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Judge
Roy Bean
Formed
from the Pecos, Kinney, and Crockett counties, Val Verde officially became
a county in 1885 and is 3,242 square miles in area (which is three times
the size of Rhode Island). Election records from that year show that Langtry
citizen Roy Bean was elected to serve as Justice of the Peace. Legend
has it that Bean so greatly admired the English actress Lillie Langtry
that he took her last name for the name of his town, and he named his
saloon after her nickname, "Jersey Lily". Unfortunately, a sign
painter misspelled "Lily" and the sign still reads "The
Jersey Lilly". Upon his election as JP, he used his saloon as a combination
bar-courtroom-billiard parlor-jail.
People came to regard Judge Roy Bean as the "Law
West of the Pecos" because he dispensed his own unique brand of justice
from the Jersey Lily Saloon. Although this kept him constantly in "hot
water" with Val Verde County officials, it formed the basis for the
legends that grew up around him. Judge Roy Bean was to later become the
subject of books, movies and a television series due to the notoriety
he earned during his tenure as JP.
One of the more interesting events occurring in Langtry
during Judge Bean's tenure was the world championship prize fight between
Australia's Bob Fitzsimmons and Ireland's Peter Mahar. To avoid rulings
from the United States and Mexico against the fight, Bean held it on a
sand bar in the middle of the Rio Grande in February, 1896. Fitzsimmons
won by a knockout in one minute, 35 seconds!
Bean remained "The law West of the Pecos"
until his death in 1904. He was buried in Westlawn Cemetery in Del Rio.
His son, Sam, was killed three years later and was buried beside his father.
They remained there until 1964 when a surviving relative gave permission
to move the graves onto the grounds of the Whitehead Memorial Museum in
Del Rio.
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