| Belle Starr carried messages for the Confederates during the Civil War |
Belle Starr was “a sure shot and murderess,
who never forgot an injury nor forgave a foe.” She said she never killed a man
she didn’t have to, adding, “Wouldn’t you kill rather than to be killed?”
Belle
Starr was born in Carthage, Missouri, on February 3, 1846. Her father was a
Southern sympathizer, and her brother rode with Quantrill’s Raiders. As a young
girl, Belle carried messages for her brother and met up with Jesse James and
the Younger brothers.
Rumors
persist about an affair with Cole Younger, but the chances that it happened are
exceedingly slim. She married his cousin, Bruce Younger, in 1880, but that
union lasted only a few weeks. In 1866, Belle married James Reed, another
outlaw who rode with Quantrill during the Civil War. In 1868, she gave birth to
her first child, Rosie Lee (better known as Pearl). In 1870, Reed was on the
run for killing the man who murdered his brother.
On
November 19, 1873, Jim Reed and Belle Starr robbed a Creek Indian, Watt
Greyson, of $30,000 in gold and paper currency. Belle said, “Mrs. Greyson began
to cry as soon as she saw us, screaming loudly
for help. I approached her bed, placed my revolver on her forehead, and said:
‘One word more and I will blow your brains out.’”