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SETH
CAREY'S ESCAPE
FROM THE
MURDEROUS
YOCUM GANG
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from "Escape
From Murderous
Yocum Gang
Recalled,"
Beaumont
Enterprise,
December 25,
1977.
The principal
source of Seth
Carey's life
was his own
memoirs,
titled "A Tale
of A Texas
Veteran,"
published in
Galveston
Daily News of
Sept. 21,
1879, which is
reprinted
verbatim in W.
T. Block,
"Emerald of
The Neches:
The Chronicles
of Beaumont,
Texas etc.,"
pp. 158-163 at
Tyrrell
Historical
Library. From
about 1845
until 1880,
Seth Carey and
his wife
farmed, and
raised
livestock near
the mouth of
Cedar Bayou in
Harris Co. In
1859 he was
also running a
20 hp.
circular
sawmill there,
that cut 5,400
cedar and
cypress logs
into 1,878,000
feet of
lumber, worth
$28,000. See
1860 Harris
Co. Sched. V,
Products of
Industry - on
microfilm.
Parts
of this story
will coincide
with another
named "Yocum's
Inn: The
Devil's Own
Lodging
House."
However, Seth
Carey's
encounter with
the Yocum
murderers is
so unique a
tale of
frontier
violence that
it deserves
retelling as a
separate
story. The
main source is
Carey's own
long memoirs
in the
Galveston
Daily News of
Sept. 21,
1879.
If
old Seth Carey
looked back on
any portion of
his life with
something less
than nostalgic
feeling, it
was during the
year 1841 when
he fell into
the clutches
of the
notorious
Thomas D.
Yocum gang of
Pine Island,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
Just
another fly
caught up in
Yocum's web of
murder and
intrigue,
Carey not only
survived his
slated
assassination
and
dismemberment
in Yocum's
alligator
slough, but he
lived instead
to finger the
gang and
account for
its
destruction.
It was an
episode,
however, that
he was always
reluctant to
discuss and
one that "cost
him in one way
or another at
least $5,000."
When
Carey told his
life story to
a newspaperman
in 1879, he
was already in
the 73rd year
of his life,
silver-haired
and partially
bald. Small of
stature, he
had already
lived most of
his life as a
farmer and
livestock
herdsman near
Cedar Bayou in
Harris County.
His looks and
gentle
demeanor would
wholly
camouflage the
fact that he
had once
killed a man
and had
participated
in some of the
most violent
moments in the
history of
early-day
Texas.
Born
in Vermont in
1806, Capt.
Carey had
migrated at an
early age to
Boston, and
later to New
Orleans, where
for several
months he was
employed as a
laborer on the
waterfront. It
was early
October of
1835 that the
first news
from the
Mexican
province of
Texas heralded
the impending
revolt against
the Mexican
oppressor and
begged for
volunteers and
supplies
sufficient to
guarantee its
success.
Everywhere
in the saloons
and coffee
houses, there
were speakers
and solicitors
for the Texas
cause, and
when Captain
William G.
Cooke
approached
Carey about
joining the
Texas-bound
"New Orleans
Grays," the
young New
Englander
enlisted.
The
"Grays"
traveled first
by steamboat
to
Natchitoches,
La., overland
from there to
Pendleton
Ferry on the
Sabine River,
and thence to
Nacogdoches,
Texas, where
they were
royally
welcomed. At
Nacogdoches,
the citizens
outfitted them
with muskets,
ammunition,
and Bowie
knives before
the "Grays"
departed en
route to San
Antonio. Upon
nearing that
Mexican
stronghold,
they then
joined the
main force of
Col. Ben
Milam's
command, and
on Dec. 7,
1835, helped
storm the
citadel known
as the Alamo
and wrest it
from Mexican
control. When
Gen. Perfecto
de Cos
surrendered
the city, and
later he and
his army were
allowed to
retreat toward
the Rio Grande
River, the
Texans hailed
the success of
their
revolution and
considered it
as already
ended. Unknown
to them at
that moment,
Mexican
Generals Santa
Ana and Urrea
were advancing
on the Rio
Grande with a
large army of
the enemy.
