Sheriff Brady

by J. Younger

Sheriff Brady 1870s

Events & Genealogy
Born: William John Brady
Birthdate: August 16, 1829
Birthplace: County Cavan, Ireland
Marriage: Maria Bonifacia Chavez on November 16, 1862 at Albuquerque
Children: Guillermo William Brady (1863-1923)
Teodora Brady (1865-?)
Robert Chavez Brady (1867-1945)
Juan Brady (1868-1927)
Lawrence G. Brady (1869-?)
James Brady (1873-?)
Anita Brady (1874-?)
Catarina Brady (1877-1940)
Primitivo Samuel Brady (1878-1948) 
Death: April 1st 1878
Cause of death: Gunshot wounds
Burial: Brady-Hindman burial site at The former Brady Ranch east of Lincoln

Vitals
Height: 5’8″
Weight: 
Hair: Brown
Eyes: Blue

William Brady Siblings.
William 1829-1878
Mary Brady 1832-?
Henry Brady 1853-?
Patrick Brady 1835-?
Catherine Brady 1836-1903
Ellen Brady 1837-?
Mathew Brady 1837-?

Rogue Lawman

The Rise and Fall of Sheriff William Brady: A Tale of Loyalty and Lead
Born on August 16, 1829, in the rolling green hills of County Cavan, Ireland, William J. Brady was the eldest of seven siblings, raised on his father’s potato farm. The son of William John Robert Brady and Catherine Darby, young William showed an early spark for politics after graduating in 1844. But the call of adventure lured him across the Atlantic to America in 1851, where he traded Irish fields for the dust and danger of the frontier.
Brady enlisted in the U.S. Army on July 11, 1851, joining Company F of the First United States Riflemen. Stationed at Fort Duncan, Texas, he climbed to the rank of Sergeant by June 2, 1856, earning an honorable discharge. Yet the military life still beckoned; that same day, he reenlisted with the same company. By March 2, 1861, he was discharged again, this time at Fort Craig, New Mexico. Undeterred, Brady joined the 2nd New Mexico Infantry of Volunteers on August 19, 1861, and by April 25, 1862, he transferred to the 1st New Mexico Volunteers, forming the 1st New Mexico Cavalry. As a 1st Lieutenant in Company C, stationed in Albuquerque, Brady’s steady rise reflected his grit and ambition.
At 33, standing 5’8” with piercing blue eyes, brown hair, and a fair complexion, Brady cut a striking figure. On November 16, 1862, he married Maria Bonifacio Chaves Montoya in Albuquerque, building a life with her that included nine children and a sprawling ranch home. His valor in battles against Indigenous tribes earned him a promotion to Captain in the 1st New Mexico Volunteer Cavalry in Santa Fe, followed by a Brevet Major appointment on March 13, 1865, for his courage. He left the military for good on October 8, 1866, at Fort Union, New Mexico, ready to carve out a new legacy.
Brady settled in Lincoln, New Mexico, aligning himself with L.G. Murphy’s powerful faction, which ran a sprawling general store and held a chokehold on the town’s economy. His loyalty to Lawrence G. Murphy was so profound that he would later even named one of his sons after him. By 1870, Brady was recorded as Lincoln’s sheriff, possibly the first to hold the title, though he may have served as early as 1867. His badge, however, came with whispers of corruption, as he and his allies tightened their grip on the small settlement.

In the waning months of 1876, Alexander McSween, a cunning attorney, began to carve his own path, stepping out from the shadow of Lincoln County’s ruthless powerbroker, L.G. Murphy. By 1877, acting as an agent for a wealthy Englishman, McSween extended loans for property and livestock, employing a predatory strategy eerily reminiscent of Murphy’s own tactics. His aim was clear: seize control of assets when borrowers inevitably defaulted. As Murphy’s grip on the region weakened, McSween sensed an opportunity to dismantle the empire being handed to Murphy’s protégé, James Dolan. Among the casualties of this scheme was the widow Mrs. Casey, who lost both her land and cattle to McSween’s machinations.
Enter John Henry Tunstall, an ambitious young Englishman who infiltrated this den of opportunists. Aligning himself with McSween and the formidable cattle baron John Chisum, another of McSween’s clients, Tunstall orchestrated a bold move to challenge Dolan’s dominance. The trio established a rival bank in Lincoln, a direct affront to the entrenched powers. Yet, they underestimated the formidable political influence and wealth bolstering Dolan’s operation.
Whispers in Lincoln suggested that Sheriff William Brady, a steadfast ally of Murphy and Dolan, grew desperate as legal efforts to crush Tunstall faltered. Rumors swirled that Brady unleashed a posse to eliminate the upstart Englishman. Tunstall’s murder in 1878 ignited a powder keg, sparking the formation of the Lincoln County Regulators, a vigilante force determined to exact justice. Initially, they sought arrests, but when the corrupt system shielded the guilty, the Regulators turned to vengeance. After two of Tunstall’s killers met their end, the emboldened Regulators set their sights on the heart of the conspiracy, Sheriff Brady himself. On a rain soaked morning in Lincoln, in a muddy street steeped in betrayal, they struck.

