The Museum

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Museum History


Billy the Kid Museum opened in 1987 after Justice of the Peace Bob Hefner wrote a book that claimed to substantiate Brushy Bill’s claims that he was Billy The Kid. Hefner was also the museum’s founder with a vision of an educational and entertainment venue that could bring tourists to Hico. A statue of Billy went up, and the town started its annual Billy the Kid Festival in April

Billy turned out to be good for Hico. Wild West fans trek to this part of central Texas to see Brushy's grave, death spot, statue, and the museum, with its small collection of firearms and Western memorabilia. Sue Land, the current museum Director, admits that Hico's delayed embrace of Brushy hurt the museum's collection, limiting it to a handful of items owned by the old man. "By the time we come along, almost everything was gone."

“It’s not that we’re promoting an outlaw or a killer,” Land said. “We’re promoting Hico.”

Land ran through the details of the historical story of Billy in Hico: Pat Garrett mistakenly killed someone else in Fort Sumner, New Mexico then covered it up to hide his embarrassment and (to) collect the reward money. There was a flood in the cemetery where Billy was supposedly buried. “All the old wooden caskets were washed away," Land said, leaving the grave sites empty. Billy escaped the shootout, changed his name, and reformed, embarking on a career that included catching horse thieves, working for Hanging Judge Parker, and holding down jobs as a constable, deputy sheriff, and plainclothes policeman.

By 1950 Brushy Bill knew he was dying and wanted to be pardoned by the governor of New Mexico for his crimes. His body was examined by a local doctor, revealing bullet wounds and knife scars that matched those known to be on Billy. "I don't know any man that would've shot and stabbed themselves just so they could have the same scars as Billy the Kid," said Land. "All he was asking for was a pardon, not money or notoriety or anything like that."

The New Mexico governor, however, scoffed at Brushy's claims. The governor said, according to Land, "I don't believe him. He's just a sick old man."

Heartbroken, Brushy Bill returned to Hico. A month later, four days shy of his 91st birthday, he dropped dead on a downtown sidewalk, walking to the post office to mail a letter for his wife.

So, Billy the Kid Museum opened in Hico nearly 40 years after Roberts’s death, and the city actively celebrates the connection. In Hico Billy is everywhere, from the statue downtown, to the monumental arch over Roberts’s grave (in Hico’s County seat of Hamilton). There is no doubt there that Billy the Kid is one of Hico’s own, and they’re happy to tell the world.

 

The Museum Today


Billy the Kid Museum is a small history museum in the town of Hico in rural Texas. Our claim to fame is that Billy the Kid, the famous gunfighter and outlaw, was not shot and killed by Pat Garrett in 1881 but died at the age of 91 in Hico, Texas.

The Museum promotes research and public education through its Museum collection. Visitors to the Museum can see exhibits, attend events at the Museum, and access educational programs. The Museum supports itself through sales, fundraisers, and donations.

Sue Land, director of the Billy the Kid Museum, said she wasn’t really a believer in the Brushy Bill claim until she read Daniel A. Edwards’ book “Billy the Kid: An Autobiography”. Now her doubts are gone, and she is confident that Brushy Bill was Billy the Kid.

It's a complicated story that Sue or one of her museum staffers will be happy to explain to you — or you could simply watch one of the museum's two small flat screen monitors, each playing a different video with historians and researchers asserting that Brushy Bill and Billy the Kid were the same person.

According to Sue, visitors seem satisfied to read the museum's informational displays and get the facts from Sue and volunteers. "One man said, 'I wanted to know that the Kid made it out,'" said Sue. "That's the way the majority of them feel."

“Hico doesn’t have industry,” Land says. “We have tourism. That’s our industry. We have some wonderful stores, but people can go shopping anywhere. What is unique about us is the Billy the Kid Museum.” As Director it is her responsibility to promote the museum and to raise funds.

Billy the Kid’s namesake museum survives in Hico, Texas. Visitors to the Billy the Kid Museum in Hico can explore the mythology surrounding the young man’s life story as well as the history of Hico’s past. The museum also features a well-stocked gift store where shoppers may pick up a variety of items including a reproduction of the famous Billy the Kid ferrotype (an early form of photography printing).

 
 

Upcoming Events

Billy The Kid Old West Festival
June 10-11, 2022

Museum Hours

Mon - Sat
9:00 am - 5:00 pm

Sunday
Call for Hours

Address

114 North Pecan Street
Hico, TX 76457