought the West was only Billy the Kid, we rounded up 20 more wanted posters.

178006201529e25ccb16ec4da0ff6d4ca46e0421c89a3ce241.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

1. Felipe Espinosa

Felipe Espinosa turned Colorado Territory into a place of fear in 1863; he and his relatives carried out a string of killings across lonely settlements. Even today, the Espinosas are Colorado’s most prolific monsters, with a story tangled in land loss, vengeance, and frontier panic.

1780061111f4ea8e658364d20b463d80d1d5c796292bc9382e.jpegАнтон Хаткевич on Pexels

2. Boone Helm

Levi Boone Helm, better known as Boone Helm, was a mountain man with a grim reputation. He was convicted of murder, which was a common enough charge back in the day, but he also moved through several western territories, and later became infamous under the nickname “Kentucky Cannibal”. 

178006114652394b2b95dd391ec2cbb8fc5400eae9a6151475.JPGJohn Warner Norton on Wikimedia

3. Cullen Baker

Cullen Baker operated in the violent aftermath of the Civil War, when parts of Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana were already tense enough without a desperado running loose.

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Nevertheless, his gang was accused of terrorizing Union soldiers, civilians, and freedmen, and later accounts connect him with a wave of Reconstruction-era violence.

1780061213b5efe9f777d15476e08bffabbc5d7dc86375a22b.jpgDDP on Unsplash

4. Cherokee Bill

You may have heard of Cherokee Bill, but his official name was Crawford Goldsby. Whatever you call him, he’s often remembered as having ridden with the Cook Gang, becoming one of Indian Territory’s most feared young outlaws. Records show that he shot a barber during the 1894 Lincoln County Bank robbery and later claimed a guard’s life while jailed in Fort Smith. He was only about 20 when the law came down on him.

1780061240f1d7418fd072f852b6aea3bccca262e398ae380e.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

5. Jim Miller

Jim Miller looked respectable enough, and that’s exactly how he fooled people. In reality, beneath that unassuming demeanor was a man linked to killings, hired-gun work, and a reputation that later gave him names like “Killer Miller”. 

17800612701eab6dda77cfdf94706ff03638a21fce610b6a65.pngUnknown author on Wikimedia

6. Rufus Buck

Rufus Buck led a short-lived but terrifying gang through Indian Territory in 1895. Don’t let their short time in the sun fool you, though. The gang’s crimes included robbery, murder, and assault, and their spree was brutal enough that it eventually ended with execution at Fort Smith. 

17800612964257936b168aa3c7699b4a7a2b3e16e69739e85d.jpgunknown photographers on Wikimedia

7. Stephen Dee Richards

You can’t say Stephen Dee Richards didn’t make history—just not a flattering piece of it. He was a Nebraska man whose crimes constantly made the newspapers, and if you do a little digging, you can even find an 1879 account that identifies him as the “murderer of nine persons”. Later summaries describe him as Nebraska’s first documented serial killer, and he earned harrowing aliases, like the Nebraska Fiend and the Ohio Monster.

1780061389317111ea82e64884bf179ec45db465b3e1135d2e.jpgRichard K. Fox Publishing on Wikimedia

8. John Joel Glanton

If you know Cormac McCarthy, you know John Joel Glanton, even if you don’t think so! He wasn’t a saloon-card outlaw; he was a scalp hunter tied to mass violence along the borderlands. He led a gang in northern Mexico and the Southwest, and his reputation was grim enough to echo through some of the best-written Western literature.

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1780061408ce4a35c77cd93a85e226ea30403c34d04a2300c7.pngTexas State Historical Association on Wikimedia

9. Charles Kennedy

Charles Kennedy preyed on travelers near the Taos Trail outside Elizabethtown, New Mexico, but it was a lot worse than making men cough up their watches. Accounts describe him as a serial killer who used an isolated stop to rob and take the lives of those passing through.

178006149226f4fccd58502ae4aafd679ccc9ccc7de251d180.jpgAntje Winkler on Unsplash

10. Bill Longley

William Preston Longley, otherwise known as Wild Bill Longley, had a quick temper and a violent career—two things that made him notorious in Texas. He was eventually convicted of murder, but historical accounts describe a long list of aliases and crimes long before his 1878 execution. 

