Tom Horn is one of those western characters who’s hard to peg.
During his brief lifespan, he served as an Indian fighter, deputy sheriff,
Pinkerton man, and range detective, but mostly, he worked as a problem solver,
offering a final solution for troubled cattlemen.
The
Salt Lake Herald said, “Horn is
alleged to have taken it upon himself to get rid of the rustlers in his own peculiar way and which he often remarked
was the sure way.”
“Doc” Shores, the sheriff of Gunnison County,
said Tom Horn “didn’t place a high value on human life.” As a cattle detective
with the Swan Land Cattle Company and the Iron Mountain Ranch Company, Horn earned
$600 for the hide of every cattle rustler he brought in. But Horn told one
confidant, I have “no trouble collecting my money, for I would kill a man who
cheated me out of ten cents.”
Many Western writers classify Tom Horn as a gunfighter because he killed at least seventeen men during his days as a range detective. But Tom Horn was no gunfighter. He faced no one in a fair fight. His favorite method of getting his man was to ambush him on the trail or back shoot him from a safe distance—with a Buffalo gun. Tom Horn may have played fast and loose with his victims’ lives, but he never took chances with his own.