The
"Grays" were
then
transferred to
Col. James
Fannin's
command at
Goliad, and
except for a
quirk of fate,
Carey's bones,
because of the
Goliad
Massacre,
might have
been left to
bleach on the
prairie there
as were those
of most of his
comrades in
the "Grays."
But before
leaving New
Orleans, he
and a friend
named Moser
had shipped a
trunk via
schooner to
Brazoria,
Texas, and
they were
granted
furloughs to
go there and
recover it.
While
en route,
Carey was
stricken with
the first
attack of a
recurring
malady,
probably
malarial
fever, that
for the next
three years
was to leave
him often upon
the threshold
of death, and
Moser left him
to recuperate
at the log
cabin of a
Captain Hatch.
In the
meantime, the
Alamo and
Goliad fell to
the Mexican
armies, and
after his
initial
recovery,
Carey and
Hatch rode on
horseback to
Harrisburg,
seeking the
main body of
the Texas
troops. After
joining
General Sam
Houston's
army, he
suffered a
relapse of
fever, and was
placed aboard
the wagon of a
refugee
fleeing in the
Runaway Scrape
toward
Louisiana.
At
Beaumont,
Carey was left
in the custody
of an old
ferryman named
Joel Lewis,
who sooned
nursed him
back to
health. Later,
when a small
company was
mustered at
Beaumont for
Indian service
on the western
frontier, he
enlisted
again, but
upon reaching
Lynchburg the
malady struck
him for the
third and last
time. For most
of the next
eighteen
months he
remained
bedfast and a
virtual
invalid, at
first in the
care of Dr.
Harvey
Whiting, and
later on Cedar
Bayou at the
residence of
an old man
named Benjamin
Page, whom
Carey had
known before
he left
Boston.
By
the time he
recovered from
his last and
worst attack
of malaria, he
had been in
the Page home
for fourteen
months and had
become an
adopted member
of the family.
Page had
already
exacted a
promise from
Carey that the
latter would
marry the old
man's only
child, a
13-year-old
daughter, when
she reached
her sixteenth
birthday. That
union would
bring to him
the title of
Page's league
of 4,428 acres
received from
the Mexican
government.
But shortly
after his
recovery,
Carey took
complete
possession of
the place
anyway,
tending its
cattle herds
and
supervising
the cotton
fields,
because Page
had grown too
infirm and
feeble to do
so himself.
Carey
received a
640-acre
bounty grant
from the
Republic of
Texas and a
1,200-acre
land
certificate
from his
county's Board
of Land
Commissioners,
which he soon
located on
unclaimed
public domain
adjacent to
Cedar Bayou.
And in 1838,
he acquired
valuable
business
property near
the waterfront
in Galveston.
By 1840, he
had channeled
about $4,000
of his own
wealth into
improvements
on the Page
place, knowing
that the title
to the league
of land would
soon be his.
By
1839, Carey's
troubles with
a neighbor
named Whitney
Brittain had
already begun.
The initial
outburst
resulted from
a quarrel over
a dog, but
long before
and without
his knowledge,
he had already
become the
victim of
Britton's
intense
jealousy,
hate, and
violent
temper.
Originally,
Brittain had
accompanied
the Page
family from
Boston to
Texas, built
his cabin on
neighboring
property, and
enjoyed the
same position
in the Page
household that
Carey would
later assume.
And as Carey's
stature in
Page's
affections
increased,
Brittain's
resentment and
hate mounted
in like
proportion
until he used
every means
short of
murder to vent
his spite.
Soon
transferring
his enmity
entirely from
Page to Carey,
Brittain, so
the old
veteran noted,
"shot his
cattle,
girdled his
peach trees,
turned over
his windmill,
injured his
cart, and
threatened and
annoyed him in
every way." On
one occasion
Brittain
chased him
with a cow
whip at a time
when he was
unarmed and
unable to
resist. He
added that he
would have
killed
Brittain then
and there if
he had had any
weapon, but he
had neither
owned nor
carried a gun
since his days
in the Texas
Army. Many
neighbors,
including the
former Col.
Moseley Baker,
told Carey
that Brittain
had insulted
him publicly
in the town of
Lynchburg and
even
threatened to
kill Carey.
