After he was discharged in 1861, he ventured to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and reenlisted once again in the Union Army. He served for the duration of the Civil War, but saw little, if any, combat.
He established relationships with other well-connected G.A.R. members and went into business with German immigrant Emil Fritz. Due to Murphy's connections, the partners immediately began securing military contracts to supply beef, vegetables, and other supplies to the ApacheReservation.
They also hatched schemes to sell land they didn't own to unsuspecting farmers. This, however, was common practice at the time and, in Santa Fe, the capital of the Territory of New Mexico, "a specialized legal profession had grown up around the manipulation of title" to “old Spanish and Mexican land grants."[1]
Murphy eventually moved to Lincoln County, New Mexico, and in 1869 he started "L. G. Murphy & Co." In 1873, Murphy hired James Dolan, a fellow Irish Catholic immigrant from Loughrea, County Galway. By 1874, Murphy and Dolan had become business partners in a highly profitable mercantile and banking operation. The business saw success mainly due to there being no competition. As a member of the Republican Partypolitical machine known as the Santa Fe Ring, Murphy also wielded considerable power over law enforcement, as Lincoln County SheriffWilliam J. Brady lived on a cattle ranch that he had purchased using money borrowed from Murphy and Dolan's bank.
What would become known as the Murphy-Dolan faction charged local farmers and ranchers high prices for their goods, causing them to be resented by many local people.
To counter them, rancher John Tunstall and former Murphy-Dolan lawyer Alexander McSween opened a rival business in 1876, called "J. H. Tunstall & Co".
On February 18, 1878, while Tunstall was alone, he was shot and killed by Jesse Evans, William Morton, Frank Baker and Tom Hill, likely under the orders of Dolan.
This event sparked the Lincoln County War, one of the best known range wars. To counter Sheriff Brady's lack of action on the murder, McSween took command of the Regulators, having them legally deputized, and tasked with the apprehension of the murderers.
On March 6, 1878, the Regulators captured Morton and Baker. On March 9, 1878, the Regulators executed both men as well as William McCloskey, a fellow Regulator suspected of being a traitor.
On April 1, 1878, the Regulators ambushed and murdered Sheriff Brady and Deputy George W. Hindman. This assassination, according to Robert Marshall Utley, had been ordered by McSween, who had learned that the Sheriff was carrying an arrest warrant for him. As the Sheriff lay dead, Billy the Kid ran from the place of ambush in order to remove the arrest warrant from Brady's pocket. Instead, he was driven back and slightly wounded by the gunfire of one of Brady's Deputies.
Several other killings following this were committed by both the Regulators and the gunmen employed by Murphy-Dolan. The range war culminated in the Battle of Lincoln from July 15–19, 1878.
Death
By that time Murphy was in poor health, suffering from cancer. He was, by this time, having little to do with the day-to-day activities of his businesses or the gunmen under his employ. He died on October 20, 1878, around the age of 47.
Jack Palance portrayed Murphy in the 1988 film Young Guns. Murphy's death was changed to him being killed at the end of the Battle of Lincoln after the Regulators escape. Billy the Kid doubles back and says "Reap it, Murphy, you son of a bitch!" before shooting Murphy between the eyes.
References
^Robert M. Utley (1987), High Noon in Lincoln: Violence on the Western Frontier, University of New Mexico Pres. Page 5.
^Mustang (1 March 2021). "Lincoln County War". Searching History. Retrieved 4 August 2024.
Further reading
Dickson, Brandon (October 2023). "The Posse That Killed John Tunstall: The story of what happened to them". The Tombstone Epitaph. CXXXXXIII (10). Tombstone, AZ: 1, 8–9, 13. ISSN1940-221X.