Maricopa Slim (October 13, 1883 – November 5, 1914) was a gunslinger and railroad bull of the American Old West. His real name was John Powers and he worked in the Gila River Valley of Arizona, United States in the early 20th century, originally as a Southern Pacific railroad detective and later as a deputy sheriff.
Biography
Maricopa Slim was born John C. Powers in Texas on October 3, 1883. Maricopa Slim seems to have spent much or most of his time rousting hobos who were trying to ride the rails cross-country for free. Captured vagrants were kept in a jail made of railroad ties until they could be transported to the county jail in Florence, Arizona. Maricopa Slim was based out of the Maricopa Junction station; he sometimes worked with deputy sheriff Perry, known as the Gila Monster of Gila Bend station.
Maricopa Slim was involved in several shootouts:
- Killed "the famous Jack Miller"
- Killed one Mexican and wounded two in a gunfight at Sacate, Arizona; the Mexicans were wanted for beating up the shopkeeper of Sacaton Siding and robbing his store. The Mexicans were also wanted for the killing of another deputy sheriff; the manhunt left seven dead.
- January 1913: Two escaped prisoners, J. C. Miller (shot and killed) and J. C. Wilson (recaptured)
- November 1914: Maricopa Slim versus an employee of either the Barnum or the Al G. Barnes Circus; the employee was named Sideshow Black or Mike Meehan or Frank Sawyer; "Maricopa Slim" Powers was killed immediately, the other man later died of his wounds. The exact circumstances of Maricopa Slim's death have been obscure since 1914.
When Tom and John Powers and another man Tom J. Sisson were accused in 1918 of "killing three Arizona peace officers in the Aravaipa canyon north of Tucson," initial reports had it that the Powers brothers were half-brothers of Maricopa Slim, but this was false.
In 1961 a retired Southern Pacific railroad bull told an Idaho columnist that Maricopa Slim was "the most abusive, just unnecessarily darn mean man you could think of" and he was killed by someone he had bullied.
Maricopa Slim, the Gila Monster and Yermo Red are mentioned in a 2018 Beau L'Amour novel.
See also
- Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum)
References
- ^ Hernandez, John (December 2015). "Historical Perspective: Maricopa Slim, a Pinal County Legend". Pinal County Nugget. pp. 11, 14–15. Retrieved January 8, 2023 – via issuu.com. Alternate URL: https://www.copperarea.com/pages/maricopa-slim-a-pinal-county-legend/
- ^ Courtesy of Maricopa Historical Society (July 3, 2010). "Law and order in the early 1900s: 'Maricopa Slim'". InMaricopa. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
- ^ "Maricopa Jurist Takes His Departure". The Arizona Republican. November 14, 1915. p. 5. Retrieved January 8, 2023 – via Arizona Memory Project.
- ^ Herron, Ralph E. (February 21, 1918). "Maricopa Slim Hoboes' Enemy"". El Paso Herald. p. 3. Retrieved January 8, 2023 – via The Portal to Texas History.
- "Circus Clown Dead of Bullet Wound". The Copper Era and Morenci Leader. November 27, 1914. p. 6. Retrieved January 8, 2023 – via Arizona Memory Project.
- Osselaer, Heidi J. (May 3, 2018). Arizona's Deadliest Gunfight: Draft Resistance and Tragedy at the Power Cabin, 1918. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-6142-6.
- "How Things Appear from Pegler's Angle". Times-News. Tucson. March 17, 1961. p. 4. Retrieved January 16, 2023 – via Internet Archive.
- L'Amour, Louis; L'Amour, Beau (November 20, 2018). No Traveller Returns (Lost Treasures). Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-425-28490-2.
Further reading
- Brock, Patricia (2011). Maricopa. Maricopa Historical Society. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Pub. ISBN 978-1-4396-3999-3. OCLC 746898999.
- Bert Russell, ed. (1978). Hardships and happy times in Idaho's St. Joe Wilderness. Harrison, Idaho: Lacon Publishers. ISBN 0-930344-01-4. OCLC 5102910.