Brittain
warned that
such
indignities
would end only
when Carey
acquired a
will to
resist. In
desperation,
Carey went to
Houston and
bought a gun,
and even the
justice of the
peace assured
Carey that if
Brittain's
death occurred
at his hand,
the killing
could amount
to no more
than a
justifiable
homicide.
Early
in 1841, Carey
accompanied
Dr. Whiting to
the home of a
Col. Turner to
deliver some
medicine. On
the way, the
doctor
admonished him
that Brittain
needed no
additional
pretext for
murder than to
find Carey
carrying a
pistol. They
arrived at
Turner's place
just as the
colonel, in
company with
Brittain, rode
up at the
gate. The
latter
immediately
launched "a
tirade of
abuse and
threats
against
Carey," who in
turn drew his
gun, killing
Brittain
instantly.
The
latter's death
produced no
tears in the
Lynchburg
vicinity, and
a magistrate,
to whom Carey
had
surrendered,
scoffed at any
thought of an
arrest or
trial, adding
that the
defendant had
been provoked
beyond human
endurance and
had rid the
county of a
violent and
troublesome
man. But
within days,
the same
voices that
had condoned
the action
before the
event soon
warned that
public
indignation
over the
killing was
rising
rapidly. Some
suggested that
Carey should
abandon the
country
permanently,
and a few
offered to buy
his property
at a paltry
fraction of
its actual
worth.
The
warnings
notwithstanding,
Carey decided
to give
himself up for
trial in
Houston, and
while on his
way there, he
stopped at
Nimrod Hunt's
place on
Buffalo Bayou.
Hunt offered
to go to
Houston and
ascertain the
true temper of
the people,
and after his
return, he
warned that
the only
justice that
Carey could
expect would
be the lower
end of Judge
Lynch's rope.
With a
power-of-attorney
received from
Carey, Hunt
went to
Galveston to
raise cash on
the
defendant's
property
there. And
later, Hunt
gave $100 in
Texas currency
(worth only
$25 U. S.) to
the fugitive,
although Hunt
had raised
$300 in gold
coin for the
property.
Earlier,
Hunt had told
Carey of a
place on Pine
Island Bayou
called Yocum's
Inn. Located
on the old
Opelousas
cattle trail
northwest of
Beaumont, it
was a hideaway
where on
outlaw might
purchase
asylum for a
price. In
desperation,
Carey gathered
up what cash
and valuables
he had, along
with his gun
and a gold
watch, and in
the middle of
the night, he
saddled a mule
and started
eastward
toward the
Neches River.
Finally, he
arrived at the
Beaumont cabin
of David Cole,
who was
married to
Yocum's
daughter,
Sydna Lou, and
Cole agreed to
accompany
Carey to his
father-in-law's
estate.
The
trail from
Beaumont led
through some
of the
prettiest pine
and hardwood
forests in
North America.
Blackberry
vines and
dogwoods were
in full
blossom, and
here and there
a raucous
bluejay or
redbird
flitted
through the
branches.
After a few
hours' ride,
the pair
arrived at a
large log
house, nestled
within the
shadowy
perimeter of a
pine barren. A
painted board
across the
front bore the
crude notation
"Pine Island
Post Office."
Nearby was a
long barn,
built of rough
hewn logs,
which also
served as one
side of a
rail-fenced
corral and a
couple of
slave cabins.
As they
approached,
the bearded,
old Tom Yocum
could be seen
in the
doorway,
conversing in
an undertone
with a
stranger, whom
Carey
recognized
immediately as
William H.
Irion. Irion's
exact
connection
with the Yocum
gang has never
been firmly
established.
Perhaps he was
deeply
implicated; if
not, he was at
least an
esteemed
friend of
Yocum's, one
who was fully
conscious, as
he later
admitted, of
the murderous
activities
which were
being
conducted on
the premises.
Carey
had met Irion
the first time
at Joel Lewis'
ferry near
Beaumont
during the
Runaway Scrape
of 1836, and
afterward had
encountered
Irion on two
or three
occasions in
Houston.