17800615114d981e7f010bb8e7115916253b411703301a88c8.jpgunknown on Wikimedia

11. Henry Plummer

Henry Plummer is one of the West’s most unsettling figures, but not for the reason you might think. He was corrupt, sure, but he also wore a badge while accusations flew of him leading road agents in Montana Territory. The alleged Innocents gang preyed on travelers and gold shipments between Bannack and Virginia City, and Plummer was hanged by vigilantes in 1864. 

178006154799ec755ed38020d5e1770dc87e06d7f61b3b518d.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

12. Big Nose George Parrott

It’s hardly the name you want, but Big Nose George (George Parrott) was a highwayman and cattle rustler tied to the murder of two Wyoming lawmen after a failed train robbery. He tried to break out of prison and failed, leading to his lynching in Rawlins in 1881.

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His story didn’t stop there, though. His remains became part of one of the strangest postmortem stories in history; a pair of shoes was made from skin taken from his body, and those later became a museum piece. 

1780061574e0c4f4f58dce6d2a26e8a880decc13e759925368.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

13. Zip Wyatt

Nathaniel “Zip” Wyatt had a few aliases, most commonly Dick Yeager and Wild Charlie. Either way, he became one of Oklahoma Territory’s most notorious outlaws in the 1890s. Newspaper coverage called him the leader of a murderous band, which was putting it lightly, and his capture came after a fierce fight near Sheridan, Oklahoma.

1780061633c5bcf9ab64dff128b91f9b408d94af8d216da1d7.jpegMarco Antonio Casique Reyes on Pexels

14. George “Bitter Creek” Newcomb

George “Bitter Creek” Newcomb started as a cowboy, drifted in and out of roving gangs, and ended up connected to the Dalton and Doolin gangs. Don’t just assume he cozied up with men like him, however; he was considered too wild even by Bob Dalton, with a career including bank robbery, hideouts, and a long, violent streak.

17800616804e60d6cd8ccbc9121662e2ddc2680255241ae1e3.jpegCan on Pexels

15. King Fisher

John King Fisher moved through Texas as a lot of different things: a rancher, a gunman, an outlaw, and later a lawman. You’d like to think that being a lawman would have reined him in, but sources describe his raids across the Mexican border and his violent rise in the Nueces Strip before he tried to settle into a more respectable life. 

1780061699b5619949c13456dc9d524488594ddad07889bea9.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

16. Jack Slade

Tongue-twister name aside, Joseph Alfred “Jack” Slade helped run stage and Pony Express operations, becoming infamous for violence and hard drinking. It didn’t take long for vigilantes to catch up with him, and he was hanged in Virginia City, Montana, in 1864, the same rough year that swallowed several other Montana desperadoes. 

1780061725dbe5a9dce146f6e1fe7df29263e1ec59a770bc35.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

17. Harvey Logan

Harvey Logan, better known as Kid Curry, rode with Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch—he just never earned the same kind of spotlight. It’s weird, too, seeing as how he has been described as “the wildest of the Wild Bunch,” and accounts link him to the deaths of multiple law officers and other victims. 

178006184938d010696b8b658c11d44fe862b3b039eafb3c57.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

18. James Kirker

James Kirker was an Irish-born frontiersman, mercenary, and scalp hunter—think of him as a sort of unholy trinity wandering the United States-Mexico borderlands. He made quite the name for himself, too, with recent historical writing connecting his contracts to violence against the Apache people.

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178006191805b91711bf9f0a68489c9d8fe78c428fcf42bcb8.jpgThomas Martin Easterly on Wikimedia

19. Clay Allison

One thing to know about Clay Allison is that he liked the word “shootist,” which should tell you enough about his personality. He was tied to all the typical stuff: gunfights, vigilante violence, and several deadly encounters across New Mexico, Colorado, and Texas. 

17800619467989779fc83fbde46734652785791c3d578ac797.jpgUnknown author on Wikimedia

20. Curly Bill Brocius

William “Curly Bill” Brocius belonged to the outlaw Cowboys in Arizona Territory, becoming part of the violent world surrounding Tombstone. The biggest black mark on his record was being involved in the fatal shooting of Tombstone Marshal Fred White—though accounts have long debated whether the shooting was on purpose or not. 

1780061975669da8b2fd1c61e5f2f8cd49c66f0a72909d9e8b.JPGUploaded by Notyouravgjoe (talk). The original uploader was Notyouravgjoe at English Wikipedia. on Wikimedia


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