Southwest Jewish History Volume 2, Number 2, p. 3-7
The Fearless Sheepherder on the New Mexico Frontier
(Editor's Note: Sol Floersheim was one of the Southwest's most intrepid
Jewish pioneers. The following article is excerpted from a memoir
written by his son Carl in 1953.)
My father arrived in New York the latter part of 1878. After a
day or so getting located, he obtained work in a matzoh factory
at $5 per week; not being able to subsist on such a wage he
drifted West and what money he had from home took him as far as
Trinidad, Colorado where he arrived in the early part of 1879. He
worked there a few months for a pioneer firm of Rosenwald
Brothers. His wages there as a clerk were $12.50 per month. He
found a cheap eating place and slept in the store and so managed
to get by.
While working for the Rosenwalds, he contracted typhoid fever
and was committed to a hospital. It seems that while there his
bosses brought him lemons and other items which they thought
would soon make him well but on getting back to work my father
found they had charged him for all of that and he got mad and
quit. He left one night, bumming his way to Las Vegas, New Mexico
where he arrived in the latter part of 1879.
[Sol Floersheim's first job in Las Vegas was as a liquor
salesman and after a harrying experience where he saw a man shot
to death, he began carrying a pistol.]
My father started to work for Mr. Charles Ilfeld, a real
pioneer of those days sometime in 1880. He worked for him about
seven years as clerk and as collector in the outlying districts
that were adjacent to Las Vegas which was then a very important
trading point. Collections from ranchers consisted mainly of
receiving wool and sheep twice each year, wool in June, sheep in
October. It was on one of these collecting trips that my father
had occasion to encounter the Southwest's famous outlaw, Billy
the Kid. It seems that on July 12, 1881 my father's destination
was a sheep ranch about 15 miles southwest of Fort Sumner, New
Mexico which was the home area of Billy the Kid. [Looking for a
place to stay overnight, Sol Floersheim stopped at a small saloon
where he noticed a young man sitting. He asked the man where he
could find a place to stay.] My father was told of two places and
turned to go out when the young man asked him to take a drink of
whiskey. My father told him he did not carry for any. The young
man drew a pistol and pointed at my father and said, "you drink,"
and he did.
The young man then inquired where he was from, his name, what
he was doing, and what his possessions were. While they were
talking, he asked my father to take another drink. Of course,
until then my father did not know that he was facing Billy the
Kid. My father had on his a very fine Winchester .45 Colt pistol
and he started kidding the outlaw and even offered to trade guns
with him. Billy preferred his own pistol that had killed at that
time 21 men and had a notch on the wood handle for everyone
killed. My father even had the nerve to ask Billy to come and see
him when he came to Las Vegas, but the true fact was that he ever
wanted to see him again.
My father did not remain in Fort Sumner that night. He was
afraid Billy might change his mind and kill him so he traveled
all night and arrived at a ranch house and was pleased to find it
was occupied by the famous Sheriff Pat Garrett. After a good
breakfast Garrett said to my father, "Sol, let us go back to Fort
Sumner and get Billy." My father told him, "I saw all I wanted of
that fellow. If you want him, you go and get him."
[Garrett killed Billy the Kid on July 14, 1881.]
Some time in 1882 my mother (nee Emma Blumenthal) came over
from Germany with Mrs. Charles Ilfeld who had gone to Frankfurt
am Main on a visit, that was my mother's birth-place as well as
that of the Ilfeld family. My mother went to work in Las Vegas
for Mr. Ilfeld as buyer and clerk in the drygoods department and
also served as bookkeeper. It was there that my parents met and
fell in love and were married December 25, 1884.
[For Sol Floersheim, a man small in stature but steeled in
strength, there were more confrontations on the frontier. He was
caught up in the robbery of a store in Springer, New Mexico with
the bandit taking off with the $27 Sol had just collected from
the store owner.]
My father told the store-keeper, "I shall go out and see if I
can find the guy that held me up and see if I cannot recover your
money." The store-keeper feared my father would be killed, but my
father said, "I will take a chance." So he went out and across
the street from the store he found the cowboy in a bar drinking.
My father sneaked up behind him, swung the cowboy around and
said, "Now it is my turn. Get your hands up and don't you dare
make a move or I will kill you." My father took the man's gun and
while his hands were up, rifled the man's pockets, took all the
money he could find and told him to leave town that very minute
and not come back for at least four days. On returning to the
store he found out that he had made a good profit as they counted
out $10 more than what was stolen.