Despite the
latter's
association
with Yocum,
Irion was a
respected
Beaumonter in
the early
days. In 1838,
Beaumont's
proprietors
had contracted
with him to
build a steam
sawmill, which
never
materialized,
on the
townsite's
"Steam Mill
Square." When
Irion died
almost
simultaneously
with Yocum in
September
1841, the
Houston
"Telegraph and
Texas
Register"
quickly
heralded both
deaths as
resulting from
vigilante
violence
(which was a
falsehood)
directed at
the gang of
murderers. But
Rep. George A.
Pattillo of
Jefferson
County, upon
arriving at
Houston the
following
month,
declared that
Irion's death
at Beaumont
had stemmed
from natural
causes,
whereas Yocum
had been
lynched in
another
county.
Carey
found old
Yocum to be a
genial host,
somewhat
talkative
about the
political
affairs of the
day, and he
soon paid the
innkeeper for
a month's
lodging. He
was assigned
to a bunk in
the large ,
single-room
attic of the
log house. On
several
occasions, he
shared his
quarters with
the dusty
cattle drovers
who stopped by
for a place to
sleep and a
piping-hot
meal, served
by an elderly
black woman.
Once
a week, the
mail rider
passed
through,
traveling
west, and
Carey was
pleased that
he could
communicate
with the Page
family if the
occasion to do
so arose. And
perhaps with
luck and the
passage of
time, the
public
indignation
over
Brittain's
killing might
subside and he
might even
return to
Cedar Bayou.
Carey
told Yocum the
full extent of
his troubles
with the law
and was
assured of
concealment
from it. But
the old robber
baron warned
him to avoid
any movements
far from the
house or trips
to Beaumont,
where he might
be recognized.
And
especially, he
was not to
mail any
communication
to Page which
might fall
into the hands
of the Harris
County
sheriff. Yocum
introduced to
Carey a young
man. named
Jeremiah "Bud"
McClusky,
whom, he said,
was his most
trusted
employee and
who would
gladly ride to
Cedar Bayou
for him if
such a trip
were required.
During
the next two
months,
McClusky made
three trips to
the Page home,
carrying
letters from
Carey, but on
his return, he
always
reported that
Page was too
sick to write,
and had
forwarded no
message, and
the clamor for
Carey's arrest
and conviction
had not
subsided.
Later, Carey
learned that
the Pages had
always sent
him money,
clothing, and
letters, but
none of the
items they
sent were ever
given to him
by McClusky.
Irion
came to
Yocum's Inn
once or twice
each week, and
Yocum assured
the fugitive
that neither
McClusky nor
Irion would
ever betray
him. Carey
wandered at
first only as
far as the
corral to tend
his mule, but
as time
passed, he
occasionally
went for short
strolls in the
nearby forest.
Sometimes he
chatted with
some of
Yocum's
slaves, one of
whom was a
19-year-old
Mulatto named
Job, a
stock-minder,
whose mother
had been
Yocum's cook
since long
before his
birth.
Once,
when Carey
heard cattle
lowing, Job
took him down
a wooded trail
to the stock
pens, where a
number of
steers had
just been sold
to a cattle
drover and
would soon
begin the long
trek to New
Orleans. There
he met a
red-haired
stock-keeper,
Ezekial
Higdon, who
oversaw
Yocum's large
herd of cattle
and horses and
lived in a
rude cabin
nearby with
his wife.
Higdon also
enjoyed a wide
reputation in
the area as a
"broncobuster"
and horse
racer.
Yocum's
two older sons
were usually
gone and
reputedly
spent much of
their time in
Beaumont,
where one of
them, Chris,
lived with his
young bride.
Two smaller
children often
played about
the yard, but
Yocum's wife
was rarely
seen outside
of the house
except when
she rode her
elegant
carriage to
Beaumont. A
couple of men,
"Boozer" and
"Wes," were
introduced to
Carey as being
among Yocum's
most trusted
employees, but
no surnames
were
mentioned, a
rather common
occurrence on
a frontier
where outlaws
abounded.
The
more sinister
aspects of
Yocum's Inn,
however, were
transmitted to
Carey by the
young slave,
after the
former had
gained Job's
confidence.
Nearly all of
the tales,
among them
Yocum's
earlier
association
with the
notorious John
A. Murrell
gang of
robbers along
the Natchez
Trace and
Yocum's horse
and
slave-stealing
escapades in
the Neutral
Strip, had
been passed
along to Job
by his mother.
