OWENS-BLEVINS SHOOT-OUT
Commodore Perry Owens
During the 1880’s, Holbrook developed into one of the toughest and most lawless towns in the country.
According to one course, in a period of one year, twenty-six gun victims were planted in Holbrook’s
grave yard. Shooting brawls usually broke up dances and public gatherings, and at least several times
each week drunken cowboys or badmen galloped their horses through town, firing there six-shooters,
shattering store windows and wounding bystanders who were too slow to take cover.
Not only was the town being ravaged by outlaws, but by 1886 this lawless element was also running wild
in the surrounding countryside. A bitter cattle-sheep war was in progress to the southeast of Holbrook;
a small scale war, between the Graham and Tewksbury factions, was raging in Pleasant Valley in Tonto
Basin to the south of Holbrook; and a wholesale rustlers’ campaign was in full swing on the cattle range
near Holbrook. Many outlaws chase out of Texas by the Rangers, came to Holbrook area and hired out
the Hashknife Outfit under an assumed name.
Possibly the most famous man in Holbrook’s colorful past was Commodore Perry Owens, newly elected
Apache County Sheriff and a principal of the town’s best-known gun battle. Owens given name reflected
his mother’s love of history; he was born July 29, 1852, on the anniversary of Commodore Perry’s
victory on Lake Erie. When he was only 13 he ran away from his home in Indiana. He began working
his way west on farms in Indiana, and on both farms and ranches in Oklahoma and the Indian Territory.
Owens came to Arizona in 1881 and was hired as a foreman by John Walker at Navajo Springs in Apache County. During this period, Owens
held important positions with other large cattle companies, including the job of range foreman for the Gus Zeiger Outfit. In addition, he
was employed to guard cavalry horses at Navajo Springs where Native American horse thieves threatened to steal the mounts. Owens
quickly squelched the situation by killing so many Native Americans that the Navajos, who repeatedly tried to shoot him, called him “the
Iron Man” and actually thought that he had a charmed life. They also believed that he had supernatural powers, that he was not human, but
a devil, and that it was impossible for a bullet to enter his body.
Staw-yellow hair faling almost to his waist gave Owens a singular appearance. He was average height and had steel gray eyes. He was
extremely sensitive about his haiar as well as his two guns, and any derogatory remarks about either prompted a fight. However, since he
was greatly respected, no one who knew him made the mistake of making fun of his hair, which he would sometimes let stream behind him as
“a standing invitation to the Navajos to come and get me - if you can”
Many fabulous stories are told about the Commodore’s shooting. He wore twin forty-fives at this hips and carried a Winchester repeater in
his saddle scabbard. As he usually shot from the hip, he often got the dop on a man.
As the Pleasant Valley War threatened to involve the whole area and rustling was rampant, many person felt the need of a “fighting sheriff”,
and Owens was soon elected sheriff of Apache County. This man was well liked and The Argus in Holbrook described him as “a quiet,
unassuming person, strictly honorable and upright in his dealings with all men and enjoyed the respect and confidence of all who knew him.”
Owens is best remembered in Arizona as teh hero of Holbrook’s gun battle. The other man who was to take such a leading role in the
“Blevins Shootout” was Andy Cooper, whose real name was Blevins. He had changed his name when he came to Arizona because he was wanted
by the law in Texas. Cooper had been suspected for some time as the leader of the gang of horse thieves operating in Northern Arizona. His
father “Old Man Blevins” had recently beed found dead. He was thought to have organized the band of rustlers when he moved to Arizona.
Blevins had six or seven sons, with Andy Cooper, alias Blevins, being the most audacious of any of them.
Apparently pressure began to build on Sheriff Owens to serve a warrant for horse stealing on Cooper. The officers of the Stock Growers
Association protested long and loud to the county supervisors in St. Johns about the failure of the sheriff to get busy. So many complaints about
Owens’ lack of action reached the supervisors tht they finally determined to call the sheriff before them and question him on the subject of
several undeserved warrants. Naturally, if ws a ticklish situation that the board felt they had a sworn duty to perform but none of them were eager
to undertake the job. To their great surprise and great relief, Owens agreed to act soon. He explained that he had not served the warrants because
he felt that Coooper would resist and it would end in the death of one or both of them.
On September 4, 1887, Sheriff Owens rode into town to serve the warrant for Cooper’s arrest. Owens stopped at the drugstore owned by Frank
Wattron, the constable of Holbrook and Owens’ deputy, and talked with Wattron for a few minutes. Wattron said later that Owens told him what
he was going to do, he offered to assist the sheriff either alone or with a posse. This help was refused by the sheriff. Owens said, “I don’t want
anyone hurt in this matter - I’ll show them that I am not afraid.” Owens then mounted his horse and rode over to the livery stable. He asked Sam
Brown, the owner of the stable, where Cooper’s horse was located and Brown stated that he was in the
yard back of the stable. Owens then went into a small room that ws used as an office, Owens shut the door, he began to clean and oil his
Wincherster rifle. While Owens was still in the room, John Blevins, Cooper’s brother, can and led Cooper’s horse to the street and tied him to the
cottonwood tree, in front of the Blevins house.
