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Not What You Meant?  There are 65 definitions for Ranger.

Arizona Rangers

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The Arizona Rangers was a law enforcement agency in Arizona, modeled on the Texas Ranger Division, created by the Arizona Territorial Legislature in 1901. Created to deal with infestations of outlaws, especially rustlers, in the sparsely populated Territory of Arizona, especially along the Mexican border, the Rangers were an elite, well-trained, and secretive agency mounted on the best horses money could buy and well equipped with modern weapons at State expense. They were very effective in apprehending members of outlaw bands, often surprising them by descending on them without warning.

Contents

History

One company was authorized to consist of a captain, a sergeant and not more than 12 privates. In 1903 the authorized force was increased to 26. On February 15, 1909 the act establishing the Arizona Rangers was repealed. During the 7 and 1/2 years of its existence 107 men served as Rangers. The men who served in the Rangers, many of them veterans of Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders, were expert horsemen, trackers and marksmen. They were widely publicized and conspicuous, sporting their badges boldly, well armed and distinctive. Their disbandment is said to have been politically motivated by pressure from conventional law enforcement in the persons of the county sheriffs of the Arizona counties. In addition to dealing with rustlers and other outlaws they were called on to deal with several large strikes by Mexican workers at mines in Arizona and at a mine at Cananea, in Mexico. Contemporary news reports in the New York Times on June 3, 1906 reported that on June 1, 1906 strikers destroyed a lumber mill and killed two brothers who were defending the mine. Eleven casualties were reported among the Mexican "rioters". Responding to a telegraphed plea from Colonel William Cornell Greene of the Greene Consolidated Copper Company, a posse of 275 volunteers from Bisbee, Douglas and Naco Arizona, commanded by Captain Thomas H. Rynning of the Arizona Rangers, entered Mexico against the orders of Joseph Henry Kibbey Governor of Arizona Territory, and at the invitation of Rafael Yzabel, the Governor of Sonora, reinforced the Sonoran rurales. Mexican troops were reported en route to the city. Four troops of the Fifth Cavalry en route from Fort Huachuca were held at Naco, Arizona on the border on the orders of President Taft. According to Colonel Green the "trouble was incited by a Socialistic organization that has been formed [in Cananea] by malcontents opposed to the Diaz government."[1][2][3][4] The first Captain of the Arizona Rangers was Burton C. Mossman of Bisbee, Arizona who had previously as manager of the 2 million acre (8,000 km²) Aztec Land and Cattle Co, also called the "Hash Knife outfit", in northern Arizona near Holbrook and Winslow had some success in controlling rustling of his company's cattle. In July, 1902 after successfully recruiting and organizing the Rangers, Mossman resigned, returning to the cattle business and was replaced by Thomas H. Rynning. The third and last commander of the Arizona Rangers was Harry C. Wheeler. In general the men of the Arizona Rangers were extremely capable and honorable men who exploits were extensively reported by the newspapers of the day.[5] Many of these reports are collected in the book, The Arizona Rangers edited by Joseph Miller. A tale of at least one bad apple, Sergeant Jeff Kidder, who while blind drunk, shot it out with Mexican police in Naco, Sonora is also recorded as is the interesting tale of Manuel Sarabia, a Mexican revolutionary. Badges of the Arizona Rangers which are described as being of solid silver, lettered in blue enamel with engravings etched in blue, are a valuable collectable.

Other agencies

The analogous agency in the Territory of New Mexico, organized in 1905 was called the New Mexico Mounted Police. Across the Mexican border in northern Sonora a similar band of men, the rurales, also known as the Cordada, was commanded by a Russian, Colonel Emilio Kosterlitsky who cooperated closely with the Rangers. The Arizona Rangers had been preceded by ephemeral organization of the Arizona Territorial Rangers in 1860 (disbanded when its members joined the Confederate Army) and in 1882 (never funded by Congress). There is voluntary service organization organized in 1957 called the Arizona Rangers with a website at Azrangers.us {4 of the original Arizona Rangers-such as John M. Redmond {1884-1967}-help found the new org}. The modern Arizona Rangers are recognized by the State of Arizona as an auxiliary police force. The Arizona Territorial Rangers Reenactment Group (headquartered in Netcong, New Jersey) is a historical reenactment group. Another Arizona Rangers, in Tucson, is part of Missouri Western Shooters [1]. The California State Rangers who were broadly similar and became the California State Police.

Cultural references

For most the only reference they have ever encountered to the Arizona Rangers was in the song, "Big Iron", in Western singer Marty Robbins album Gunfighter Ballads & Trail Songs. They are also used in the 1971 John Wayne movie, Big Jake. 26 Men, a U.S. action-adventure series about the Rangers, aired on the ABC television network for two seasons in 1957-59. Johnny Cash - Talks about the AZ Rangers in his song "Big Iron"

See also

Notes

References

Further reading

  • Edited by Joseph Miller, The Arizona Rangers, Hastings House, 1975, hardcover, 268 pages, ISBN 0-8038-0353-2

External links

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Arizona Rangers from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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