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The
Tale of Joseph Wiley Evans
A
3 part series
by R. Michael Wilson
JOSEPH WILEY EVANS was,
arguably, one of the most efficient
and capable lawmen in the western
United States between 1877 and 1887.
Most remarkable, he did it with one
arm. He arrested more armed,
dangerous desperadoes than any man
in Arizona, and at one time had over
a dozen postal department rewards
pending payment.
Part I - the first Arizona
stagecoach robbery
On the evening of January 5, 1877
road agents placed a rope across the
road in the canyon at Woolsey Hill
on the route between Skull Valley
and Tonto Springs, 28 miles from
Prescott. At 6:30 P. M., as the
leaders stumbled across the rope,
one robber called out from behind a
rock, “Stop! How many passengers
have you?” Jesus, the driver,
replied, “one” and was ordered to
disembark and take control of the
leaders while the passenger, Joseph
Wiley Evans, was ordered out of the
coach. The robbers had their faces
masked and the man behind the rock
aimed a Spencer rifle at the driver
and Evans while the other went about
the business, taking the express and
mails. They picked up Evans’ pistol
from the coach seat, but returned
it. Evans favored a pistol as he
could not handle another firearm.
Evans lost his left arm in 1875. In
mid-February of that year Evans had
a disagreement with James Carroll, a
driver for the California and
Arizona Stage Company, which led to
a shooting affray. Carroll was
killed and Evans wounded, and within
a month Evans’ arm, shoulder and
breast became inflamed. As soon as
this was resolved the arm, at a very
definite line of demarcation below
the elbow, began to decay. It was
amputated in mid-March by Dr.
Lippencott at the point where live
flesh met dead.
Once the road agents had all the
valuables they told Evans to board
and ordered Jesus to continue. After
going a short distance Evans crawled
back over the top of the coach and
descended by the back boot, without
stopping the stage, and returned to
the scene of the robbery with the
intention of surprising the road
agents. However, upon examining his
pistol he found that, while
pretending to inspect it, one road
agent had removed all the
cartridges. Jesus stopped the stage
after driving a short distance
further and returned to the scene
after the robbers had departed. He
and Evans examined the ground as
well as they could in the dark,
found the mail bags cut open with
many of the letters torn open, and
Evans picked up a check drawn by the
Peck Mining Company on the First
National Gold Bank, San Francisco
for $50. Evans proceeded to a house
in Skull Valley, procured a horse
and made the best time he could over
the new Miller Road to Prescott
where he routed out Deputy Sheriff
W. W. Standifer, and the two started
back on the main stage road to the
scene of the robbery.
When a short distance beyond
Blair’s ranch they met two men, on
horseback, who had a pack mule
carrying a camper’s outfit. This was
between two and three o’clock this
morning and thinking this a
suspicious circumstance they
arrested the two men and took from
them several packages of bullion,
checks and letters, and lodged in
the Prescott jail. The men gave
their names as M. V. Alexander,
later determined to be Milton A.
Vance, and Thomas Berry. They said
they had been to Hull’s ranch at
Mint Valley to see about ranching
some horses – some of which they had
brought from Nevada, and said they
spent most of the previous day in
the mountains back of the American
Ranch trying to find a spring. While
attempting to make camp a stranger,
who had sandy whiskers, rode up and
asked them to take several packages
to town and leave them at the
express office.
Judge H. H. Cartter did not believe
their story and held them to answer
before the U. S. Commissioner on a
charge of mail robbery. Both men
were taken to the Yuma Penitentiary
to be temporarily held until the
Grand Jury met. They made several
attempts to escape, failed several
times and succeeded several times
only to be recaptured, and were
tried, convicted, and sentenced to
serve life terms. They were
delivered to the Detroit House of
Corrections in early 1878.
Joseph Wiley Evans Part 1
Joseph Wiley Evans Part 2
Joseph Wiley Evans Part 3
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