Benson Shootout – February 28, 1907

The Benson Shootout (also known as the Shootout in Benson or the Rock Fight) occurred on February 27–28, 1907 (sources vary slightly on the exact calendar date due to overnight events), in Benson, Arizona Territory. It stands as one of the last notable Old West-style gunfights, remarkable for its origins in a love triangle, its intense close-quarters combat, and its unusual conclusion involving thrown rocks.

Background and Reason for the Shootout

The confrontation stemmed from a classic lovers’ triangle involving jealousy, pursuit, and threats of violence.

J.A. Tracy, a wealthy businessman and agent for the Helvetia Copper Company at Vail Station, had a prior romantic relationship with a young woman from a prominent Colorado family (her name was withheld from contemporary newspapers to protect her family’s reputation). She rejected further involvement with him and moved on. Between 1905 and 1906, she met and allegedly married D.W. Silverton, Jr. (son of a Kentucky Colonel) in Phoenix, possibly in a ceremony performed by a traveling evangelist. Some later accounts questioned whether the marriage was fully legitimate, but the couple presented themselves as married.

Tracy, unwilling to accept the rejection, pursued the couple with threatening letters. In February 1907, learning they were heading toward Bisbee, he followed them. The Silvertons spotted him at Vail Station and continued to Benson, a key railroad town, where they stayed overnight at the Virginia Hotel near the station. Fearing for their lives, they sought help from local law enforcement and bystanders.

Arizona Ranger Lieutenant Harry C. Wheeler (sometimes referred to in accounts as part of a group with Captain Thomas H. Rynning) was also staying at the Virginia Hotel. The Silvertons informed him of the threats, showed him a photograph of Tracy, and described the danger. Wheeler, known as a level-headed and exceptionally skilled gunman, agreed to intervene and arrest Tracy if he posed an immediate threat.

The Participants

Cochise County Sheriff Harry C. Wheeler — in the pre-statehood Arizona Territory.
Cochise County Sheriff Harry C. Wheeler — in the pre-statehood Arizona Territory.
  • Harry C. Wheeler (1875–1925): Born in Jacksonville, Florida, to a military family (his father was a West Point graduate). Wheeler enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1897, served in the Spanish-American War with the 1st Cavalry as an expert marksman, and received a medical discharge as a sergeant in 1902. He joined the Arizona Rangers in 1903, rising quickly to sergeant and then lieutenant. He had already been involved in at least one prior fatal shooting (killing a saloon robber in Tucson in 1904). Wheeler was respected for his marksmanship, professionalism, and restraint—he reportedly lived by a code that he would never fire first. He later became the third and final captain of the Arizona Rangers (1907–1909), served as Cochise County Sheriff (1912–1918), and as a U.S. Army captain in World War I. He died young in 1925.
  • J.A. Tracy: A prosperous mining company agent from Nevada who had relocated to Arizona. Contemporary accounts portray him as determined and volatile in matters of the heart. He was reportedly wanted for two murders in Nevada (with a $500 reward), one victim being the brother of a former Arizona Ranger, though Wheeler later declined the blood money and suggested it go to the victim’s widow.
  • D.W. Silverton, Jr., and his wife: The couple at the center of the dispute. Silverton confronted Tracy earlier at Vail Station. They were the ones who alerted Wheeler and sought protection while trying to board a train out of Benson.

Other minor figures included hotel staff, bystanders, and possibly Captain Thomas H. Rynning (Wheeler’s superior), who was in the area.

The Shootout

On the morning of the incident, Tracy was at the railroad station/platform, armed with a Colt .45 revolver and waiting as the Silvertons prepared to depart for Bisbee. When he spotted them, he drew his weapon and threatened them.

Wheeler approached and identified himself: “Hold on there. I arrest you. Give me that gun.” Tracy immediately opened fire. A furious pistol duel ensued at close range. Wheeler drew his own revolver and returned fire while advancing methodically, hitting Tracy four times (accounts vary on exact locations but generally include wounds to the neck/chest area, shoulder, hip/thigh, and arm). Tracy hit Wheeler at least once or twice—commonly described as a serious wound to the upper left thigh/groin area and later to the foot/heel.

Tracy feigned surrender (“I am all in. My gun is empty”), prompting Wheeler to lower his guard and approach. Tracy then fired again (hitting Wheeler in the foot). Out of ammunition, Wheeler resorted to throwing rocks at Tracy (or, in some versions, clubbing him with a rock while both were down). The fight ended with both men severely wounded on the street. Wheeler reportedly quipped to the dying Tracy something like, “Well, it was a great fight while it lasted, wasn’t it, old man?” Tracy allegedly expressed no ill will toward Wheeler before succumbing.

The Silvertons escaped unharmed and continued on.

Aftermath

Tracy died of his wounds shortly afterward, reportedly at or near Mescal Station en route to Tucson. Wheeler was seriously wounded but recovered fully after treatment (including time in Tombstone) and returned to duty. He was soon promoted to captain of the Arizona Rangers.

The incident received significant newspaper coverage as a dramatic example of frontier justice. Wheeler wrote a detailed letter to his friend, Pima County Sheriff Nabor Pacheco, expressing sorrow over the necessity of the killing despite believing it was justified.

The Benson Shootout highlighted the twilight of the Old West era and the Arizona Rangers’ role in maintaining order in a still-rough territory. It added to Wheeler’s legendary status as a fearless lawman. Benson, a railroad hub, preserved some of the sites (like the reconstructed station), and the event remains a colorful footnote in Arizona history.

This gunfight is often remembered not just for the bullets but for Wheeler’s resourcefulness with rocks when his revolver ran dry—earning it the nickname “Rock Fight” in some retellings. It exemplified the personal, high-stakes nature of law enforcement in the early 20th-century Southwest.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.