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Read Curator
David P. Bailey's article, published in Pathways Magazine.
During a
vicious spring storm in 1874,
six forlorn figures struggle against a sea of blowing snow in the San
Juan Mountains. In desperation, they find shelter in a deep ravine
protected from the wind by a large stand of pine trees. The ragged men
build a small fire on top of a rotted log. The six prospectors, lost
and starving to death, send out a scout to find the Los Pinos Indian
Agency settlement. After a fruitless all day search, the scout returns
to the camp as darkness falls in the mountains. As he approaches, a
dark figure, silhouetted against the fire, rushes at him with a raised
hatchet. Startled, the scout backs up, reaches for his pistol and shoots
his assailant. The attacker, although slowed, reaches his intended
victim and the scout is forced to drop the pistol and fight for the
hatchet. The pistol, flung hastily aside, is lost in the deep snow ...
and from memory.
The mystery of what happened that fateful day would slowly come to light
one hundred and twenty years later in a most unlikely place, the
artifact storage area of the Museum of Western Colorado. As Curator of
History at the museum in 1994, my intention was to photograph, document,
and obtain the provenance or associated history of the firearms in the
Audrey Thrailkill collection. The Thrailkill collection has an amazing
assortment of pistols, rifles, carbines, and swords owned by the famous
and infamous figures of the Wild West, such as Kit Carson, Buffalo Bill,
and outlaw members of Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch.
Click
here to read more.... SOLVING THE AMERICAN WEST'S
GREATEST MYSTERY:
Was Alferd Packer Innocent of Murder?
By David P. Bailey © 2003
In 1994, one of my main objectives as Curator of History was to photograph, document, and obtain the
provenance or associated history of the firearms in the
Audrey Thrailkill collection.
The Thrailkill collection has an amazing assortment of pistols, rifles, carbines, and
swords owned by the famous and infamous figures of the Wild West, such as Kit Carson, Buffalo Bill, and outlaw
members of Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch.
Many of the firearms had fascinating histories that were well documented and verified by firearms experts.
Several had little or no historic information, but a few had tantalizing bits of information that connected them to
important events in Colorado history. One of the most intriguing of these was a 1862 Colt Police Model pistol.
The pistol was in poor condition, the grips were rotted off, the main spring broken, and the rusted cylinder of the
gun still had .38 caliber bullets in three of its five chambers. The yellowed accession card with the gun
cryptically stated, " This gun was found at the site where Alferd Packer killed and ate five of his traveling
companions."
The card referred to one of the most infamous incidents in the American West. In the winter of 1874, Alferd
Packer and five prospecting companions tried to cross
the San Juan Mountains in southwestern Colorado in order to reach the Los Pinos Indian Agency,
75 miles from present day Lake City. They were advised by the famous Ute leader, Chief Ouray, not to attempt
this dangerous passage in winter, but the prospectors, anxious to get to a gold strike in Breckenridge, ignored
his warning. In April of that year, only one man ventured out of the mountains, Alferd Packer. Suspicions were
aroused and Packer was arrested after his companions were found murdered and partially eaten. Fearing that he
would be lynched and hanged, Packer escaped from jail and stayed on the run for eight years. He was eventually
arrested in Cheyenne, Wyoming, tried, and after several changes of venue, was sentenced to forty years in prison.
During the trial, he told the jury that his prospecting companion, Shannon Bell, attacked him with a hatchet
after killing the other members in the party. Packer then fired his gun at Bell and killed him. After much hesitation,
Packer admitted to "eating the flesh of his fellow man" knowing that he was on the brink of death
from starvation. Packer later claimed that it was cannibalism that sent him to jail not murder
charges. However, in 1901, Packer was paroled after sixteen years in prison due to the
public outcry that he was convicted on flimsy circumstantial evidence. He eventually died in
1907, claiming to his last breath that he was innocent of murdering his traveling companions.
To think that this rusted relic could actually be the pistol that Packer used to shoot Bell
intrigued me and I decided to find out whether or not this gun had actually been at the murder
site. While researching the pistol's origin, I found out it had been issued by the Colt Firearms
Company as a cap and ball revolver in 1862. The gun was later re-released in 1873 and
converted to fire .38 caliber rimfire bullets. This conversion pistol was popular with
prospectors because it was inexpensive and this is why it accompanied the ill-fated Packer
expedition. Even more astoundingly, while working with archaeologist Phil Born in the
Museum collections, he noticed the pistol and recalled seeing a photograph of it taken by his
cousin, Jim Harris, many years ago.
