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Brazen Bill - The Man Behind the Infamous Mask

Brazen Bill - The Man Behind the Infamous Mask

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William “Brazen Bill” Brazelton was one of the boldest and most enigmatic outlaws of the Old West—a masked highwayman who single-handedly robbed stagecoaches across Arizona and New Mexico in the late 1870s. A towering figure with a calm voice and iron nerve, he struck alone near Wickenburg, Silver City, and Tucson, armed with both pistol and rifle in one hand—a signature move that unnerved everyone who faced him. Before his life of crime, he briefly posed as a showman in Prescott, Arizona, claiming he would “swallow a wagon wheel” before vanishing with the ticket money, earning him his first nickname.His luck ran out in August 1878 when Sheriff Charles Shibell’s posse tracked him by a single twisted horseshoe print to a mesquite bosque along the Santa Cruz River near Tucson. Refusing to surrender, Brazelton went for his gun and was cut down in a storm of Winchester fire. His body was brought back to town, photographed upright with his mask and rifle, and displayed as proof that the Territory’s most feared outlaw was finally dead. That haunting image—and tales of his ghost, El Tejano, still riding the desert—cemented “Brazen Bill” Brazelton’s place among the most enduring legends of the American frontier.#BrazenBillBrazelton #OldWestOutlaw #WildWestHistory #StagecoachRobberies #ArizonaLegends #FrontierJustice #WildWestDeepDivesSources for PhotosPoint of Mountain Benchmark Photo by Michael 🌵 WilliamsBrazen Bill’s Unique Stance Photo by Nick Brumby Westerns https://nickbrumbywesterns.com/brazen-bill-brazelton/ Sources for Researchhttps://www.legendsofamerica.com/william-brazelton/ https://truewestmagazine.com/article/the-man-who-swallowed-a-wagon-wheel/https://truewestmagazine.com/article/brazen-bill-shot-to-blazes/ https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn82014896/1878-08-30/ed-1/?sp=2&q=coach+nine+robbed&r=0.08,0.662,0.393,0.25,0 Arizona citizen (Tucson, Pima County, A.T. [i.e. Ariz.]), August 30, 1878https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn84024827/1902-08-03/ed-1/?sp=6&q=Arizona+coaches+Mexico+New+nine+robbed&r=0.036,0.223,0.549,0.261,0 (5) Bisbee daily review (Bisbee, Ariz.), August 3, 1902. John Clum interview.https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn82014896/1877-09-29/ed-1/?sp=2&q=robbed+stage&r=0.309,0.551,0.381,0.181,0 Arizona citizen (Tucson, Pima County, A.T. [i.e. Ariz.]), September 29, 1877https://www.loc.gov/resource/sn82014896/1878-08-16/ed-1/?sp=3&q=masked+robber&r=0.172,0.553,0.374,0.178,0 Arizona citizen (Tucson, Pima County, A.T. [i.e. Ariz.]), August 16, 1878

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