On the night of July 14, 1881, in a darkened bedroom at the Maxwell Ranch near Fort Sumner, New Mexico Territory, Sheriff Pat Garrett ended the most celebrated manhunt of the American frontier. His target was Henry McCarty — the outlaw the country knew as Billy the Kid — and after months of pursuit, Garrett shot him to death, closing one of the most sensational chapters in the history of the American West.
Garrett had been tracking the Kid for roughly three months following his escape from jail. A tip finally placed Billy among friends at the Maxwell Ranch, and the information proved accurate. When Billy the Kid entered the room expecting safety, he instead found Garrett and his men. In the encounter that followed, Garrett killed him, bringing an abrupt and violent close to a career that had transfixed the entire territory.
Even the date carries a whiff of frontier uncertainty. Some sources record the shooting as July 15, 1881, a discrepancy typical of a place and period where precise record-keeping was rarely a priority. July 14, 1881 is the commonly accepted date — the date this history remembers.
The man Garrett killed had traveled a long road to that room. Billy the Kid rose from relative obscurity through the Lincoln County War, a bloody dispute between rival factions competing for control of the lucrative cattle trade in southern New Mexico during the late 1870s. He became one of the conflict's most notorious participants. Among the many charges brought against him was his role in the murder of Lincoln County Sheriff William Brady — a killing that put him at the top of law enforcement's most wanted lists across the territory.
Captured and jailed, Billy the Kid agreed to testify against the perpetrators of the ranch wars in a deal with the new governor of New Mexico, hoping to secure his freedom. The arrangement never fully played out. He escaped from custody before his scheduled execution, an act that turned an already-intense pursuit into an obsession. Pat Garrett organized the manhunt that would finally run him to ground at Maxwell Ranch.
Garrett himself was a product of the same rough frontier. Born June 5, 1850, in Chambers County, Alabama, he eventually found his calling in law enforcement in New Mexico. After killing Billy the Kid, Garrett ranched near Roswell, then served as sheriff of Doña Ana County, then as collector of customs at El Paso. His own end mirrored the violence he had spent a career pursuing: on February 29, 1908, Garrett was fatally shot near Las Cruces, New Mexico. He was never known by anything other than the man who killed Billy the Kid.
The mythology surrounding that night has proven hard to untangle from fact. Legend long held that Billy's real name was William H. Bonney, but scholars determined that Bonney was merely one of a series of aliases. What the record shows is something smaller than legend: a young man, barely twenty-one years old, dead in a confrontation at a ranch in New Mexico, at the end of a gun held by the sheriff who had hunted him for months. More than a century later, the brief, violent life that ended at Maxwell Ranch still stands as one of the defining stories of the American frontier.