A
few decades
earlier,
before Yocum
had fled from
law
enforcement in
Mississippi,
it was said
that an aged
veteran of the
American
Revolution had
lived with
him, having
deeded to
Yocum all of
his bounty
lands in
exchange for
care, board,
and lodging
until his
death. The old
soldier
imbibed quite
freely,
however, and
often "slept
off the fumes"
on a pallet in
front of the
fire place.
One day when
the old man
was drunk and
Yocum was
molding musket
balls from
molten lead,
the innkeeper
stuck a small
funnel into
the old man's
ear and filled
his head with
boiling lead,
which brought
on
instantaneous
death.
Other
tales
recounted by
the young
slave
mentioned the
thoroughbred
horses in
Yocum's
stable, whose
owners,
usually
cattlemen
returning from
New Orleans
with fat money
belts, had
ridden them to
the Inn in
search of food
and a night's
lodging. The
next day, the
horses were
seen running
loose in the
corral or
pasture, but
the owners
were never
seen again.
And a gray
mare with two
white stocking
feet, which
Carey had seen
in the stock
pens,
certainly
answered the
description of
a missing
Liberty County
cattleman. On
one occasion,
Job said that
he had seen
two huge
alligators in
Yocum's slough
devouring the
body of a man,
and elsewhere,
the bones of
other victims
were reported
as scattered
about the
nearby
thickets.
After
a few weeks,
Carey
despaired of
ever returning
to Cedar
Bayou, and
decided to
sell his
property to
Yocum, if an
agreement
could be
reached. He
would then
escape to
Louisiana, and
Yocum readily
agreed,
offering to
compensate the
fugitive
partly in
gold, partly
in slaves, and
the remainder
to be several
heads of
horses. But
first, Yocum
told him, he
would have to
see the Cedar
Bayou property
himself, and
determine if
the title were
clear and
transferable.
Carey then
executed a
power-of-attorney
so Page could
transfer the
property, and
as the
innkeeper
prepared to
ride westward,
he warned the
fugitive again
to remain
close to the
attic and not
show his face
outside if
strangers
appeared at
the Inn.
After
Yocum left,
Carey decided
to walk
through the
woods to the
stock pens
where Higdon
lived, and
along the way
he ran into W.
H. Irion, whom
Carey tended
to trust
because of
their previous
acquaintance.
He told Irion
the complete
story of the
Brittain
killing, his
agreement to
sell Yocum his
property and
his plan to
flee to
Louisiana.
Irion feigned
great
astonishment,
but with a
selfsame
frankness, he
told Carey
that more than
likely the
latter would
be murdered as
soon as Yocum
returned.
Irion then
recounted a
few of the
murder
episodes that
had transpired
at the Inn,
and readily
admitted his
own
involvement in
some of
McClusky's and
Yocum's
machinations,
which had
ended short of
murder.
Carey
asked Irion to
ride hurriedly
to Cedar Bayou
with a letter
for Benjamin
Page in order
to try to stop
the transfer
of Carey's
property
before it was
too late.
Irion replied
that he
couldn't
because he had
no money for
the trip, but
that Carey
should not
worry -- that
Irion would
not stand by
and permit
Yocum to kill
him. Carey,
however,
pressed his
desire,
offering Irion
his expensive
pistol and
gold watch to
finance the
trip, and the
latter finally
agreed. Carey
then penned a
brief note to
Page, and
Irion rode
away with the
gun, watch,
and letter,
exclaiming as
he dug in his
spurs, "I'll
defeat old
Yocum this
time, damn
'im!"
Instead,
the scheming
Irion rode
straight to
Yocum's house
and gave the
letter to the
innkeeper's
wife. Then he
left for
Beaumont to
sell the watch
and pistol and
pocket the
proceeds. As
of that
moment, Carey
felt that he
could no
longer wager
his life by
spending
another night
in the attic
of Yocum's
Inn. While the
innkeeper was
away, he would
slip out of
the house each
day after dark
and spend his
nights hidden
away in the
hayloft of the
barn. The next
Saturday, the
same day that
Yocum
returned,
Carey left at
daylight for
Zeke Higdon's
cabin, only to
learn that the
stock-keeper
and his wife
planned to
spend the day
grinding corn
at Yocum's
mill. Carey
later hid out
in the woods
near the
trail, and as
sunset
approached, he
saw the
Higdons
returning with
a cartload of
corn meal.