The morning of April 1, 1878, dawned with a deadly promise. Behind an adobe wall on John Tunstall’s property, the Lincoln County Regulators, Henry Brown, John Middleton, Fred Waite, Jim French, and the infamous Billy the Kid, lay in wait. Sheriff Brady, a creature of habit, was expected to ride past Tunstall’s store as he did every morning. But Brady was already in town, throwing the Regulators’ plan into disarray. Seizing the chaos of April Fool’s Day, they hatched a quick scheme to lure him out. A commotion near Ike Ellis’s house did the trick, drawing Brady and his posse, Deputy George Hindman, circuit court clerk Jacob “Billy” Matthews, and possibly George Peppin and Jack Long, toward the trap.
As Brady paused to chuckle with a woman, perhaps sharing an April Fool’s jest, he trotted to rejoin his men. The Regulators overheard him ranting about Billy the Kid:
“That little devil, cow thief Billy Bonney is getting more daring every day! He’s headed for a hanging, and it can’t happen too soon to suit me!”
His words were cut short by a sharp crack of gunfire. Brady crumpled to the ground, groaning,
  “Oh, Lord.”  
As he struggled to rise, the Regulators unleashed a hail of bullets from behind the wall. Over a dozen rounds tore through Brady, killing him instantly. Deputy Hindman and Billy Matthews were wounded, the latter crawling for cover as dogs barked in the stunned silence.
In the aftermath, Billy the Kid and Jim French emerged from hiding. Billy approached Brady’s lifeless body, possibly to reclaim a confiscated Winchester or to snatch incriminating documents, or perhaps to defile the sheriff’s badge. A shot from Matthews narrowly missed Billy, grazing his hip and striking French in the thigh. The Regulators fled on horseback, but French, hobbled by his wound, hid in Tunstall’s store. Dr. Ealy tended to him, concealing him beneath floorboards until the dust settled.
The ambush left deputies Peppin and Matthews scrambling. They summoned military support from Fort Stanton, but the arrival of Alexander McSween, John Chisum, Montague Leverson, and others in Lincoln complicated matters. Passing Brady and Hindman’s bloodied bodies in the street, they stopped at the Ellis home. Peppin, backed by Captain Purington and a small detachment of soldiers, demanded McSween’s surrender on an arrest warrant. McSween refused, arguing Peppin’s authority died with Brady. 
Sheriff Brady and Deputy Hindman were laid to rest at the Brady Ranch east of Lincoln. Brady left behind his wife, Maria, and six children, his legacy forever tied to the brutal Lincoln County War, a saga of loyalty, betrayal, and a fatal April Fool’s Day.

Full story on Brady coming soon! Please check back later for details on Brady coming to Lincoln County and his involvement in the county's troubles

Census Reports

Cavan Ireland Census report. The Brady's can be found on lines 16-22
Census 1870 Lincoln
Census 1870 Lincoln Sheriff Brady

Newspapers

A word from our PAL Steve...

A DIFFERENT LIGHT ON THE BRADY KILLING - History tells us that Sheriff Brady and his deputy were on foot, walking down the street, when he was killed on April 1, 1878. I will respectfully have to disagree. Six months later, the Kid sold Dr. Hoyt a horse with the "BB" brand on the left hip. (Pic#1) According to the Lincoln County Brand book, which had been lost for years, the BB brand on the left hip is registered to William Brady, the Sheriff. (Pic #2) Later, Hoyt took the bill of sale to one of Brady's sons, and the boy said that it was the horse my dad was riding the day he was killed. We arrive at the idea that they were on foot because a witness says they were "walking" down the street. The witness was describing the speed at which they were traveling, common for the day. I am not talking ill of anyone, but history was written by city guys who were not horsemen. A horse has four gates of travel; a walk is the slowest. History does not make it clear why the Kid ran out into the street. Some say he was getting the warrants from the Sheriff's body; others say the Kid ran out and recovered the rifle that Brady took from him. However, Brady's body was taken to the courthouse, and the Judge made an inventory of what Brady had with him that day. (Pic #3) If you notice, the sixth item that Brady had was a Winchester listed by serial number. So the Kid did not get his rifle. We are told Brady, when shot, fell in a sitting position. Which again can be explained by him riding. When Brady was shot, his body went limp. At the same time, his horse's nostrils flared, his head came up, and he jumped forward. Fleeing from the reports of the rifles. The first lunge, his horse jumped out from under him, and Brady fell off the back. His feet would have been in the stirrups coming out as he fell off the back of the horse. His feet would have been in front of him, and his heels would have hit the ground first, then hit the ground in a sitting position. Most everyone who spent their youth on a horse has come off in this position. Most of the time, when you were a kid and playing around, your horse would spook, leaving you sitting on the ground. If you look at the inventory, you'll see Brady's pistol is listed. (Pic #4) is the pistol he wore that day. (Pic #5) Is the holster that he wore. It is a mail-order from Montgomery Ward. The company was just six years old when Brady was killed. The holster was for a large frame, and a rivet was placed behind the trigger guard to keep the gun secure.

Gallery

Videos

For more on Sheriff Brady’s End of Watch, including first hand and eye witness reports, photos and more, follow the trail below!
https://palsofbillythekidhistoricalsociety.com/sheriff-brady-end-of-watch/

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