Pleasant Valley War
The Pleasant Valley War, also known as the Graham-Tewksbury Feud, was a range war fought in Pleasant Valley in the Arizona Territory from 1882 to 1892, primarily between the cattle-ranching Graham family and the sheep-herding Tewksbury family over grazing rights, livestock rustling accusations, and economic competition in a remote frontier valley.[1][2] The conflict escalated from initial disputes into a series of ambushes, gunfights, and vendettas that resulted in approximately 20 deaths, including most adult males from both families, marking it as one of the deadliest and longest family feuds in the American West.[2][3] Interventions by territorial sheriffs, such as Commodore Perry Owens, temporarily quelled violence through posse actions but failed to fully resolve underlying tensions until attrition and external pressures diminished the factions by the early 1890s. Defining characteristics included the absence of clear legal resolutions, reliance on personal reprisals, and the role of geographic isolation in prolonging the bloodshed, with survivor accounts later revealing cycles of retaliation driven by perceived betrayals and resource scarcity rather than ideological divides.[4]
Historical Context
Geographical Setting and Frontier Conditions
Pleasant Valley lies in Gila County, Arizona Territory, forming a remote basin within the broader Tonto Basin region, approximately 100 miles northeast of Phoenix and directly beneath the Mogollon Rim escarpment. Spanning roughly 7,600 acres at an elevation of about 5,000 feet, the valley features open grasslands and glades ideal for grazing livestock, drained by seasonal creeks such as Cherry Creek and fringed by rugged canyons, ridges, and draws. The surrounding terrain includes chaparral shrublands, pinyon-juniper woodlands to the south toward the Mazatzal Mountains, and transitioning to ponderosa pine forests along the northern rim, creating a diverse but challenging landscape for overland travel and settlement.[5][6][7] In the 1880s, frontier conditions in Pleasant Valley were marked by extreme isolation, with a settler population of fewer than 250 individuals scattered across ranches, far from established towns or reliable communication lines. Access relied on arduous wagon trails through mountainous passes, exacerbating supply shortages and delaying external aid during emergencies. The semi-arid climate brought scorching summers exceeding 100°F, freezing winters with snowfall on higher elevations, and dependence on erratic monsoon rains for water and forage, which often led to overgrazing pressures in the limited valley floor.[3][8] Persistent threats from Tonto Apache bands, who conducted raids into the early 1880s despite U.S. military campaigns, compelled settlers to maintain armed guards and fortified homesteads, fostering a pervasive atmosphere of vigilance and mistrust. The lack of formal governance, with distant county seats like Globe over 50 miles away and infrequent sheriff patrols, meant disputes over water, land, and stock were resolved through informal arbitration or vigilante action, heightening tensions in this lawless expanse.[9][10]Economic Pressures: Cattle Versus Sheep Ranching
The core economic tension between cattle and sheep ranching in Pleasant Valley arose from their fundamentally incompatible grazing habits on Arizona's arid open range, where forage and water were scarce resources shared on a first-come, first-served basis. Cattle, as practiced by the Graham family, selectively grazed the tops of grasses, permitting regrowth cycles essential for sustaining herds in the region's semi-desert conditions; a single cow required approximately 20-30 acres of rangeland annually to thrive, depending on precipitation. Sheep, however, consumed vegetation down to the roots, compacting soil and inhibiting regeneration for years, which effectively sterilized large swaths of pasture for cattle use—rendering the land economically unproductive for beef production while favoring wool and mutton operations that could tolerate poorer recovery. This disparity not only reduced carrying capacity but also accelerated overgrazing, with sheep bands capable of denuding 1,000 acres per week under herding pressure, directly threatening the viability of established cattle outfits.