General Histories of Coleman County, Texas


The Peace Keepers
 
by Ralph Terry

(From A History of Coleman County and Its People, 1985 
edited by Judia and Ralph Terry, and Vena Bob Gates - used by permission.)



Here in Coleman County, I have found very little to indicate that our citizens have been on the wrong side of the law, or else we have had some very efficient law enforcement officers.  There have been accounts of Rangers and sheriffs doing battle during the early days of Coleman City, when every other building housed a saloon, and typical gun battles that most frontier towns had.  Then there was the "Fence-cutting War" of the early 1880's which was resolved by the Texas legislature.  The only death penalty ever carried out in Coleman County was on a change of venue of the trial of accused murderer, John Pearl, who was buried in the Coleman Cemetery.  There was the occasional boot-legger and moonshiner; even a few robberies in the county.  The only sheriff that seems to have had his hands full most of the time was Frank Mills, who served from 1928 to 1937, which was during the depression years and lawlessness seemed to be high everywhere.  When Mills resigned to return to the Rangers, he said, "It got too quiet, so I resigned." Mills' scrapbook tells of many cases he worked on.  The McBee hanging skeleton case was one of the eeriest cases in which a man was murdered and buried by his assailant, then dug up and hanged from a tree eight months later in a futile attempt to make it appear a suicide.  This happened at Rising Star in Eastland County.  Mills solved the case.  George "Machine Gun" Kelly was another notorious gangster Mills had dealings with, though not directly.  After the kidnaping of Charles F. Urschel, Oklahoma City oilman, in 1933, Kelly made his way to Coleman County and buried his share of the $200,000 ransom on a farm of his wife's uncle, Cass Coleman.  Coleman and a past neighbor, Will Casey, were convicted of aiding Kelly.  Mills recovered the $73,250 from a clump of trees in a Coleman County cotton field.  Bonnie and Clyde left a car in Coleman that had about 35 bullet holes in it, but Mills never saw them.  In 1931, the bank at Valera was robbed and a few months later the same bandits raided the bank at Lohn.  The men were cornered in the Trickham area and tried to shoot it out with Mills and his deputies, Bob Sommerall and P. F. Dyches.  Bob shot one and the others were captured.  In 1934, a trio of bandits raided the First Coleman National Bank and made off with about $24,000 and kidnapped and beat the bank's assistant cashier before turning him loose near Santa Anna.  After a relentless search, they were captured and two were sentenced to prison and another killed.  (See story in First Coleman National Bank History).

Today we have an occasional serious or violent crime, mostly just minor violations.  The moonshining is now rare ... a few cases of marijuana growing have been turned up during the early 1970's during the service of Corky Chapman.  In 1971, a record Texas haul was taken in north Coleman County.  The farm was almost an acre in size, being watered from a nearby creek.  The man indicted was from Balmorhea and was working on the Webb Ranch.  The marijuana plants weighed 2750 pounds and the refined, rolled retail value was estimated at over $1 million.

Dick Pauley was the only Coleman County sheriff to be killed in the line of duty in 1925 ... oddly enough, the only known deputy killed in the line of duty was Pauley's deputy, Joe Griffith, who was killed in February 1924.

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The jury which gave the only hanging sentence ever carried out in Coleman - 1901

Standing: Sheriff Bob Goodfellow, Mr. Ratliff, Phillip Saunders, Mr. Dockery, Jim Jameson, Lucien Love.
Second row: R. H. Beard, J. L. Wilkerson, Mr. Tabor, Mr. Griffis.,
Front Row: Nelson Jameson, Jess Ratliff, and Mr. Garrett.

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The crowd awaiting the hanging in 1901 of John Pearl.
 

The execution took place on the second floor of the county jail, where the rope was attached to a rafter.
Only a few county officials viewed the hanging.
Photograph taken from the upper story or attic of the courthouse, looking south down Commercial Avenue.
(Note Moore's Studio sign at the top of the stairs to the right.  Moore probably took this photograph.)

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Coleman County lawmen made this haul on moonshiner's stills in 1922

(left to right) Lester Gray, Coleman deputy; Jess Cunningham and Sam Lowe, Valera deputies; T. L. Stafford, Coleman deputy;
a Mr. Welch and a Mr. Allen, Santa Anna deputies; Sam Squyres, Gouldbusk deputy; and Sheriff Dick Pauley, who was killed in 1925.
(Photograph taken at the rear (north) door of the courthouse.)

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Former living Sheriffs of Coleman County - 1934

Front: Jim Sanders, W. I. Knox, Bob Goodfellow,
Rear: W. L. Futch, W. R. Hamilton, and Frank Mills.

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Coleman County General History Index