Thursday, June 12, 2014

Show Me Your Badge, Ranger: Can You Spot the Fakes?

By Kathleen Rice Adams

Texas Ranger badges are a hot commodity in the collectibles market, but the caveat “buyer beware” applies in a big way. The vast majority of items marketed as genuine Texas Ranger badges are reproductions, facsimiles, or toys. Very few legitimate badges exist outside museums and family collections, and those that do hardly ever are sold. There’s a very good reason for that: Manufacturing, possessing, or selling Texas Ranger insignia, even fakes that are “deceptively similar” to the real thing, violates Texas law except in specific circumstances.

According to Byron A. Johnson, executive director of the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum (the official historical center of the Texas Ranger law-enforcement agency), “Spurious badges and fraudulent representation or transactions connected with them date back to the 1950s and are increasing. We receive anywhere from 10 to 30 inquiries a month on badges, the majority connected with sales on eBay.”

If you had to, could you identify a legitimate Texas Ranger badge? Test your knowledge: Which of the alleged badges below are genuine? Pick one from each set. (All images are ©Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, Waco, Texas, and are used with permission. All Rights Reserved.)

Set 1


©TRHFM, Waco, TX
©TRHFM, Waco, TX

Answer: The right-hand badge, dated 1889, is the earliest authenticated Texas Ranger badge in the collection of the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum. Badges weren’t standard issue for Rangers until 1935, although from 1874 onward, individual Rangers sometimes commissioned badges from jewelers or gunsmiths, who made them from Mexican coins. Relatively few Rangers wore a badge out in the open. As for the item on the left? There’s no such thing as a “Texas Ranger Special Agent.”


Set 2

©TRHFM, Waco, TX
©TRHFM, Waco, TX

Answer: On the left is an official shield-type badge issued between 1938 and 1957. Ranger captains received gold badges; the shields issued to lower ranks were silver. The badge on the right is a fake, though similar authentic badges exist.


Set 3

©TRHFM, Waco, TX
©TRHFM, Waco, TX

Answer: The left-hand badge was the official badge of the Rangers from July 1957 to October 1962. Called the “blue bottle cap badge,” the solid, “modernized” design was universally reviled. The right-hand badge is a fake. According to the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, “No genuine Texas Ranger badges are known to exist with ‘Frontier Battalion’ engraved on them.”


Set 4

©TRHFM, Waco, TX

©TRHFM, Waco, TX

Answer: The badge on the right, called the “wagon wheel badge,” has been the official Texas Ranger badge since October 1962. Each is made from a Mexican five-peso silver coin. The badge on the left is a “fantasy badge.” According to the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, the most common designation on such badges is “Co. A.”

How did you do?

For more information about the Texas Rangers—including the history of the organization, biographical sketches of individual Rangers, and all kinds of information about badges and other insignia—visit the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum online at TexasRanger.org. The museum and its staff have my utmost gratitude for their assistance with this post.



My latest story appears in the Prairie Rose Publications anthology Lassoing a Mail-Order Bride.

“The Big Uneasy”


To escape the unthinkable with a man about whom she knows too much, New Orleans belle Josephine LaPierre agrees to marry a Texan about whom she knows nothing.

Falling in love with his brother was not part of her plan.

8 comments:

  1. I would be fooled by the fake badge :-(

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  2. Another excellent article, Tex. You find the coolest things to chat about...I'm also off to 'tweet' this'n...♥

    ~ Cindy Nord

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  3. Great article! Thanks for sharing the Texas Ranger badge saga and the differences between the real and the fake. I learn something each time you post!

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  4. Judy, I thought I knew something about Texas Ranger badges, but most of these fooled me too! :-D

    Thanks for the tweet, Owl!

    Carra, one of the things I love about the Sweethearts is the vast collection of research we've all accumulated. It's wonderful to be able to share some of our interests with others, isn't it? :-)

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  5. Kathleen, I loved visiting the Texas Ranger Museum in Waco. I only identified 50% correctly on the badges. Thanks for the lesson. I guess I'd better stick with being honest--don't think I'd make it as a crook.

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  6. Really interesting! Sometimes you see people on shows like "Pawn Stars" trying to sell badges. The badges they have are almost always fakes. I loved trying to tell the difference ... I guess I'd soon be the fool parted from her money. :D

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  7. Isn't the museum wonderful, Caroline? Did you know they're building a collection of books about Texas Rangers, including fiction in which the Rangers play a significant role? Ask western author Jim Griffin for details. He may be a dang Yankee, but he's an expert about Ranger history and lore (and a sweetheart, to boot). :-)

    Lorrie, I've only caught brief snatches of Pawn Stars, but the bits I've seen have been fascinating. Male Human loves the show and seldom misses an episode. Like you and Caroline, I'd make a terrible con artist or collector. :-D

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  8. Kathleen, I really enjoyed this post about the Texas Rangers/badges. ("Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges! BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!") Very interesting stuff.

    Oh, I love Pawn Stars! Just love it. Antiques Road Show is another favorite, and some of the stuff people have--the badges and memorabilia, etc. --it's so fun to learn about how they can tell the fakes apart from the real thing.

    Cheryl

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