When Ownes finished cleaning his rifle, he asked Saam where the Blevins House was located. Sam told him it was down the block adn this side
of the blacksmith’s shop. About 4:00 p.m., Ownes came out of the stable and walked with his Winchester in the bend of this left arm to the Blevins
place. He stepped on the porch and knocked at the front door on the east side of the house. The Apche Critic stated that several eyewitnesses to
the shooting said when Sheriff Owens knocked, Andy Cooper answered while John Blevins went to the door of the west front room. Cooper and
Owens saluted. Owens said, “I have a warrant for you and I want to to come along with me.” Cooper replied, “What warrant is it, Owens?”
The sheriff answered, the “The warrant for stealing horses.” Cooper seemed to think for a few minutes and Owes said, “Are you ready?” and
was answered by Cooper, “In a few minutes.” Owens said, “No! Right away,” then fired the ball from the Winchester and Cooper fell to the floor.
That no injustice be done to the sheriff and in the justification for the shooting, Mr. Owens stated later that Cooper refused to go and that he said,
“no, I will not go,” coupled with a movement to raise his six shooter, which Copper held in his right hand.
Sheriff Owens stepped off the front porch, turned as he did so as to face the of the west front room, and fired the second shot, which passed through
the right should of John Blevins. At this time, the sheriff retreated to the corner of Armbruster’s blacksmith shop and caught Moss B. Roberts
escaping through the east bedroom window, six shooter in hand. Owens fired again, the bullet striking Moss B. Roberts in the left shoulder; the ball
entering from behind, passing through his left lung, carrying away a part of the left color bone, and finally it buried itself in a spoke of a wagon.
Roberts rounded the corner and entered the kitchen where he fell in a heap and lay weltering in a pool of his own blood.
After shooting Roberts, the sheriff stood in his last position perhaps ten seconds, whne Sam Blevins, a youth about fifteen years, rushed out, his
mother after him, through the same door in which Andy Cooper was killed, with Cooper’s six shooter in his hand. The boy and his mother were
about four feet from the door; seeing the sheriff, she screamed, grabbed hold of her son and rushed for the door, but oo late to save the life of the
boy, as Owens’ unerring rifled fired again and the boy fell dead in his mother’s arms. All this took place in about three minutes.
After firing his last shot, Sheriff Ownes coolly threw his rifle across his left arm and calmly walked back to the livery stable where he had left his
saddle horse. As soon as the firing ceased, several citizens went to the houe, where a horrible sight met their eyes. Dead and wounded in every
room, and blood over the floor, doors, and walls. The agonizing groans of the wounded, the death rattle of the dying mingled with the hysterical
screams of the females made a shocking and unforgettable scene. In addition to Mrs. May Blevins, the widow of Mart Blevins and mother of the
Blevins boys; Eva Blevins, wife of one of the Blevins boys, and Mrs. Amanda Gladden, and her nine year old daughter, who was splatted with
blood and gore, were in the house that day.
The coroner’s jury cleared Owens in the death of Cooper and Sam Blevins. However, many person say that the killing of the young Blevins,
practically in his mother’s arms, always weighed heavily on the sheriff’s conscience. Dry-eyed and grim, the mother testified briefly that the
attach was unprovoked, that not a shot ws fired from the house, that Same Houston Blevins, the dead boy was her son and was fifteen year of age.
Cooper, Roberts, and John Blevins were wounded. Cooper died about midnight the same day; Roberts died several days later and John Blevins
recovered in three or four weeks. The whole battle had occurred in a lettle less that five minutes. John Blevins was found guilty of assault with
intent to murder Owens. He was given a five year sentence to the territorial prison in Yuma. However, he was pardoned by the governor before
serving any of his sentence. At least one shot came from the house, because it struck and killed Cooper’s horse tied to the cottonwood tree
in the street in front of the Blevins house.
Probably as a result of the Blevins fight controversy, Owens did not seek re-election as Apache County Sheriff in 1888. Instead he took a job with
the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad as a guard for its passenger trains from Albuquerque, New Mexico to Seligman, Arizona.
Later, Owen was appointed the first sheriff of Navajo County when it was formed in 1895. He served from March 25, 1895 to December 31, 1986.
During this period, he also served as county assessor. About 1900, he moved to Seligman where he opened a stor or saloon. Son after this, Owens
met Elizabeth Barrett and the couple ws married April 30, 1902. Owens was nearly 50 years of age and his wife only 23. They had no children.
The membory of th Blevins shoot-out probable haunted Owens to his grave. He said to have seen ghosts of the men he had killed before he
died of pareses of the brain at the age of 66 in Seligma, Arizona, on May 10, 1919, People in Arizona would long remember Commodore Perry
Owens as the man whose “coolness and determination” made him a terror to the criminal element in the Southwest. Holbrook became a peaceful
town after the Blevins fight, with only an occasional killing to break the monotony.
MORE MEMORIES…
History of the Courthouse
History of the Hashknife Posse
Highlights of Early Holbrook, Compiled by Vada Carlson Rodriquez, 1973
Navajo County Historical Society
100 East Arizona Street
Holbrook, Arizona 860255
928.524.6558
holbrookazmuseum.org