PIONEER STORY -- The Trial of Oliver Lee
Written up by Frances E. Totty, Nov 17, 1938
Interview of H. F. Chaves
In 1901 a jury
was selected in Hillsboro, Sierra County, New Mexico to hear the case of
Oliver Lee, Bob Railey, and Jim Gillon for the murder of Colonel Fountaine
who was murdered February, 1896 by three unknown men.
The above three were tried on circumstancial evidence.
The members of the jury that I remember were: Martin Lumin, President Johnie
May, Secretary, H.F. Chafez, interpeter, and Sam Bernard, I do not
remember the names of the others on the jury. The case was changed from Las
Cruces, Dona Ana County, New Mexico as the feeling ran very much against the
men who was being tried as Colonel Fountain was a man who
was highly respected in Las Cruces. The case as I heard it was as following:
Colonel Fountaine in January of 1896 was called to Lincoln, County as
Prosecuting Attorney, to the case of trying some cattle rustlers,
who had been jailed at that place. Before Col. Fountaine left Las Cruces, he
was warned to not take the case as it seemed that such men as Oliver Lee,
an important cattle man of New Mexico, A. B. Falls a mine operator and cattle
man, did not wish the case to be tried. Why? We were never able to uncover
this fact. Oliver Lee served in later as representative
and is still considered a leading cattle man in New Mexico,
When Colonel Fountaine started for Lincoln, County his wife Mrs. (Morales)
Fountaine, who was raised as far as I know in Old Mesilla, Dona
Ana County, requested the Colonel to take their son, Henry, age nine with
him to Lincoln in hopes that whoever was threating the Colonel would not
bother him if he had the child with him. On the return trip
from Lincoln, Colonel Fountaine met Satterona Barela, mail carrier, from
Tularosa, and told him that e was being followed, but he didn't have an
idea who it was, and after Sattarona Barela went on his route he saw
several men, who appeared to be cow boys coming, but they turned out of the
road before they met the carrier and went around him coming back into the
road a mile or so farther on down the road thereby providing that
they did not wish to be recognized.
Colonel Fountaine was killed between San
Augustine and Agua Blanca, at least that was where his buckboard was found
by a posse. When the Colonel did not return at the time that was set for
his return, his wife became worried and sent out an alarm that the Attorney
had not returned. The buckboard was found, and the foot prints of men around
it where the horses had been unhitched, the bodies tied on the horses and
these horses were followed by three other mounted horses. These horses went
toward the Sacramento Mountains, but they could not be trailed
successfully so the bodies were never found.
Soon after the death of the
Colonel a warrant was made out for the arrest of Oliver Lee, who disappered
and was not heard of for over a year. In 1895 Oliver Lee came to Las
Cruces and gave himself up. As there wasn't anything but circumstancial
evidence we could not find the men guilty even though the Grand Jury indicted
the above mentioned men. It was known that there was hard feelings
between the parties, but there was not enough evidence to make a real case.
A.B. Falls was drawn into the case as many believed that Mr. Falls had the
murder done, but this was another thing that was only belief. Nashy said
that Mr. Falls committed the deed, but this was impossible as Mr. Falls
proved that he left Gold Dust, thirty-five miles from Las Cruces
and went Las Cruces on the day that Colonel Fountaine was killed,
therefore it would have been impossible for him to be on the other side of
San Augustine in the Organ Mountains.
It has always been hard for me to believe that Oliver Lee could have had
anything to have done with the murder, but for the other men they were
the type--gun men that lived the life of out-laws. Colonel Fountaine was
from Texas, and I understand he was at one time a political leader in the
state. He was recognized as a brilliant man and a leader in Las Cruces.
H. F. Chavez, age 60, was born in Santa Fe, New Mexico. His father Manuel
Chavez came to Santa Fe from Louisana, the family having settled in the
Louisana Territory many years ago. When H. F. Chavez was a young boy his
parents moved to Las Cruces.