Jean Henry Mead's new historical
novel, NO ESCAPE, is ready for downloading now! Today, the author tells how this book came about. Read her
riveting account of "Cattle Kate's" courage. If you love mysteries, history and
strong women, this is the book for you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jean Henry Mead |
No Escape, the Sweetwater Tragedy
By Jean Henry Mead
I was researching a Wyoming centennial history book during the
mid-1980s, by reading old microfilmed newspapers dating from 1888. During that
time I read about a young woman named Ellen Watson, who had been hanged by cattlemen
along with homesteader James Averell. The cattlemen who hanged them claimed
that the pair had been operating a rural bawdy house and taking cattle for Ellen’s
services.
After her death, the hangmen labeled Ellen “Cattle Kate” and
vilified her by claiming that she was not only a prostitute but a cattle
rustler. The Cattlemen’s Association, headquartered in Cheyenne, controlled a
local newspaper and reports of the hangings were published worldwide, resulting
in considerable condemnation that a woman had been hanged, despite the
cattlemen’s claims.
I was curious when I read the 1889 newspaper reports, when the
murders took place, and decided to write a novel about them, someday. A number
of authors had written about the hangings from the cattlemen’s point of view,
and films have been produced, portraying Ellen as a pistol packing outlaw. But
that didn’t jibe with news reports from the Casper Weekly Mail, which
published James Averell’s “letters to the editor,” complaining that greedy
cattlemen were gobbling up all of Sweetwater Valley, so they could graze their
cattle on government land, without paying for it.
I researched the story intermittently over the years but pieces of
the puzzle were missing until George W. Hufsmith was commissioned to write an
opera based on the hangings. He was hooked on the story and spent the next 20
years interviewing residents of Sweetwater Valley, Wyoming, who had knowledge
of what had actually happened. Thanks to Hufsmith’s nonfiction book, I was able
to write
my novel. I dedicated the book to him.
Thanks Jean, for the background to your new and exciting novel.
And thanks to our readers for dropping by.
Jackie King