[2][11] The Tewksbury family's pivot to sheep herding around 1884, initially as partners with external Navajo and Mexican outfits, amplified these pressures by introducing large migratory flocks—often exceeding 5,000 head per band—into the valley's 50-mile-long basin, which supported only limited grass during wet seasons. Cattlemen like the Grahams viewed this as an invasion that halved effective range availability, as sheep herders prioritized speed and volume over sustainability, fouling creeks and springs by pawing mud into water holes and concentrating animals in bottlenecks; such practices increased disease risks, like scabies transmission between species, further eroding cattle health and market value. Economically, while sheep offered quicker turnover via wool sales (with Arizona's industry peaking at over 1 million head by 1885), they demanded intensive herding labor—typically 1 herder per 1,000 sheep versus freer-range cattle management—straining local resources and inviting rustling claims as bands crossed unfenced boundaries. This shift reportedly yielded profit-sharing deals for the Tewksburys but imposed cascading losses on cattle ranchers, whose herds faced starvation risks amid the 1880s droughts, exacerbating bankruptcy threats in a market where beef prices fluctuated wildly post-1884 overstocking.[12][2] Although some contemporary accounts and later analyses emphasize personal animosities over pure economic drivers, the grazing incompatibility imposed verifiable hardships: Pleasant Valley's estimated 100,000-acre range, once adequate for several hundred cattle heads, saw forage yields drop by up to 70% in contested areas following sheep incursions, compelling ranchers to expand operations or relocate at high cost. Cattle interests, aligned with larger Arizona stock associations, lobbied territorial officials for range protections, but unenforced open-access policies perpetuated the standoff, turning economic competition into a zero-sum contest where sheep expansion correlated with cattle herd reductions of 20-30% in affected basins by 1886.[13][3]Pre-Feud Settlements and Apache Threats
Pleasant Valley, situated in the Tonto Basin along the southern edge of the Mogollon Rim in what is now Gila County, Arizona, attracted its first white settlers in the mid-1870s due to its abundant grasslands, water sources from Cherry Creek and the East Verde River, and relative isolation from larger population centers.[3][7] The earliest cabins were constructed around 1876–1877 by pioneers seeking opportunities in ranching and mining, at a time when the valley formed the eastern fringe of Yavapai County in the Arizona Territory.[3][7] These initial homesteads were rudimentary, supporting small-scale cattle operations amid challenging frontier conditions including harsh terrain and limited access via trails from Globe and Payson.[14] Among the early arrivals was the Tewksbury family, led by James D. Tewksbury, who relocated from California mining ventures and established a ranch on Cherry Creek in 1879, initially herding horses and later transitioning to sheep.[15][14] The Grahams, originally miners in Globe, followed suit in the late 1870s by selling their claims and moving to the valley to pursue cattle ranching, initially forging cooperative ties with the Tewksburys through shared labor and mutual aid against common hardships.[11] By 1880, the population remained sparse—fewer than a dozen families—with settlements clustered near watercourses to facilitate livestock grazing on the valley's 20-mile-long expanse of fertile bottomland.[3] The Apache presence posed a persistent threat to these settlers, as the region lay within traditional territories of the Tonto and Yavapai Apache bands, who had long utilized the Tonto Basin for raiding and seasonal migration.[16][17] Although U.S. military campaigns in the 1870s, including forced relocations to reservations like San Carlos, had subdued many groups following the Yavapai-Apache War (1871–1875), sporadic raids continued into the early 1880s, targeting livestock and isolated homesteads.[18][3] Settlers reported Apache incursions as early as 1881, involving stealthy thefts of cattle and horses that strained nascent ranching economies and heightened armed vigilance, with families maintaining constant watches and fortifying cabins against potential attacks.[3] These threats, compounded by the Apache warrior tradition of surprise tactics, instilled a pervasive sense of insecurity, fostering alliances among settlers for defense while the U.S. Army's distant posts offered limited immediate protection until Geronimo's final surrender in 1886.[3][17]Origins of the Conflict
