John Wesley Hardin
John Wesley Hardin (born May 26, 1853, Bonham county, Texas, U.S.—died Aug. 19, 1895, El Paso, Texas) was the most notorious killer and quick-draw gunman of the Texas frontier. He killed at least 21 men in gun duels and ambushes in the period 1868–77.
Reaching adolescence as the defeated South entered the Reconstruction period, Hardin was virulently antiblack and anti-Yankee and, in 1868 at the age of 15, killed his first man, an ex-slave. From then on he led a life of gunslinging, dueling, gambling, and drinking. In the course of his career he outgunned and killed at least eight Union soldiers and four black policemen pursuing him on various murder charges. Finally, in flight from Texas, he was caught in a Pensacola, Fla., train depot and returned to Austin, Texas, for trial in September 1877. He was sentenced to 25 years at hard labour in the state prison at Huntsville. In 1894 he was pardoned and retired to a peaceful life in Gonzales, Texas, with his three children (the wife whom he married in 1872 had died while he was in prison). He married again but then abandoned his wife and moved on to El Paso, where he began a life of dissipation and thievery. On Aug. 19, 1895, while standing at the bar of the Acme Saloon, he was shot in the back of the head by John Selman, Sr., an El Paso policeman and thief, with whom he had had a long feud. Subsequently tried, Selman was acquitted of murder.
Hardin’s career and exploits were self-advertised in an autobiography published posthumously, The Life of John Wesley Hardin as Written by Himself (1896).