John Joel Glanton

John Joel Glanton (1819 – April 23, 1850) was an early settler of Mexican Texas, a Texian fighting for independence, and later a Texas Ranger. After the Mexican–American War, he became a soldier-of-fortune and mercenary and led the notorious Glanton Gang of scalp-hunters in the American South-West.

Biography

Early life and education

Glanton (sometimes spelled "Gallantin"), was born in Edgefield County, South Carolina, in 1819. He was said to have been an outlaw in Tennessee, where his family had moved, before they went to Texas. He would have been under arms at an early age.[1]

In 1835, at age sixteen, Glanton was living with his parents at Gonzales, Texas. Some accounts said he was engaged but his fiancée was killed that year by Lipan Apaches.[1]

Military career

Glanton was involved in early military affairs in Texas and the South-West, participating in both the Texas Revolution and the Mexican–American War.[1] While a member of Walter P. Lane's San Antonio company of Texas Rangers in the Mexican–American War, contemporary sources attribute to him the 1847 killing of a Mexican civilian in the city of Magdalena.[2] Although Glanton protested he had done so when the civilian had refused to obey his commands as sentry to halt passage, other witnesses claimed it had been an act of murder. The event brought Walter P. Lane, then a major in the army, into conflict with General Zachary Taylor. As a result, Glanton was forced to flee the American army police who were sent to arrest him.[3] He later reenlisted in John Coffee Hays' second regiment of the First Texas Mounted Rifles, and saw action with Winfield Scott's army in central Mexico.[4]

Glanton Gang

After the war in the summer of 1849, Glanton and a posse of followers were hired in a nominally mercenary operation by Mexican authorities, to track down and kill bands of Apaches in northern Mexico and what is now part of the American South-West. To earn more money, the Glanton Gang began murdering and scalping peaceful agricultural American Indians and Mexican citizens alike to claim under the bounty for scalps. The soldier and memoirist Samuel Chamberlain claimed to have been a member of the band. According to Chamberlain, Glanton's second-in-command was a Texian known as Judge Holden. The state of Chihuahua put a bounty on the heads of the gang, declaring them outlaws by December, 1849.[1] Chihuahuan authorities drove the gang out to Sonora, where they also wore out their welcome and moved north into what is now Arizona.

Glanton Massacre

In Arizona, Glanton's men became partners in a ferry at the Yuma Crossing of the Colorado River, a popular crossing for settlers and prospectors traveling to and from California during the California Gold Rush. The gang sometimes killed the Mexican and American passengers returning from the gold-fields to take their money and goods.[1] They destroyed a boat and killed some Quechans who were operating a rival ferry down the river near Pilot Knob. At dawn on April 23, 1850, a band of Quechans led by Caballo en Pelo killed and scalped Glanton and most of his gang in retaliation and reclaimed the tribe's ferry monopoly.[5] Upon hearing of the massacre, the nascent California state government recruited men for a militia and directed the ill-fated Gila Expedition against the Quechan tribe.

Song

  • "Chambers" Ben Nichols – The Last Pale Light in the West, released January 20, 2009[6]

Literature

  • Jeremiah Clemens (1814–1865) includes Glanton as a character in his novel Bernard Lile (1856), one of the earliest fictional works concerning the Texas Revolution.
  • Samuel Chamberlain (1829–1908), who claimed to have been a member of the gang, wrote an account of their activities in his memoir, My Confession.
  • Glanton, under the name Gallantin, is a character in George MacDonald Fraser's Flashman and the Redskins (1982), an installment in the long-running The Flashman Papers series of comic novels.
  • A fictionalized version of Glanton and his gang is featured prominently in Cormac McCarthy's novel Blood Meridian (1985), many of the events of which are based on Chamberlain's account. McCarthy developed the mysterious Judge Holden (Glanton's second-in-command according to Samuel Chamberlain's memoirs) as the primary antagonist of his book.
  • Glanton, along with another historical scalp hunter, James Kirker, appears briefly in the opening scenes of Larry McMurtry's novel Dead Man's Walk (1995). The book is the first volume of McMurtry's Lonesome Dove tetralogy.
  • The seven-page story "A Scalp for a Scalp", drawn by Russ Heath and written by John Whalen, also based on Chamberlain's memoir, is included in The Big Book of the Weird Wild West published by Paradox Press in 1998.[7]
  • Hugues Micol's graphic novel Scalp: La Chevauchée funèbre de John Glanton et de ses compagnons de carnage, again based on Chamberlain's book, was published in 2017 by the French publisher Futuropolis.

Television

References

  1. "John Joel Glanton", Texas Handbook of History Online, accessed 2 Dec 2009
  2. Walter P. Lane. Adventures and Recollections of General Walter P. Lane, A San Jacinto Veteran (1928), pp. 56–59. Marshall, Texas: News-Messenger Publishing Co.
  3. "Id."
  4. Frederick Wilkins. The Highly Irregular Regulars: Texas Rangers in the Mexican War (1990), pp. 146–47, 158, 163. Eakin Press.
  5. Braatz, Timothy. Surviving Conquest, 2003. p. 76
  6. The Last Pale Light in the West
  7. Whalen, John. The Big Book of the Weird Wild West, 1998. p. 109

Further reading

  • Ralph A. Smith, "John Joel Glanton, Lord of the Scalp Range," Smoke Signal, Fall 1962.
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