Hank Vaughan
Henry Clay Vaughan aka Hank Vaughan (April 27, 1849 – 1893) was born to Alexander and Elizabeth Vaughan in the Willamette Valley of Oregon Territory. Vaughn became an infamous outlaw and gunfighter of the American West.[1]
Early criminal activity, prison sentence
At the age of 18, after having rustled Cayuse horses from the Umatilla with Dan Burns, Vaughan and Burns were tracked by Umatilla County Sheriff Frank Maddock and Deputy O. John Hart to their camp at Burnt Creek. On May 1, 1865, the lawmen engaged the two outlaws in a gunbattle. Deputy Hart and the horse thief Burns were killed in the gunfight, and Sheriff Maddock was wounded with a gunshot wound to the head. Vaughan was also wounded, but initially escaped. However soon afterward he was captured and taken to jail in Auburn, Oregon, where he was protected from a gathered lynch mob by a citizen named John Hailey. Hank Vaughan was sentenced to eight years in the Oregon State Penitentiary.[2]
After prison
After release from prison, Vaughan lived a colorful life in the area of Pendleton, Oregon, engaging in frequent gunplay and supporting a lifestyle that included significant medical expenses and damages to taverns without having any noticeable means of income. He acquired a lifetime pass on the Northern Pacific Railroad when a gang robbing the train interrupted his nap on a trip home to Pendleton from Spokane, Washington.[3]
Hank Vaughan married into the Umatilla tribe and settled down, relative to his own youth, on his wife's ranch on the reservation. In 1891, the New York Times reported an incident at an auction for lands formerly part of the Umatilla Reservation. Hank Vaughan had hired an attorney to bid on his behalf, and when the parcel of land he wanted went up for bid a gunfight broke out behind the building, an exchange of gunfire between Vaughan and one of his men. Vaughan's agent bought the property at what was described as a "ridiculously low price." No one was injured in the gunfire, which was reported to be the discharge of numerous blank cartridges.[4]
Death
Hank Vaughan died when his horse, running through the streets of Pendleton, slipped on the first concrete sidewalk in Eastern Oregon. He fractured his skull on a telephone pole. He died during the summer of 1893.[5] At the time of his death, the contents of his private safe included 6,000 dimes, a collection of seal finger rings, a large gold nugget and a collection of revolvers.[6]
Further reading
- An Illustrated History of Umatilla and Morrow Counties, by Col. Wm Parson, and W.S. Shilach; W.H. Lever; 1902. p. 257-259.
- And There Were Men by Russell Blankenship; Alfred A Knopf, New York, NY; 1942.
References
- ↑ Hank Vaughan - Horse Thief and Cattle Rustler of the Pacific Northwest
- ↑ Outlaws of the Pacific Northwest by Bill Gulick; Caxton Press, Caldwell Idaho, 2000; p.148-149.
- ↑ Gulick, p. 155.
- ↑ "'Hank' Vaughn's Scheme" The New York Times, May 11, 1891, p. 2.
- ↑ Gilick, p. 158.
- ↑ Hank Vaughan, Desperado