Initial Family Rivalries and Land Disputes
The Tewksbury brothers, including John D. and Edwin, settled in Pleasant Valley, Arizona Territory, around 1880, initially focusing on cattle ranching in the fertile but isolated basin along Cherry Creek. Ed Tewksbury subsequently invited Tom Graham and his brothers—John and William—from Texas to join them in 1881, fostering an early partnership in the cattle trade amid the valley's abundant grasslands and water sources. This collaboration reflected the frontier's cooperative necessities, as small operators pooled resources against larger threats like Apache raids and rustling.[2][19] Tensions emerged as the Tewksburys diversified into sheep herding by 1882, a shift driven by market incentives but incompatible with cattle operations, since sheep cropped grass to the roots, hindering regrowth essential for grazing herds. The Grahams, adhering to cattle ranching, viewed this as an encroachment on shared range, sparking disputes over grazing rights and property lines in the valley's limited 20-mile expanse, where water from perennial streams like Cherry Creek became focal points of contention. Early rustling allegations compounded these issues, with claims that the Tewksburys mixed their sheep with Graham cattle, complicating ownership and leading to acrimonious divisions of jointly held livestock.[20][21][2] Personal animosities intensified when both families aligned temporarily against established cattle baron James Stinson, whose Aztec Land and Cattle Company sought dominance in the region. However, by late 1882, the Grahams reportedly accepted favorable terms from Stinson—including potential employment or land concessions—effectively betraying the Tewksburys, who resisted such overtures and faced accusations of rustling Stinson's stock. This schism, rooted in opportunistic shifts amid scarce arable land and overgrazing pressures, transformed economic rivalries into entrenched family hostilities, setting the stage for violent escalation.[22][23]Role of External Outfits and Rustling Allegations
The rustling allegations that ignited the Pleasant Valley conflict originated in the early 1880s, centered on claims that local ranchers, including members of both the Graham and Tewksbury families, were stealing cattle from James Stinson's large-scale operation in the valley.[23] Stinson, an external cattle baron with extensive herds, accused small operators of misbranding and appropriating his stock, a practice reportedly widespread among settlers struggling with slim margins in the harsh frontier economy.[3] These claims prompted legal warrants and heightened vigilance, transforming petty theft suspicions into a flashpoint for interpersonal distrust.[7] In 1884, the allegations escalated when Tom Graham, secretly employed by Stinson as a range detective, formally charged the Tewksburys with rustling Stinson's cattle, stemming from a disputed agreement over shared grazing and branding practices.[23] The Tewksburys were acquitted after trial, with the jury viewing the charges as a fabricated setup, while the Grahams faced perjury accusations in retaliation—a reversal that deepened the familial rift and solidified opposing alignments.[23] This episode, occurring amid broader complaints of nocturnal cattle thefts that disrupted ranchers' security, underscored how rustling claims served as pretexts for eliminating rivals rather than mere property disputes.[3] External outfits amplified these tensions by injecting large-scale commercial interests into the local dynamics. Stinson's outfit, later acquired by the Aztec Land and Cattle Company (known as the Hashknife Outfit) in 1885, represented Eastern-backed corporate ranching that competed aggressively for range resources, with its Texas cowboys notorious for their own involvement in rustling from smaller herds.[3] Concurrently, the Tewksbury brothers partnered with the Daggs Brothers, Arizona's preeminent sheep wool shippers based in Flagstaff, agreeing in summer 1886 to herd and protect two large Daggs sheep flocks through Pleasant Valley on a profit-sharing basis—a move that cattle interests decried as range degradation and prompted reciprocal rustling accusations against sheep operations.[24] This alliance drew the Tewksburys deeper into sheep advocacy, aligning them against Graham-cattle coalitions, while the Hashknife's arrival intensified cattle theft reports and deputized enforcers, broadening the feud from family vendettas to a proxy war over livestock dominance.[7]Escalation Phase (1882–1885)