As
the fugitive
pondered his
plight, he
considered for
the first time
the
feasibility of
returning to
Harris County
and face the
legal music
there rather
than fleeing
to Louisiana
without any
money. Beset
with fright
and unaware
that Yocum had
already
returned,
Carey began
pleading for
Higdon to help
him in his
flight, adding
that he
already knew a
plot to murder
him existed.
At first
Higdon scoffed
at the idea,
but later, as
they
approached the
latter's
cabin, Higdon
grew strangely
silent and
appeared
depressed.
Later he asked
Carey to
remain outside
while he and
his wife
discussed a
matter of
importance in
the privacy of
their home.
While Carey
waited, their
muffled but
upraised
voices were
sometimes
audible
through the
log crevices,
but always
their subject
of
conversation
remained a
mystery.
Finally Mrs.
Higdon opened
the door and
invited Carey
inside.
At
a glance he
could tell
that Higdon
had been
crying. For a
second time,
Carey inquired
about the
cause of
Higdon's
depression,
but received
no answer, the
latter only
turning and
staring
blankly at the
wall. At last
his wife
intervened,
"Come on out
with it, Zeke!
It's Carey's
life that's at
stake so tell
him!"
Higdon
commenced in a
slow and
unsteady
voice,
remarking
first that
Yocum was
already back
from Cedar
Bayou with the
title to
Carey's
property, but
for payment
the old robber
planned to
substitute
murder for the
gold, slaves,
and horses he
had originally
promised.
"My
life and yours
are both at
stake if I
back down,
Carey," he
said, "but I
ain't no Judas
hunting thirty
pieces of
silver. Yocum
made me
promise to
take you
tomorrow
morning to a
swamp, about
seven miles
from here,
under the
pretense of
hunting the
mule you have
running loose.
He, his son
Chris, and Bud
McClusky will
be waiting
there. If I do
not choose to
see you
murdered, I am
to pretend to
see a deer and
ride away,
while they
kill you and
throw you into
the slough
with the
alligators. My
payment for
playing Judas
is to be your
mule, a gun
worth about
$100, and a
good race
horse."
Relieved
that he had
finally found
some one he
could trust,
Carey
proffered a
solution that
he thought
might get
Higdon
temporarily
off the hook.
Unknown to
either Yocum
or Higdon,
Carey's mule
was in the
nearby woods,
hobbled and
grazing, for
he long
foreseen the
possible need
for a quick
getaway. And
about four
miles south of
stock pens,
there lived an
old farmer,
named E. C.
Harris, who
raised and
cured tobacco,
and Carey had
already
visited him on
two occasions
to buy the
fuel for his
habit.
"Early
in the
morning,"
Carey
suggested,
"tell Yocum
that I left
before
daylight to
buy smokes at
old Harris'
place, but
will be back
by 10 o'clock,
and we'll go
looking for
the mule then.
He'll believe
that 'cause he
knows I'm a
slave to
tobacco. I'll
leave my coat
and knife at
your place and
that oughta
convince him
that I'll be
back."
"
Where are you
going?" Higdon
inquired.
"I
guess back to
Cedar Bayou
and face up to
the law.
There's plenty
witnesses for
my defense and
maybe I can
get a fair
trial."
He
then shook
hands with
Higdon and
retreated to
the woods to
find his mule,
fully-prepared
to rise before
daylight and
follow the
westbound sun
toward Cedar
Bayou. Along
the way he
planned to
stop off at
the residence
of a certain
Liberty County
rancher and
tell him where
he could find
his missing
brother's mare
with the
stocking feet.
As
directed,
Higdon also
rose early the
next day, and
he and his
wife rode
through the
woods to
Yocum's Inn.
Old Yocum, his
son Chris, and
Bud McClusky,
each of them
heavily armed,
stood by the
rail fence of
the corral as
they talked.
