Stagecoach
- Part 3 of a 6 part series about Stagelines, Stagecoaches and Stage Robberies of
the Old West
by R. Michael Wilson
PART III - THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS
The Principals
The primary persons associated with stagecoaches were the
DRIVER and the SHOTGUN
MESSENGER, or Guard, and the primary person associated with
stagecoach robberies was the ROAD AGENT.
Stagecoach DRIVERS were known by many sobriquets including
KNIGHT or KNIGHT OF THE LASH, WHIP, SAGEBRUSH NAVIGATOR, or
the biblical reference JEHU. Drivers were a hardy lot
representing a cross section of the nation’s citizenry. Many
chewed or smoked tobacco to excess, and some cussed
mercilessly, but others were kind and gentle, especially
toward the ladies riding in their coaches. Drivers were the
captains of their vessels. They commanded all who boarded and
were always respected, usually appreciated, and often admired.
Not every man could handle the ribbons of a four-up or six-up
and many times it was only a driver’s iron will and bravado
which brought the coach through bad weather, across swollen
rivers, over treacherous roads, with poor stock, while
surviving attacks by highwaymen.
SHOTGUN MESSENGERS sat beside the driver and shared the
discomfort and danger, more so in those rare instances of a
robbery because the messenger was the first target of a road
agent’s bullets. Putting a messenger on a stagecoach was a
signal, to a spy, that there was substantial treasure aboard,
because if there was no treasure there was no guard. A stage
line operator would not pay a messenger to ride along if there
was no treasure to protect. Many lawmen, when not engaged in
their primary vocation, worked as messengers, and men such as
Wyatt Earp and Morgan Earp worked for Wells, Fargo in that
capacity at Tombstone. However, there is not much in the
record about their activities as messengers since, as might be
expected, their coaches were never robbed.
The term ROAD AGENT originated with a station keeper. Two men
stopped at his station, left but returned a short time later,
then left again. When the stagecoach arrived a robbery was
reported and the description of the robbers matched the two
men who had stopped at the station. The station keeper, in his
report, referred to the robbers as “agents of the road” and
Wells, Fargo & Company adopted the term “road agents.” Road
agents followed a formula which varied only slightly, except
in a few instances. For example there were loners, but usually
road agents worked in parties of 2 to 4 men. Even when they
acted alone they often made it appear there were others lying
in hiding.
One of the advantages in robbing stagecoaches was that the
work could be done at some isolated location, allowing the
criminals time to escape before a posse could be organized and
ride to the scene. The scene of the robbery was a place where
the stagecoach would naturally travel at a slow pace, such as
when the coach was ascending a steep or long grade, driving
across soft sand, crossing a narrow bridge, or where there was
a sharp curve in the road. The coach could be stopped by
almost anything, or by nothing more than a man stepping in
front of the horses, pointing his gun at the driver, and
ordering him to halt. Other methods included placing a small
obstruction in the roadway such as a log, a brush pile, rocks,
a long tree limb propped at waist level, or tying a rope
across the road. The road agents’ weapons included shotguns,
rifles and pistols.
A spy might be assigned to watch the loading of the treasure
box at the express office to see if it was heavy, or to watch
for a shotgun messenger to board which would signal there was
substantial treasure aboard. At the scene of a robbery, once
the driver, messenger, and passengers were covered by
firearms, a road agent would order the driver to throw out the
treasure box. Sometimes the mail sacks would also be demanded,
but often road agents did not want to involve federal
authorities. Occasionally the passengers would be STOOD-UP and
ordered to PUNGLE, or the road agent would search them
himself. If the robbers got nothing for their trouble it was
called a WATER HAUL, indicting the value of the plunder was no
more than “water.”
Many stagecoach robberies were not solved because there was
no motivation to pursue the robbers. Lawmen had no budget to
pursue road agents. They had to put up the funds themselves to
pay for a posse and a pursuit, so there were instances where a
posse numbered only one or two men. Lawmen relied on the
rewards for “capture and conviction,” or the rewards for
recovered treasure, to reimburse them their expenses; so, if
there was no reward there was no pursuit. Still, lawmen were
relatively effective and, if there was a pursuit, the road
agents were usually caught.
It was quite common in the old west that, upon being
captured, criminals confessed, and often they would “PEACH,”
or inform, on their partners-in-crime. Those who were jailed
would then have an examination before a JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
who would weigh the evidence and determine if it was adequate
to hold the prisoners for the grand jury, and set bail. The
grand jury would INDICT the men [return a TRUE BILL] and they
would then be arraigned. They often pled guilty which, by
their cooperation, earned them a lighter sentence.
Road agents were sent to prison, and sentences typically
ranged from 5 years to 15 years. Often one of the road agents
in a case turned state’s evidence and testified against their
fellow road agents, and were released after testifying.
Stagecoach robbers were not legally executed, though once in
Del Norte, Colorado two young brothers were lynched for the
crime. However, circumstances during a stagecoach robbery
sometimes led to a murder, and first degree murder was a
capital crime in all parts of the Old West.




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