Early Shootings and Alliances
The initial violent confrontations in the Pleasant Valley feud occurred in 1883, transitioning the conflict from accusations of rustling to armed clashes. On May 17, 1883, John Gilliland, a local rancher allied with the Grahams through prior associations and shared cattle interests, accompanied by his nephew Louis Ruiz, approached the Tewksbury ranch amid ongoing disputes over stolen livestock. Gilliland initiated the altercation by drawing his weapon and firing the first shot, which narrowly missed Ed Tewksbury's head; John Graham and Ed Tewksbury responded with gunfire, wounding Gilliland.[7] [14] No deaths resulted, but the incident prompted arrests and a trial in Prescott, Arizona, where Gilliland and Ruiz faced charges of assault with intent to kill, though outcomes favored self-defense claims from the Tewksbury side due to witness testimonies from both families agreeing on Gilliland's provocation.[7] This shootout crystallized emerging alliances, as the Grahams, primarily cattle ranchers, increasingly aligned with other bovine operations wary of sheepherding's impact on grazing lands, while the Tewksburys, who had shifted to sheep, drew support from mutton interests and Basque herders. Earlier, from 1881 to 1882, both families had cooperated against external threats, notably James Stinson's large-scale cattle outfit, which accused locals of rebranding and rustling its herds—Stinson dispatched armed cowboys to recover stock, fostering a brief unity among smaller Pleasant Valley operators like the Grahams and Tewksburys against such incursions.[25] [15] However, post-1883, economic rivalries—cattlemen viewing sheep as land-degraders that fouled water sources and overgrazed ranges—solidified the divide, with the Grahams enlisting allies like the Blevins clan for muscle and the Tewksburys relying on kin and hired hands for defense.[2] [9] Subsequent skirmishes in 1884 and 1885 remained non-lethal but escalated rustling reprisals, including reported ambushes and livestock thefts attributed to each side, further entrenching the factions without broader intervention from authorities distant from the remote Tonto Basin.[15] These early exchanges, lacking fatalities, nonetheless set the pattern for retaliatory violence driven by territorial control and economic survival, as neither family yielded ground amid Arizona's frontier lawlessness.[26]Hashknife and Daggs Outfits' Involvement
The Aztec Land and Cattle Company, operating as the Hashknife Outfit, acquired significant ranching interests in northern Arizona, including the purchase of the Stinson outfit's holdings in Pleasant Valley by 1885, thereby entering the region's volatile cattle-sheep dynamics. This Texas-based corporation drove large herds of cattle into the area starting in the mid-1880s, employing rough cowboys who enforced range dominance through aggressive tactics against sheep operations, such as scattering herds, poisoning water sources, or outright killing animals to protect grazing lands for cattle.[27][3] The outfit's arrival intensified existing tensions, as their cowboys aligned informally with the Graham family's pro-cattle stance, viewing sheep incursions as a direct economic threat that degraded pastures by overgrazing and compacting soil.[28] Concurrently, the Daggs Outfit, a prominent sheep ranching enterprise run by the five Daggs brothers from Flagstaff, forged a partnership with the sheep-sympathizing Tewksbury brothers in spring 1886, leasing substantial herds—estimated in the thousands of head—for grazing in Pleasant Valley. This agreement tasked the Tewksburys with herding and protecting the sheep through contested territory, marking a deliberate expansion of ovine operations into cattle-dominated ranges and serving as a flashpoint that escalated personal animosities into organized violence.[29] The influx of Daggs sheep provoked retaliatory raids from Hashknife hands and Graham allies, including documented instances of sheep massacres and ambushes, as the outfits' conflicting economic imperatives—cattle requiring rotational grazing versus sheep's tolerance for denser foraging—clashed over finite water and forage resources.[24] These external corporate involvements transformed the feud from localized family disputes into a proxy range war, with Hashknife cowboys participating in search parties and enforcements that heightened lethality, while Daggs' backing emboldened Tewksbury resistance; records indicate this phase correlated with a surge in rustling allegations and shootings by late 1885, underscoring how large-scale outfits amplified frontier resource conflicts without direct legal arbitration.[3][28]Peak Violence (1886–1887)
