Title
Search for the grave of William Preston Longley, Hanged Texas Gunfighter
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2006
Abstract
William Preston Longley was one of the most notorious out-laws in Texas when he was finally tracked down, arrested, and convicted for shooting a boyhood friend. Since he had cheated death before, contemporaries easily believed Longley's hanging in October 1878 was a hoax that allowed him to live and raise a family in Louisiana under an alias. The ultimate test of the hoax hypothesis would be to find Longley's grave and expose either his remains or a weighted coffin. In fall 1992 and spring 1994, a team of scientists used electrical resistivity and magnetometer surveys to locate unmarked burials in areas where historical research indicated Longley's grave may be located. Team members hoped a grainy historic photograph of the marked gravesite could be correlated with a position in the cemetery. The team determined the approximate location of an unmarked grave that could be Longley's. Excavation uncovered the remains of a tall white male, which fit his description, and artifacts recovered from the grave were consistent with those known to have been buried with Longley. Finally, a mitochondrial DNA comparison with his living maternal relative produced a very high probability match.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Historical Archaeology
First Page
50
Last Page
63
Recommended Citation
Owsley, D., Ellwood, B., & Melton, T. (2006). Search for the grave of William Preston Longley, Hanged Texas Gunfighter. Historical Archaeology, 40 (3), 50-63. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03376732