*** Welcome to piglix ***

Castaic Range War

Castaic Range War
Date 1890–1916
Location Castaic, California
Caused by Land disputes, family feud
Resulted in Jenkins victory
Parties to the civil conflict
William Willoby Jenkins
Los Angeles Rangers
William C. Chormicle
Casualties
21–40 killed

The Castaic Range War, also known as the Jenkins-Chormicle Affair, was a range war that happened in Castaic, California from 1890 to 1916, between ranchers and farmers William Willoby Jenkins and William C. Chormicle who both staked claims on a piece of land in the territory. The feud started when Jenkins fell into a dispute with Chormicle when the latter purchased 1,600 acres of the same land he had settled in years ago. When the problem couldn't be settled on court, violence then erupted between the two which lasted for over two decades, in which dozens of men from both sides were killed. The Castaic affair was one of the largest range war in American history, as well as becoming one of the bloodiest event in the state.

William Willoby Jenkins was a rancher and gambler who staked a claim of land in Castaic, California in 1875, during the great migration of settlers into the West in the late 19th Century. Jenkins was 16 when he moved from Ohio to Los Angeles with his family in 1851. He ran a successful ranch and an oil company in Castaic, as well as a profitable cat business during a rat infestation in the county. He would later develop a reputation as a gambler and a gunman and was once deputized as a constable in the county. In one incident, he was sent to repossess a guitar said to have been stolen by a Mexican named Antonio Ruiz. When Jenkins arrived at Ruiz's home, a fight broke out between the two that forced Jenkins to shoot and kill Antonio. This angered the local Mexicans and they soon formed a mob of 200 people to hunt down Jenkins and lynch him. Jenkins on the other hand was locked in a jailhouse awaiting his trial with other lawmen to protect him. The Mexicans tried to storm the jailhouse and failed but a sheriff was wounded during the scuffle. He would then enlist in the Los Angeles Rangers, where his first mission was successfully hunting down and capturing the leader of the mob that tried to lynch. By 1872, he staked a claim near the Lake Hughes and Castaic Creek, before building a ranch he called the Lazy Z.

In 1890, a fellow rancher and frontiersman by the name of William C. Chormicle bought 1,600 acres of the land that Jenkins have already settled. Jenkins, who have already built his business in the land, refused to acknowledge Chormicle's purchase. When the dispute failed to be handled in court, both sides took violent actions to protect their land. Fighting started in the same year when three of Jenkin's men accidentally moved two wagon loads of lumber near Chormicle's cabin. Chormicle and a friend named William A. Gardner indiscriminately fired on the intruders, killing two of them, while the third, Jose Olme, managed to escape by horse. Chormicle and his friend soon surrendered to the sheriffs and a trial was set. The two pleaded for self-defense, saying that they were only trying to protect their property. The trial lasted for 18 days and was one of the longest trials ever conducted in Los Angeles County at the time. On June 1890, the jury finally found Chormicle and Gardner not guilty; a decision that infuriated Jenkins.


...
Wikipedia

...