By Caroline Clemmons
Were you a fan of “Gunsmoke” when it was a radio and TV staple? Although I wasn’t aware of the radio show, my family never missed the TV version. (It’s probably in syndication on some station.) At the time we watched “Gunsmoke”, I had no idea that the character of Miss Kitty was based on a real person. That woman was Carlotta J. Thompkins, also known as Lottie Deno, Mystic Maude, Angel of San Antonio, Faro Nell, Queen of the Pasteboards, and Charlotte Thurmond. She and Frank Thurmond were immortalized as Faro Nell and Cherokee Hall in a series known as the Wolfville books, written by Alfred Henry Lewis.
Lottie was born April 21, 1844 to upper-class
Kentucky farmers near Lexington and Louisville. At one time, her father served
in the Kentucky General Assembly. The area traded with both northern and
southern states and her father traveled a great deal on business. He grew
tobacco and hemp as well as engaging in horse trading, racing, and breeding.
With her younger sister, she attended school
at an Episcopalian convent. After completing her education there, the
attractive redhead traveled with her father on business to such destinations as
Detroit, New Orleans, and Europe. He had no son and intended Lottie to take
over his business for him. While on these trips, her father taught her the
intricacies of gambling with cards.
Mary Poindexter was Lottie’s seven-foot
tall nanny. Mary was loyal to and protective of Lottie. Her family didn’t have
to worry about Lottie as long as Mary was with her. On several occasions, Mary
saved Lottie from harm.
When the Civil War began, Lottie was seventeen.
Her father enlisted and was immediately killed in battle. She, her mother, and
sister were left tending the plantation. Relatives pooled money and sent Lottie
to Detroit in the hope she would find a wealthy husband to help her family. Evidently, she was the best chance they had to survive. She
loved the parties and balls, but instead of finding a suitable husband, she met
up with Johnny Golden, one of her father’s former jockeys who had become a
gambler.
Eventually, Lottie ran out of money. She
and Johnny, accompanied by Mary, struck out plying the riverboat gambling
parlors throughout the war. She sent her relatives money but knew they wouldn’t
have approved of her gambling. She told her straight-laced Episcopalian family
that she had married a wealthy Texas rancher. Some say she never saw any of
them again while others insist her sister came to San Antonio after their
mother’s death. So, she repaid them for the money they chipped in to send her to Detroit, even though she believed she had to deceive them.
Near the end of the war, Lottie and Mary
headed for San Antonio. At the time, the town was well-known as a wide-open
gambling town. Johnny Golden was to meet up with them there later. Lottie found
a job dealing in Frank Thurmond’s University Club, with Mary seated on a stool
behind her to watch for trouble.
Lottie’s dress and manners were those of
a genteel Southern lady. She didn’t allow cursing, drinking, or tobacco at her
table. Obviously, such a gracious lady wouldn’t cheat, would she? Men lined up
to play cards with the “Angel of San Antonio”.
Lottie fell in love with her boss, Frank,
and was loyal to him. He and another player got in a fight and Frank killed the
man with a Bowie knife. The deceased man’s family put a bounty on Frank so he
headed west. This was during a
local economic boom on the Texas frontier as demand for bison hides spiked in the mid and late
1870s. Cowboys and traders flush with cash during the period became
targets for gamblers in frontier communities. Soon Lottie found Frank
working in Fort Griffin under the name Mike Fogarty. He was bartender in a
place called the Bee Hive. Lottie got a job dealing there.
It was at
Fort Griffin that her notoriety and legend became most established. Fort
Griffin was a frontier outpost west of Fort Worth near the Texas Panhandle
known for its saloons and the rough element it attracted. (Closest modern
town would be Albany, Texas.) Gaining fame as a gambler, Lottie became
associated with various old west personalities, including Doc Holliday.
Supposedly, Lottie won $3,000 from Doc in one night.
After five years at the Bee Hive, Frank
and Lottie left for New Mexico and married December 2, 1880. Once again, Frank
was in a fight in which he killed a man. This time Lottie and Frank had had
enough of that life and changed course. They left Silver City, New Mexico and settled
in Deming. Frank was in mining and real estate and eventually became an officer
of Deming National Bank. As Charlotte Thurmond, Lottie was a well-respected
member of the community. She even taught Sunday School.
Although they quit gambling, Lottie Deno
hosted one more game in 1892, which raised $40,000 to build St. Luke’s church. Frank’s friend Doc Holliday participated in
that game. Reportedly, Lottie Deno made one of St. Luke’s altar cloths.
Frank and Lottie had been together for
over forty years when he died in 1908.
She died in February 9, 1934 and is buried beside Frank in Deming.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lottie_Deno
https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fde59
https://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-lottiedeno/
https://www.texascooppower.com/texas_stories/history/lottie-deno-lady-gambler
Wow, what an interesting and full life. I loved Gunsmoke but never knew there was a real woman behind the character of Miss Kitty.
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