Shootout at Tewksbury Ranch
On September 2, 1887, a group aligned with the Graham faction, including Andy Cooper and associates from the Blevins gang, launched an assault on the Lower Tewksbury Ranch located on Cherry Creek in Pleasant Valley, Arizona.[13] The attackers, numbering around six to eight men, surrounded the cabin occupied by John Tewksbury, his wife Dora, Edwin "Ed" Tewksbury, William Jacobs, and possibly Jim Roberts and other family members or allies.[30] The siege began at dawn with sustained rifle fire from the assailants, who positioned themselves to prevent escape while targeting the structure.[11] The defenders returned fire from inside the cabin, but the intensity of the attack limited their ability to counter effectively. John Tewksbury and William Jacobs attempted to flee or reposition during the exchange and were fatally shot, dying without opportunity to discharge their weapons.[13] Ed Tewksbury sustained serious wounds but survived, later crediting the thick adobe walls for shielding the occupants from worse casualties.[11] The gunfight lasted several hours, with the attackers withdrawing after inflicting the deaths but failing to overrun the ranch. No assailants were reported killed in this specific engagement.[30] This incident followed closely on the heels of the September 1 ambush near the ranch, where John and Ed Tewksbury along with John Roberts had killed Henry Middleton—a Graham sympathizer—and wounded Joe Ellenwood, heightening retaliatory tensions.[13] The Tewksbury Ranch shootout marked one of the feud's deadliest direct confrontations, contributing to the 1887 peak of violence between sheep and cattle interests, exacerbated by external gunmen and rustling disputes. Contemporary accounts noted the ambush-like nature of the killings of Tewksbury and Jacobs, underscoring the feud's shift toward opportunistic ambushes over open range conflicts.[13]Owens–Blevins Confrontations
In the midst of the Pleasant Valley War, Apache County Sheriff Commodore Perry Owens targeted members of the Blevins family, who had allied with the Graham faction against the Tewksburys and were implicated in rustling and feud-related killings.[13] On September 4, 1887, Owens rode to Holbrook to serve an arrest warrant on Andy Blevins (also known as Andy Cooper), a key Blevins figure wanted primarily for horse stealing but suspected in murders tied to the conflict.[31][32] The Blevins resided in a small cottage where the family, including Andy's mother Mary, brothers John and Sam Houston Blevins (aged 14 or 15), and visitor Mose Roberts (a brother-in-law or associate), were gathered for Sunday dinner.[31][32] Owens approached the residence and called for Andy to surrender, but Andy refused and drew a six-shooter from inside the house.[31][32] Andy then burst through the door firing at Owens, who responded by shooting him in the stomach with his Colt .45 revolver, killing him instantly.[32] John Blevins immediately fired from within, his shot missing Owens but striking and killing Andy's nearby horse; Owens returned fire, wounding John in the shoulder.[31][32] Mose Roberts then charged out armed with a six-shooter, only to be fatally shot by Owens.[32] As the exchange continued, young Sam Houston Blevins emerged with a pistol and was killed by Owens' gunfire.[31][13] The entire shootout lasted approximately one minute, with Owens firing only five shots, all of which struck their targets, while he remained unharmed.[32] The confrontation effectively decimated the male Blevins family presence in the feud, leaving John as the sole surviving brother from the incident, though he fled wounded.[13] Eyewitness accounts and Owens' own recollection corroborated the sequence, portraying it as a defensive response to armed resistance rather than unprovoked aggression.[31] This event intensified law enforcement scrutiny on feud participants but drew criticism for the deaths, including that of the underage Sam, contributing to Owens' loss in his bid for re-election later that year.[32] Despite the toll, no formal charges were brought against Owens, underscoring the chaotic enforcement environment of Arizona Territory ranching disputes.[32]Perkins Store Incidents and Broader Clashes
