Campaign of the Month: December 2011
Dresden Files Dallas
Big Jim Courtright
Ghostly Marshal of Hell's Half Acre
Description:
Power Level
- Total Refresh: 18
- Unspent Refresh: 1
- Skill Cap: Fantastic
- Total Skill Points: 55
- Unspent Skill Points: 25
- Unspent Fate Points: 1
Aspects
- High Concept: Ghost Marshal
- Trouble: Surrounded by Ghosts and Lemurs
- Would Do Anything To Protect Outhouse Sally
- I Do The Job I’m Paid To Do
- ?
- ?
- ?
Skills
- (+6) Fantastic:
- (+5) Superb:
- (+4) Great: Conviction, Guns
- (+3) Good: Alertness, Intimidation, Discipline
- (+2) Fair: Athletics, Lore, Endurance, Rapport
- (+1) Average: Investigation, Deceit, Scholarship, Survival, Empathy
Stunts, Powers, Magic
- (-1) Demesne (White Elephant Saloon)
- (-5) Spirit Form (Poltergeist)
- (-1) Swift Transition (No Mortal home)
- (-8) Physical Immunity
- The Catch (+2) Standard Ghost weaknesses. The ghost can only be hurt in the mortal realm by those it has acknowledged. If confronted in the Nevernever, the ghost still has Armor:2 against at tacks that aren’t specifically structured as countermeasures against ghosts (like Ghost Dust).
- (-2) Inhuman Speed
- (+1) Feeding Dependency (Ghost Memories) attached to
- (-2) Breath Weapon: Hellguns (Weapon:2)
- (-1) Stunt: Hand-Eye Coordination (This is what allows the Breath Weapon to use Gun Skill)
Stress
Physical (Endurance) : (1) (2) (3)
Composure (Conviction): (1) (2) (3) (4)
Hunger (Discipline) : (1) (2) (3) (4)
Armor(s):
Consequences
Basic Minor (-2): *ANY*
Moderate (-4): *ANY*
Timothy Isaiah (Longhair Jim) Courtright, two-gun marshal of Fort Worth, was born in Sangamon County, Illinois, in the spring of 1845, the son of Daniel Courtright. He married Sarah Elizabeth Weeks in 1870 and had at least three children. At seventeen he served in the Civil War as a member of the Seventh Iowa Infantry under Gen. John Logan, who later took him to New Mexico to work as a hired gun on the Logan ranch. During his Civil War service Courtright won high praise for bravery at Fort Donelson and Vicksburg and acquired the nickname Jim, a mistake for Tim. After the war he served as an army scout and acquired the name Longhair, after the style in which scouts often wore their hair. Courtright always wore two six-shooters, butts forward, and drew from the right hip with the right hand. According to most students of the matter, he and Robert Clay Allison were faster on the draw than Wild Bill Hickok, Wyatt Earp, and Bartholomew (Bat) Masterson. Mrs. Courtright was also an excellent shot, and the couple traveled with a Wild West show as companions of Hickok.
In 1873, near Fort Worth, the Courtrights tried farming. After the farm failed, they moved to town, where Courtright worked as city jailer and in 1876 was elected city marshal by three votes. Since its incorporation as a city in 1873, Fort Worth had attracted the negative elements of a frontier town. Gambling, drinking, prostitution, and crime became rampant, but much of this vice brought income to the city, and Courtright soon learned that his job was not to clean up but simply to keep peace. While he was marshal, any attempts he made to enforce laws or make reforms met with the disapproval of the merchants. They told him to stop the flow of blood, but not that of liquor. In 1879 Courtright ran for a fourth term and was defeated by S. M. Farmer, after which the ex-marshal hung out around town, opened a detective agency that failed, spent time gambling and drinking, and then was invited to New Mexico.
His stay there was brief. After being accused of involvement in two murders, he escaped territorial authorities and returned to Fort Worth, where he opened the T. I. Courtright Commercial Detective Agency. When Texas Rangers and a New Mexico official arrived in the city to arrest him, an estimated 2,000 armed citizens challenged them. Although initially taken into custody, Courtright later escaped with the aid of friends. Eventually he returned to New Mexico, where he was acquitted due to insufficient evidence. In Fort Worth he was hired temporarily as deputy marshall during the Great Southwest Strike of 1886. Against the wishes of striking railroaders, he attempted to move the trains and, when two killings occurred, was blamed for siding with the railroads.
Courtright’s career was brought to an end on February 8, 1887. Luke Short, a former friend of his, shot and killed him in one of the most famous gunfights in western history-and, contrary to the movie legends, one of the few face-to-face shootouts. The reason for the killing was never determined, though Short and Courtright were rivals for control of gambling interests in Fort Worth.
The question of Courtright’s popularity in Fort Worth is moot. Though citizens protested his arrest by New Mexico legal authorities and turned out in droves for his funeral, they soundly defeated him in his attempt at reelection for a fourth term as marshall. Court records show that he was a bully and a brawler, and he was never endorsed by the Fort Worth Democrat, the city’s leading newspaper. Nevertheless, his funeral procession was six blocks long, the largest the city had seen. Courtright is buried at Oakwood Cemetery in Fort Worth.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
- Oliver Knight, Fort Worth, Outpost on the Trinity (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1953).
- F. Stanley [Stanley F. L. Crocchiola], Jim Courtright (Denver: World, 1957). Mack H.
- Williams, comp., The News-Tribune in Old Fort Worth (Fort Worth: News-Tribune, 1975).
Today
The Ghost of Big Jim still runs his protection racket, except now the currency are memories and his clients are Ghosts that don’t want to be eaten by Lemurs and Wraiths. He haunts the White Elephant Saloon in The Acre alongside his ‘lady love’ Outhouse Sally.
Credits
Source photos found via Google image search, in general used without permission, and digitally modified for our usage (claiming fair use: parody/pastiche). This is a non-profit site, no challenge real or intended to legally held copyrights. Please contact the GM if you would like your image/likeness removed or if you prefer different credits/notice.
- Actor/Model Used For Photos: This is an actual picture of the historical person, Jim Courtright.