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Lesser-known Legends of the Old West: Al Swearengen

The Real Life of HBO’s "Deadwoods": Legend-Al Swearengen.

Swearengen was a mean and violet man that beat his working women with reckless abandon, extending the same courtesy to his hired hands, general manager, Dan Doherty and Johnny Burns,who was in charge of the girls welfare. Both Doherty and Burns were known to have brutally beat the women working at the Gem on a regular basic. Swearengen encouraged and supported this kind of behavior.

Swearengen prospered, as the unaware eastern girls filtered into Deadwood, giving him an advantage over any competition with fresh, nice girls, new to the scene of prostitution and the west. Regardless of the many bruises and injuries the women employed by Swearengen sported, the Gem was a cash machine that routinely made between $5000.00 and $10,000.00 per week. A sum that in 1877 made Swearengen prosperous and politically able to bribe his way around the little existing laws, pay for alibis, and maneuver and forge relationships with other formidable citizens that he may have not otherwise been able to persuade to “look the other way,” as he applied his unappealing business practices.

Though a popular spot amongst the rowdy miners of the camp, the Gem Theratre quickly gained a reputation as a violent saloon where gunshots flying through its interior became commonplace. Sometimes aimed between men in drunken fights, the bullets were just as often aimed at the girls themselves. At one time a Gem Theratre prostitute named Tricksie shot a man through the front of his skull after having taken a beating from him. However, the man didn’t immediately die. The doctor was called in who put a probe through the man’s head, amazed that he survived the gunshot at all. He died about thirty minutes later. This scene was depicted on an HBO episode of ‘Deadwood.”

Swearengen lived in and around violence, committing many vilonce acts on a regular basic, including murder. His ruthless nature and crimes against humanity ruined many lives, directly and indirectly. In the early summer of 1879, the Gem suffered a fire, but the damage was quickly repaired and rebuilt. Just three months later, in September, 1879, the entire town of Deadwood suffered a disastrous inferno that claimed some 300 of its buildings, including the Gem Theater.

Denver
Swearengen again rebuilt, this time from the ground up, resulting in a bigger and better theater. When the new Gem was opened in December, 1879 The Daily Times touted it to be the finest theater building ever proposed for Deadwood. In 1899, the Gem suffered its final destructive fire and Swearengen called it quits, leaving Deadwood for good.

According to his obituary, Albert Swearengen was found dead in the middle of a suburban Denver street in late 1904. He apparently died of a massive head wound and was not “hopping a freight train as a common tramp.” However, no one witnessed his death and it shall always remain a slight mystery.

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  1. Kristie Claar

    On August 9, 2011 at 3:41 pm


    well written, good article

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