In September 1887, Yavapai County Sheriff William "Billy" Mulvenon assembled a posse of approximately 14 men to pursue members of the Graham faction amid ongoing investigations into rustling, murders, and feud-related violence in Pleasant Valley.[33][34] The targets included John Graham, wanted in connection with prior killings such as that of sheepherder William "Big Bill" Jacobs in August 1887, and Charles "Charlie" Blevins, brother of the recently deceased Andy Blevins, killed by Apache County Sheriff Commodore Perry Owens earlier that month.[2][33] Mulvenon's group, which included figures perceived by some as aligned with the Tewksbury interests, tracked the suspects to the vicinity of Perkins Store, an unfinished general store about one mile south of the Graham ranch in what is now Young, Arizona.[34][29] On September 21, 1887, the posse positioned themselves behind a four-foot-high rock wall surrounding the store, awaiting the approach of John Graham, Charlie Blevins, and a third man, possibly a cowboy named Ellenwood.[34][13] As Graham and Blevins neared the structure, Mulvenon emerged and demanded their surrender.[2] Accounts of the ensuing shootout vary: Mulvenon later testified during a grand jury hearing that Graham and Blevins reached for their guns first, justifying the posse's lethal response as self-defense, while critics alleged an ambush without adequate warning.[33] In the exchange of gunfire, John Graham and Charlie Blevins were killed—Graham shot multiple times and Blevins mortally wounded—while posse member Joe Woods sustained serious injuries; the third man reportedly fled unharmed.[2][34] The Perkins Store incident exacerbated tensions, drawing scrutiny to Mulvenon's methods and potential biases, as his posse included individuals with ties to the Tewksbury side and operated across county lines without clear Apache County coordination.[33] Broader clashes in late 1887 reflected the feud's spillover effects, including retaliatory rustling and skirmishes involving allied outfits like remnants of the Blevins gang, who ambushed travelers and harassed Tewksbury holdings in response to the Owens and Mulvenon actions.[2] These events, occurring amid a tally of at least 10 deaths that year alone, underscored the war's shift from family vendettas to wider law enforcement interventions, though prosecutions remained rare due to witness intimidation and jurisdictional disputes.[11] The store itself, fortified with gun portals, survived as a physical remnant of the violence, later recognized for its historical association with the feud's peak intensity.[29]Waning and Resolution (1888–1892)
Tom Horn's Role as Enforcer
Tom Horn, a former U.S. Army scout and Pinkerton operative known for tracking Apache warriors, entered the fray of the Pleasant Valley War during its later stages around 1887–1888, potentially serving as an enforcer amid ongoing rustling and vendettas.[35] Historical accounts place Horn in the Tonto Basin region, where he reportedly possessed credentials from multiple sheriffs, positioning him as a range detective tasked with investigating cattle thefts linked to feud participants.[36] Old-timers interviewed in historical inquiries claimed Horn was hired by the Hashknife cattle outfit—previously allied with the Grahams—to spy on or target Tewksbury associates accused of rustling, reflecting cattlemen's efforts to curb economic losses as the feud shifted from open clashes to targeted enforcement.[36] Horn's autobiography, penned while awaiting execution in 1903, exaggerated his exploits in the conflict, portraying himself as a pivotal gunman, though contemporaries and later analyses dismiss much of this as self-aggrandizement.[37] He denied aligning with either the Graham or Tewksbury factions, insisting he was "caught in the middle" without partisan involvement, a claim that aligns with his self-described role as a neutral operative enforcing property rights against rustlers rather than fueling family animosities.[35] Some evidence suggests possible ties to Ed Tewksbury, a feud survivor, but this lacks corroboration and contradicts reports of his anti-rustling activities favoring established cattle operations.