William F. Goggin

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For the next five years, the trail is cold. He resurfaces in the notes of the Rev. E.W.J. Lindesmith, who served as chaplain at Fort Keogh and as priest for neighboring Miles City from 1880 to 1891. The priest reported Goggin living south of Miles City on a Tongue River ranch raising string beans and squash by 1880. He may have been making a living selling his produce at the fort. In 1882, when Lindesmith was contemplating a new Catholic church and cemetery in Miles City, Goggin's name appears on a list of subscriptions, but it is not clear what the subscription was for, according to researchers at Catholic University of the Americas in Washington, D.C., where the Lindesmith archives are stored.
 
For the next five years, the trail is cold. He resurfaces in the notes of the Rev. E.W.J. Lindesmith, who served as chaplain at Fort Keogh and as priest for neighboring Miles City from 1880 to 1891. The priest reported Goggin living south of Miles City on a Tongue River ranch raising string beans and squash by 1880. He may have been making a living selling his produce at the fort. In 1882, when Lindesmith was contemplating a new Catholic church and cemetery in Miles City, Goggin's name appears on a list of subscriptions, but it is not clear what the subscription was for, according to researchers at Catholic University of the Americas in Washington, D.C., where the Lindesmith archives are stored.
  
It was Christmas Eve 1883 when Goggin really made a name for himself in the brawling city of 2,500. According to accounts in the Yellowstone Journal, he walked into the city early that morning to buy some meat and a jug of whiskey. Dr. J. Jay Wood, who examined the body of Goggin's roommate the next day, remembered seeing Goggin at the butcher shop about 2:30 p.m. Christmas Eve.
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It was Christmas Eve 1883 when Goggin really made a name for himself in the brawling city of 2,500. According to accounts in the Yellowstone Journal, he walked into the city early that morning to buy some meat and a jug of whiskey. Dr. [[J. Jay Wood]], who examined the body of Goggin's roommate the next day, remembered seeing Goggin at the butcher shop about 2:30 p.m. Christmas Eve.
  
 
About 4 p.m., his neighbor, Mrs. Strong, saw him 150 yards from her house on his way home. She testified in probate court about a week later that he was talking, but she could not hear what he was saying. In an earlier account that appeared in the Journal, she was quoted as saying that Goggin was drunk and was swearing loudly as he walked by with a jug in his hands.
 
About 4 p.m., his neighbor, Mrs. Strong, saw him 150 yards from her house on his way home. She testified in probate court about a week later that he was talking, but she could not hear what he was saying. In an earlier account that appeared in the Journal, she was quoted as saying that Goggin was drunk and was swearing loudly as he walked by with a jug in his hands.

Latest revision as of 17:20, 8 February 2014

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