While searching through 100-year-old criminal
records in Waco, Texas, I came across an indictment against “one Chicken.”
Although it may sound like a case of a fowl running afoul of the law, it
was a situation where officials filed charges against
a lawbreaker who was only known by his nickname: Chicken.
Similarly,
Erath County officials charged “One Cat-Faced Kid” with gaming within the city
of Dublin in November 1891. Then in May of 1894 a charge of prostitution was
filed against “One Cross-Eyed Woman.”
Chicken’s identity surfaces in another indictment in Waco. In January
1903 Jonathan Columbus Turnbow, alias Chicken, did “unlawfully keep and
exhibit, for the purpose of gaming, a gaming table and bank.” In 1910 either he
or one of his relatives, noted only as “Mr. Turnbow,” and a madam, Mary Doud,
were subpoenaed as witnesses in the State of Texas vs. Mary Hayden in
which the accused was charged with running a brothel in Waco.
Sometimes indictments reveal the true identities of these colorfully
named characters when arrests were made. The accused, if posting bond, had to
sign his or her name. But not so in the cases of Erath County’s feline-faced kid
or the cross-eyed hooker, both of whom apparently eluded capture.