[37][38] By 1888–1892, as violence subsided into sporadic killings and lynchings, Horn's presence coincided with efforts to stabilize ranching through extralegal deterrence, mirroring his later Wyoming career where he executed suspected rustlers on behalf of large outfits.[39] His marksmanship and scouting skills made him a feared figure, yet definitive proof of specific killings attributable to him in Pleasant Valley remains elusive, with historians noting the feud's opacity and Horn's tendency to inflate his narrative for notoriety.[40] This ambiguity underscores broader challenges in verifying enforcer roles in frontier disputes, where oral traditions often outpaced written records.[37]Final Deaths and Feud's Exhaustion
The final significant death in the Pleasant Valley War occurred on August 2, 1892, when Thomas H. Graham, the last surviving brother of the Graham faction, was ambushed and fatally shot while hauling grain in a wagon near the Double Butte schoolhouse outside Tempe, Arizona.[41][42] Graham, who had relocated from Pleasant Valley following his brother John's death in 1887, sustained wounds that paralyzed him from the neck down; before succumbing, he identified Edwin Tewksbury and John Rhodes as his assailants.[42][12] Tewksbury, a principal in the Tewksbury faction, was arrested and tried twice for Graham's murder but acquitted both times due to insufficient evidence linking him directly to the shooting, despite his later confession to his stepmother that he had orchestrated the ambush using horses strung along the roadside to facilitate escape.[41][43] This event eliminated the core leadership of the Graham side, as prior fatalities had already claimed brothers John and William Graham, along with numerous allies.[43] With no immediate reprisals and the primary antagonists deceased or dispersed, the feud exhausted itself by 1892, transitioning from open conflict to sporadic legal proceedings and individual pursuits. Survivors like Tewksbury and Rhodes subsequently entered law enforcement roles, signaling a shift toward institutional resolution over vigilantism.[44] The absence of further documented killings attributable to the rivalry, combined with the relocation of remaining participants and increasing territorial oversight, marked the effective conclusion of the decade-long violence that had claimed an estimated 20 to 50 lives overall.[45][44]Casualties and Immediate Aftermath
Tally of Known Deaths and Injuries
The Pleasant Valley War resulted in a disputed number of casualties, with legendary accounts estimating 20 to 50 deaths, often including disappearances and unrelated killings attributed retrospectively to the feud.[44] Recent historical scholarship, drawing on primary records, identifies fewer than a dozen deaths directly linked to factional violence between the Graham-Tewksbury groups from 1886 to 1892, emphasizing that inflated tallies stem from conflating Apache raids, disease, and independent crimes with the core conflict.[42] Injuries were sporadically recorded, typically in surviving accounts of shootouts, but many went undocumented as participants either recovered without formal report or succumbed to wounds later classified as deaths.| Name | Affiliation | Date | Circumstances |
|---|---|---|---|
| John Tewksbury | Tewksbury | February 2, 1887 | Killed alongside William Jacobs during an armed assault on the Tewksbury ranch by Graham allies including Andy Cooper and John Blevins.[15] |
| William Jacobs | Tewksbury ally | February 2, 1887 | Killed in the same ranch attack.[15] |
| Bill Tewksbury | Tewksbury | March 1887 | Fatally shot in a subsequent clash tied to the feud.[13] |
| Hamp Blevins | Graham/Blevins | July 1887 | Killed with John Payne in a shootout at a cabin during an attempted raid on Tewksbury holdings.[46] |
| John Payne | Graham ally | July 1887 | Killed in the same cabin shootout.[46] |
| Henry Middleton | Graham ally | September 1, 1887 | Shot dead at Tewksbury ranch by John and Ed Tewksbury along with John Roberts.[13] |
| Andy Blevins | Graham/Blevins | September 11, 1887 | Shot by Sheriff Commodore Perry Owens during a confrontation at the Blevins home.[3] |
| Samuel Blevins | Graham/Blevins | September 11, 1887 | 14-year-old killed by a stray bullet from Owens' rifle piercing the door during the same confrontation.[3] |
| Tom Graham | Graham | March 2, 1892 | Assassinated in Tempe by Ed Tewksbury and John Rhodes, marking a final act of the lingering feud.[44] |