My interest in Andrew Jackson “Jack”
Longstreet began when I picked up a copy of Sally Zanjani’s biography of this
Nevada character. She titled the
book Jack Longstreet, Last of the Desert
Frontiersmen. Nevada deserts
have always intrigued me; that’s why I visit them frequently. I love the open spaces and the quiet
solitude miles away from the maddening crowds. I’ve come to realize that I wouldn’t want to live full time
in any of them, but I do like to read about people who do, so when Zanjani’s
book jumped out at me, or I should say the picture of Jack on the cover jumped
out, I quickly bought it. His
story is as large as the man.
There he was a broad shouldered, bearded, determined looking elderly man dressed in sloppy clothes and a pointed hat with one hand hook in a pocket and the other holding what appears to be a walking stick. Longstreet stood six feet tall, but his powerful build made him seem even taller. His long hair covered the fact that he was minus an ear. He claimed that vigilantes, after capturing a gang of cattle rustlers he was with, hanged them, but because of his youth, they spared him and only cut off his ear as punishment. The picture shows a deep tan, which apparently was as dark as the Indians he lived amongst; however there is no evidence of what Zanjani describes as his sparkling blue eyes. Study the picture for a few moments. Can there be any doubt that here was a force to be reckoned with?
Longstreet
made his way into Nevada in the late 1800s and was the kind of mysterious
character that we find throughout Western lore. So what is known about Longstreet? First of all, he was a rugged individualist, who apparently
had a strong moral code. He was
known to have a quick temper and was involved in several gunfights; as
evidenced by the gun he packed, a long-barreled Colt .44 favored by old time
gunfighters. It had several
notches scratched into it. But
Jack was also a man of contradictions.
In stark contrast to his persona, he spoke with a soft Southern drawl
and had a “gentlemanly, almost courtly style, and a warm brand of Southern
hospitality that offered every amenity to a guest and a cocked gun to the
unidentified stranger.” He roamed the deserts of Nevada and Arizona engaged in
a wide range of enterprises: at one time or another he was a prospector, a
rancher, a saloonkeeper, a trailblazer, a stagecoach shotgun rider, a defender
of Indian rights, and a thorn in the side of ranching and mining
interests. For the most part he
was a loner, but he found friendship amongst the Southern Paiutes, learned to
speak their language and had Paiute wives. Eventually the Paiutes came to regard him as a leader.
I
learned that Longstreet once lived in what is now the Ash Meadow Wildlife
Refuge located about ninety miles northwest of Las Vegas in the Amargosa
Valley. I wanted to learn more
about Longstreet, so I visited Ash Meadow in 2008, where his stone cabin had
been restored. The location must
have been to Longstreet’s liking; it was remote, sat at the edge of a crystal
blue spring and was a good place where he could raise horses. He squatted on the land and named it
Ash Meadow Ranch. He built the
cabin up against a mound, into which he dug a cave that provided natural refrigeration. There were two other structures on the
property; a wooden frame house and a shed, but they’re long gone. After a few years, he sold the place
and moved to nearby Windy Canyon, where he established a ranch and a mine.
Jack
Longstreet’s last days are shrouded in mystery. In 1928 he accidently shot himself in the armpit and shoulder. He went to a hospital in Tonopah, was
treated, but left before he should have.
Back at his Windy Canyon ranch, the wound festered and then Longstreet
suffered a stroke. After several
days, when he hadn’t show up for his daily visit, a friend rode over to
Longstreet’s place and found him unable to move, lying alone. After suffering the stroke and without
water for three days in the deadly heat, it was remarkable that Longstreet, a
94 year old, was still alive. It
remains a mystery as to where Fannie, his Paiute wife, was during this time. Zanjani asks, “Had she turned aside
from him, believing, in the Southern Paiute way, that a man grown old and
helpless is better off to die?” Once
again Longstreet was in the hospital, but this time he would not up and
leave. A car was dispatched to
find and bring Fannie to the hospital, but Longstreet died before she got
there. Four years later Fannie
died and she was laid to rest beside him in Belmont, Nevada.
Jack
Longstreet lived the life of a self-reliant man, a man on the move, a man to be
feared and a man of contradictions.
His early life is a mystery and his later life the stuff of which myths
are made. On that score Sally Zanjani
concludes, “In the life of Longstreet, however, the myth was also the truth”
and because of that he is remembered as one of Nevada’s frontier
characters.
Q
2 comments:
I too read Sally Z’s book and I loved it. And I also appreciate the Nevada desert. There’s just something about it that I can’t put my finger on. Belmont is certainly an interesting place. The old courthouse is in great shape. I saw Longstreets grave there. I’ve also been to Ash Meadows. Jack Longstreet, a real life John Wayne.
We just visited his cabin in the desert.
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