On April 14, 1994, I contacted his cousin in Texas and found out how the pistol came
into the Museum's possession. The pistol had been unearthed by a young Western State College
historian, Ernest Ronzio, in 1950. Mr. Ronzio was a student of C.T. Hurst, the father of
Colorado Archeology. After the pistol was found at the Alferd Packer massacre on Cannibal
Mesa, near Lake City, Colorado, it was brought to Jim Harris, then a member of the
Uncompahgre Archaeology Society, to be photographed and studied. The pistol later went
on display at the Western State College Museum. I verified that the pistol had been in the
Western State's Museum collection when I noticed an old accession number on the
backstrap of the gun. I called the librarian at Western State College and she found the old
museum record book indicated that the accession number on the gun matched an entry in the
book. This entry described the rusted condition of the pistol, that it came from the Alferd
Packer site, and was loaned by Ernest Ronzio. Eventually the pistol was purchased by
Audrey Thrailkill and given to the Museum of Western Colorado.
Having established the proper time frame and location in conjunction with the Packer
massacre, I began a search for every document related to the Packer case in hopes of
connecting the pistol to the crime. From 1994 to 1999, I combed through archives,
research libraries, old diaries, depositions, and hundreds of pages of the Packer trial
documents. The evidence that emerged was astounding because many of the documents
were proof that Packer was innocent. I found much of the testimony given by the witnesses
against Packer directly contradicted later interviews they gave to the press and other private
sources. Perhaps the most startling find was a "lost" journal that gave a detailed description
of the murder scene that could have possibly freed Packer if it had been available during the
trial. Other 1873 documents indicated that, although the bodies had been exposed to the
elements, each of the dead men were identifiable by their clothes and physical features. A
Civil War veteran that visited the crime scene stated that Shannon Bell had been shot twice
and the other victims were killed with a hatchet. Upon careful study of Bell, he noticed a
severe bullet wound to the pelvic area and that Bell's wallet had a bullet hole through it. He
also stated that only two shots were fired at the murder scene, both at Bell. This passage
caught my attention because the rusted 1862 Colt pistol found many years later at the scene
had two chambers empty and three loaded.
The facts from the 1873 investigation of the murder scene seemed to mesh with the physical
evidence, the 1862 Colt pistol. Packer stated numerous times during his trial that he shot the
real killer Shannon Bell, but his testimony failed to convince the jury. What is even stranger is
that visitors to the crime scene failed to report their findings on the witness stand, and in some cases lied about what they discovered.
My case to prove Alferd Packer was innocent came to a stand still in the spring of 1999.
Even though I had physical evidence that matched Packer's story, there was still no way to
scientifically tie the gun to the murder scene. The pistol never was introduced as evidence
because it was lost after Packer's desperate fight with Bell in a snowstorm in 1873 and not
recovered until 1950 by Mr. Ronzio.
As with many historical investigations, my chance to prove my case came unexpectedly
during a visit to the Lake City Museum in October of 2000. The Museum of Western
Colorado and the Hinsdale County Historical Society had just finished a joint exhibit on
Alferd Packer. I asked Grant Houston, the Hinsdale County Historian, about the exhumation
of the Packer party victims by Dr. Starrs and a forensic team in 1989. He explained the team
proved the bodies had been cannibalized and had met violent deaths. Each of the skeletons
had been marked A through E for scientific identification and then photographed. Skeleton A
had a hole in the pelvic region and therefore must be Shannon Bell. Mr. Houston shocked
me by mentioning that forensic samples had been taken from under the skeletons and were
now in possession of the Hinsdale County Historical Society. I then asked if the Museum
could borrow the samples from Skeleton A (Shannon Bell) for testing. Hopefully, there
would still be gunshot residue in the samples to help prove Packer's story that Shannon Bell
had been shot at close range.
After receiving permission from the Hinsdale County Historical Society, I took the samples
to Mesa State College's Electron Microscopy facility in Grand Junction. A team of scientists
led by Dr. Richard Dujay, the facility manager, began to examine the bits of wool fabric, old
buttons, and soil for the traces of residue with the electron microscope. Dr. Dujay knew the
task of finding gunshot residue would be difficult and stated, "It's as if 127 years ago
someone hit a baseball in the U.S. and now you're asking to find it."
However, on February 10, 2001, we found the baseball, a 50-micron piece of lead.
Dujay and other scientists discovered that the fragment was man-made, because of
its structure, size, and composition. He next used an X-Ray spectrograph to analyze
the elemental makeup of the object. Dujay found that the object was consistent with
lead used for bullets during the post Civil War era. The scientists next took a small
sample from a bullet still in the gun and compared it with the lead fragment
underneath Skeleton A. The X-Ray spectrograph showed an exact match! Finally I
had proof that linked the gun to the murder scene.
Although this new information was over a century too late to help vindicate Alferd
Packer, it is never to late for the truth.
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