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  1. Joaquin Murrieta Carrillo (sometimes misspelled Murieta or Murietta) (c. 1829 – July 25, 1853), also called the Robin Hood of the West or the Robin Hood of El Dorado, was a Mexican figure of disputed historicity. The novel The Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta: The Celebrated California Bandit (1854) by John Rollin Ridge is ostensibly ...

    • Why 1850s California Was A Hotbed of Racial Tension
    • How The Legend of Joaquín Grew
    • John Rollin Ridge, The Native American Novelist Behind The Joaquín Story

    Beneath the Joaquín Murrieta story lies the racially charged atmosphere of 1850s California, where violence frequently flared between incoming (mostly white) settlers to the new state and the Mexican and indigenous people who had long lived there. Whether Joaquín Murrieta existed or not, that racial tension most certainly did. It grew out of the Me...

    As early as 1850, newspaper reports told of outlaws named "Joaquín" terrorizing California, according to Ireno Paz’s The Life and Adventures of the Celebrated Bandit Joaquín Murrieta. But there's no way that all the crimes attributed to "Joaquín" were committed by the same person, since sometimes crimes would occur hundreds of miles apart on the sa...

    The entirety of the Murrieta narrative—starting with his vigilante story—would never exist if not for the fictionalized biography by John Rollin Ridge. But Ridge wasn’t just a writer—his life is a noteworthy part of history itself, with many details in his biography dovetailing with the Murrieta legend. A Cherokee Indian, Ridge (tribal name Yellow ...

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  2. According to legend, Murrieta—or several “Murrietas”—responded to these oppressive actions by leading bands of outlaws that raided up and down the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys, robbing gold miners and holding up stages. Another common element of the legend is the California governor’s offer of a reward for Murrieta’s capture, dead or alive.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. May 10, 2022 · The finale of Murrieta’s story may never be known for sure. The San Francisco Chronicle reports that even newspapers at the time made varying claims about Murrieta’s alleged death. However, most of the stories about Murrieta agree that Harry Love tracked down the outlaw and his gang in California’s San Joaquin Valley in July 1853.

    • Who was Joaquin Murrieta?1
    • Who was Joaquin Murrieta?2
    • Who was Joaquin Murrieta?3
    • Who was Joaquin Murrieta?4
    • Who was Joaquin Murrieta?5
  4. May 8, 2024 · Unmasking Joaquin Murrieta: Myth vs Reality. California boasts some of the most notorious figures from the Old West – rough and tumble men who engaged in robbery, murder, and often met their demise either in capture or on the run. However, outlaws can evolve into legends over time, much like the renowned Joaquin Murrieta, known as the "Robin ...

  5. Jul 9, 2018 · The popular ballad “El Corrido de Joaquin Murrieta,” for example, depicts the bandit chief as a fearless enforcer of higher law who appears in saloons “punishing Anglos” while wrongly condemned by the state’s “unjust laws”: “Ay, que leyes tan injustas / fue llamarme bandolero” (“Oh, what unjust laws / to label me an outlaw”).

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  7. Mar 28, 2018 · The San Joaquin Republican predicted Murrieta would be “summarily dealt with” at Willow Creek, to which the arresting officer was escorting him, but he escaped the noose, possibly by paying a bribe. Meanwhile, Claudio Feliz got himself shot and captured while wresting his 15-year-old brother from a posse that was transporting Reyes to the jail in Sonora.

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