When Higdon
drove up,
Yocum demanded
in an upraised
voice,
"Where's
Carey, and
when are you
two heading
for the
thicket?"
"In
two or three
hours. Carey
left early to
go to old
Harris' place
for smokes,
but he'll be
back by ten."
"You
didn't follow
my order!" old
Yocum
retorted.
"Don't
fret over it!"
Higdon
replied,
noting the old
killer's
piercing eyes
and stern
facial
expression."
Carey'll be
back soon, and
your plan will
still carry
through. Why,
he even left
his coat and
knife at my
place, and you
know he
wouldn't leave
without those.
Ask my wife if
you don't
believe me!"
Old
Yocum then
glanced at the
young woman
and seemed
convinced
after her
affirmative
nod. "Never
mind!" he
answered,
"I'll change
the plan, but
you shore
cheated
yourself out
of a fine
mule, a gun,
and a fast
stallion."
He
then turned to
his son,
Chris, and Bud
McClusky and
directed them
to hide out
along the
trail south of
the stock
pens. When
they sighted
Carey, they
were to shoot
him
immediately
and haul the
body away to
the alligator
slough. After
Zeke and
Tabitha Higdon
returned to
their cabin,
they hastily
loaded their
sparse
possessions on
the mule cart
and lit out
toward the
west, avoiding
the south
trail where
the killers
would be
hidden.
In
the meantime,
Carey arrived
in Liberty
County and
told the
rancher about
the murder
outpost on
Pine Island
Bayou, spicing
his story in
places with
details about
the alligator
slough and the
skeletons that
lay scattered
throughout the
thickets. And
as he rode on,
the cattleman
began rounding
up a posse of
friends, a
band of
vigilantes
that
eventually
would reach
150 men in
size. After
arriving at
the Page
residence on
Cedar Bayou,
Carey
surrendered to
Judge
Moreland, who
bound him
over, on a
$500 bond
signed by Page
and Dr.
Whiting, to
the next
session of the
district
court. And
later, after a
dozen
witnesses
appeared in
his defense,
he won a
rather easy
acquittal
based on his
justifiable
homicide plea.
After
the trial, he
hurried back
to Beaumont
and having
located Zeke
Higdon, who
accompanied
him back as a
witness, Carey
appeared
before Sheriff
Robert West to
state his
complaint
against Yocum
and seek the
return of his
swindled
property. But
he soon
learned that
the infamous
inn and its
outbuildings
had already
been burned by
the 150-man
posse of
Regulators,
led by the
Liberty County
rancher.
Forewarned
in some
manner,
Yocum's gang
of cutthroats
had scattered
in all
directions,
and his wife,
children, and
slaves had
been driven
from Jefferson
County. Some
days later,
after the old
murderer had
been tracked
to the cabin
of a relative
on Spring
Creek in
Montgomery
County, the
posse
dispatched old
Yocum to the
lower regions
with five
bullets
through the
heart.
Bud
McClusky
escaped to the
Neches River
bottomlands,
and when last
reported, he
was recognized
as he rode
across
Calcasieu
Parish, La.,
on horseback.
And a few
weeks later,
Chris Yocum
was found
hanging one
morning from
an oak limb on
the courthouse
lawn in
Beaumont. As
an added token
of affection,
his vigilante
executioners
had driven a
10-penny nail
into the base
of his skull.
While lynch
justice was
usually
regrettable
and always
illegal,
somehow it
seemed a
fitting end
for the
murderous
villains who
had brought so
much grief to
so many
trusting
patrons.
Frontier
intrigue and
derring-do
passed from
Seth Carey's
life after
1841. As he
had promised
old Page,
Carey married
the daughter
on her
sixteenth
birthday, and
later the
couple reared
a large family
on Cedar
Bayou. Except
for a couple
short periods
of residence
elsewhere, he
spent his
surviving
years tending
to his cattle
herds and
cotton fields
on the bayou,
and running
his sawmill.
Long a
prosperous
farmer, Seth
Carey died,
nearing his
eightieth
birthday,
still
delighted that
Providence had
seen fit to
deliver him
from the
clutches of
the infamous
Yocum gang of
assassins on
Pine Island
Bayou.
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