Firearms

A Bandido’s California Colt

Tiburcio Vasquez’s Colt Dragoon is currently on display at a Los Angeles museum.

Click above image to view more graphics

With drawn six-guns, Tiburcio Vasquez rode rampant across early California to become one of the Golden State’s most colorful desperados.

Vasquez was second only to Joaquin Murrieta of Gold Rush infamy, yet to many he has become a California folk hero.

The passing of time has woven the myth and reality of Vasquez’s lawless exploits together. Some see him as a common bandit, while others glorify him as a revolutionary Robin Hood, a native Californio who fought against the Anglo invasion of the 1850s. And he may be the only American outlaw to have a public park named after him (Vasquez Rocks County Park).

Was he a notorious brigand or a freedom fighter? Regardless, his life was one of adventure, romance and drama—the stuff that makes legends. He was a handsome, educated and well-dressed gentleman, yet tough as nails, an excellent pistol shot and a superb horseman liked and admired by many—including some of those he wronged.

Throughout Vasquez’s lawless career, he was known to carry Henry and Spencer repeaters, and 1873 Winchester rifles, but he was seldom without one or more of his trusty six-shooters. He preferred the heavy Colt .44 Dragoons and the lighter .36 caliber Navy Colts, although he was known to have carried other six-guns.

Since he lived a life on the run, one can assume that virtually any revolver that came his way was obtained either through honest purchase (although that was always with stolen funds) or simply  by “relieving” them from his unwilling victims. Yet a scant few of his six-guns are documented today.

One revolver of note is a .44 caliber 2nd Model Colt Dragoon, serial no. 9381, taken from Vasquez when he was captured by the police in May 1874. Detective Emil Harris later recounted that they seized a “long bladed Bowie knife sticking in the floor” and “...six revolvers, two Winchester rifles of the model of 1873, then considered the best weapon made, and a Spencer seven-shooter [rifle], besides another dangerous looking knife and some saddles, bridles, etc.” These were all kept as souvenirs by the lawmen.

The deputies were armed with cap-and-ball Navy Colts when they arrested Vasquez. They considered the massive Dragoon to be obsolete, so they returned it to his sister Maria Antonia Lara. Through the years, this well-documented revolver was passed down, eventually winding up in the California Historical Society in 1941, until it was deaccessioned in 1988, when the society sold its gun collection to raise much needed funds. It is now in the collection of Vasquez historian John Boessenecker and is currently on display at the LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes Mexican-American cultural center in Los Angeles.

This Colt, manufactured around 1850-51, is well worn and exhibits a heavy patina. Once a deadly weapon, it now serves as a silent reminder of the two decades when “El Capitan” Vasquez and his gang, the “hunted bandits of the San Joaquin,” terrorized much of California, where he left behind a mixed legacy of the gentleman bandit and the notorious robber. As the saying goes, “If this old gun could talk!”

MARCH 2012

True West Magazine Issue March 2012
Buy This Back Issue: March 2012

APRIL 2012

True West Magazine Issue April 2012
Buy This Back Issue: April 2012

MAY 2012

True West Magazine Issue May 2012
Buy This Back Issue: May 2012

JUNE 2012

True West Magazine Issue June 2012
Buy This Back Issue: June 2012

JULY 2012

True West Magazine Issue July 2012
Buy This Back Issue: July 2012

True West Site Guide

Mission

True West captures the spirit of the American West with authenticity, personality and humor by linking our history to our present. Whether you call it the Wild West, the Old West or the Far West, America's frontier history comes to life in True West, the world's oldest, continuously published Western Americana magazine.

Western movie fans, re-enactors, history buffs and road warriors, we got your history covered: outlaw, cowboy, Indian, lawman, gunfighter, fur trapper, miner, prospector, gambler, soldier, entertainer and pioneer. Check out these True Westerners now!
 

Product of the Month

The Illustrated Life and Times of Wyatt Earp

Wyatt Earp

"Your book is fascinating, coupling your powerful illustrations [and] tracking...from birth to Tombstone to the legend [Wyatt] had become;...even Wyatt would approve." --By Hugh O'Brian, of the TV series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp

"Hands down the definitive books on Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday." --By Allen Barra, New York Newsday