Some time later my father told Mr. Ilfeld that he was quitting
to go into business for himself. Mr. Ilfeld ridiculed him, told
him he would not be able to make a living for himself. When my
father left Mr. Ilfeld he started a small store in a small hamlet
20 miles north of Las Vegas, N.M. and in that small store he also
had a small bar. It seems there was a blacksmith in this town
that liked his whiskey and at times imbibed a little too freely.
One day the blacksmith came for a drink, then another and when he
came for the third one my father turned him down. That infuriated
the 200-odd-pound 6-foot blacksmith so he came back with a loaded
rifle and pointed it at my father and said, "You give me all the
whiskey I want, or I will kill you." My father asked him what
kind he wanted and he said blackberry brandy. My father grabbed
the bottle by the neck and smashed the bottle in the blacksmith's
face and then proceeded to use his fists until he had the man
begging for mercy. He then took the blacksmith to his home,
turned him over to the man's wife.
About twenty-five years later the man and his family came back
through Springer and he called on my father. The blacksmith told
my father, "What happened in your bar was the grandest thing that
happened to me. You stopped my desire for liquor. You made a
Christian out of me, you saved me for my family and I am pretty
well-fixed now, have $50,000 in the bank."
I might mention that my father was five-feet tall and weighed
110-pounds, but he was packed full of dynamite, fearless and his
hobby was licking big men. He was unusually strong, very agile, a
veritable tiger and when he hit, a man went down.
To give you an idea of my father's stamina and fearlessness,
at age seventy he gave a young Spanish fellow about thirty years
old a sound thrashing even though outweighed fully by fifty
pounds. He came into my father's store in Roy, New Mexico and
said, "Here is a relief order you dirty little Jew and I don't
want you to rob me." My father threw off his coat and lit into
this fellow, gave him such a hard licking that they had to call
the doctor afterward to sew him up.
At the age of seventy-five he had an encounter with a District
Judge in the lower part of New Mexico. My father was talking to
some prospective seller of wool in the lobby of a Roswell N.M.
hotel when this so-called Judge walked through the lobby, greeted
my father. The judge came back afterward and told the man to whom
my father was talking to, "Why are you wasting your time with
this little Jew?" My father looked at the Judge and said to him,
"I believe they call you Judge down here. I have another name
that fits you better." The Judge said, "What do you mean?" My
father said, "you big overgrown SOB, you know what I mean. Let me
tell you something. I am proud of my religion. I am proud of my
religion, but I am damned sight prouder that I never killed
anyone in cold blood [as you did]." The Judge walked out of the
lobby entirely bewildered.
There was more, much more to Floersheim than defending himself
or his religion. Somehow he had developed a great knowledge of
medicine and helped doctors on the frontier. His son said that
his father had told him that he probably had helped bring three
hundred babies into the world, had performed "all kinds of minor
surgery, amputations and helped doctors in Caesarian
operations."
He also assisted in the founding and development of
Congregation Montefiore in Las Vegas, N.M., a daughter explained,
"Mother kept the High Holidays--fasted and read prayers--but she
always said she couldn't get Father to stop his work or to close
his stores long enough to do likewise. To me he seemed deeply
religious, too, in his quiet way. His whole life was his
religion. He supported his Temple [Montefiore] and charities,
gave to the needy, but was broad enough to help the struggling
churches of other faiths in other communities. He and the nuns
and the priests of the Catholic Church were always close friends.
He'd give generously to aid them, too."
The late historian, Floyd S. Fierman, wrote of Floersheim: "He
possessed many outstanding characteristics, but his most
redeeming one, in an era of blind exploitation of the worker, was
his integrity. The Spanish system of raising sheep was, in
effect, economic enslavement [of the sheepherder]. Sol
Floersheim, in his sheep operations, employed people on wages
with decent housing. In this way he maintained a fair, humane
relationship with his employees."
The vast Jaritas Ranch that Sol Floersheim founded is still
held and operated by the family today. In a telephone
conversation with Donald Floersheim, Sol's grandson, he said, "We
are still running sheep and cattle on the ranch. My grandfather
at one time had 100,000 head of sheep on the Jaritas. Today we
have mostly cattle, but still a few sheep. The Floersheim ranch
is in eastern New Mexico near the town of Springer, population
1,300.
|