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<ead relatedencoding="marc21">
<eadheader audience="internal"> 
  <eadid countrycode="US" mainagencycode="TxU-TH"
	encodinganalog="852$a">urn:taro:utexas.cah.00935</eadid> 
  <filedesc> 
	 <titlestmt> 
		<titleproper>A Guide to the Roy Bean Scrapbook</titleproper> 
	 </titlestmt> 
  </filedesc> 
  <profiledesc> 
	 <creation>Original EAD encoding by Jessi Fishman according to TARO 2 EAD
		2002 Editing Instructions. 
		<date>April 2008</date></creation> 
	 <langusage>Finding aid written in <language>English.</language></langusage>
	 
  </profiledesc>
</eadheader>
<archdesc type="inventory" level="collection"> 
  <did> 
	 <head>Descriptive Summary</head> 
	 <origination label="Creator:"> 
		<persname encodinganalog="100">Bean, Roy</persname> </origination> 
	 <unittitle encodinganalog="245" label="Title:">Roy Bean
		Scrapbook</unittitle> <langmaterial label="Language:">Materials are written in
	 <language langcode="eng">English.</language></langmaterial> 
	 <physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300$a">1 volume</physdesc> 
	 <repository label="Repository:" encodinganalog="852$a"> 
		<extref href="http://www.cah.utexas.edu" show="new" actuate="onrequest"> 
		  <corpname><subarea> Center for American History, </subarea>The
			 University of Texas at Austin</corpname></extref></repository> 
	 <abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520$a">Scrapbook of Judge Roy
		Bean.</abstract> 
  </did> 
  <bioghist encodinganalog="545"> 
	 <head>Biographical Note</head><p> Roy Bean, a frontier justice of the peace
		known as the "Law West of the Pecos," was born in Mason County, Kentucky, the
		son of Francis and Anna Bean. On October 28, 1866, he married eighteen-year-old
		Virginia Chávez, who bore him four children. The couple were not happy
		together, however. Early in 1882 Roy left home, probably at the suggestion of
		his friend W. N. Monroe, who was building the "Sunset" railroad toward El Paso
		and had almost reached the Pecos. Moving with the grading camps, Bean arrived
		at the site of Vinegarroon, just west of the Pecos, in July. Crime was rife at
		the end of the track; it was often said, "West of the Pecos there is no law;
		west of El Paso, there is no God." To cope with the lawless element the Texas
		Rangers were called in, and they needed a resident justice of the peace in
		order to eliminate the 400-mile round trip to deliver prisoners to the county
		seat at Fort Stockton. The commissioners of Pecos County officially appointed
		Roy Bean justice on August 2, 1882. He retained the post, with interruptions in
		1886 and 1896, when he was voted out, until he retired voluntarily in 1902.</p>
	 
  </bioghist> 
  <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
	 <head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scrapbook of Judge Roy Bean.</p> 
  </scopecontent> 
  <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506"> 
	 <head>Access Restrictions</head><p>Unrestricted access.</p> 
  </accessrestrict> 
  <prefercite encodinganalog="524"> 
	 <head>Preferred Citation</head><p>Roy Bean Scrapbook, Center for American
		History, The University of Texas at Austin.</p> 
  </prefercite> 
  <dsc type="in-depth"> 
	 <head>Detailed Description of the Papers</head> 
	 <c01 level="series" id="ser1"> 
		<did> 
		  <unittitle>Inventory</unittitle> 
		</did> 
		<c02> 
		  <did><container type="box">3L88</container> 
			 <unittitle>Scrapbook </unittitle> 
		  </did> 
		</c02> 
	 </c01></dsc>
</archdesc></ead>
