The Power Brothers, WWI Draft Resisters
By Max McNabb
May 07, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Old man Power didn’t want his sons
to be cannon fodder in the First World War. Jeff Power told his boys, John and
Tom, not to register for the draft. The rich man’s war had nothing to do with
them. In 1918, the Power family, originally from West Texas, had a gold mine to
work in Arizona’s Gila Valley.
“They reacted the way Texans would react,” historian Jeff
Robenalt says in the documentary
Power’s War.
“They didn’t cause the war… they didn’t make the draft. Why should they register
for it?”
The young brothers planned to remain in the Galiuro Mountains
until the war ended, then everything would blow over. But the US government had
other plans. On February 9, 1918, Deputy US Marshal Haynes, Sheriff McBride, and
Deputy Kempton met with volunteer Deputy Kane Wootan. The lawmen rode up into
the mountains to arrest John and Tom Power for failing to register for the
selective draft.
All four of the lawmen were members of the Mormon Church.
Writer Roderick Roberts notes the Gila Valley was heavily Mormon and the Power
family’s status as non-Mormon newcomers caused some of their neighbors to view
them with hostility. The Powers claimed the Wootans wanted their gold mine and
were willing to use the WWI conscription to take it. Sheriff McBride served as
chairman of the county draft board. If John and Tom were drafted, their father
couldn’t work the mine alone and would have to sell.
Just before dawn, the sound of startled horses woke Jeff Power
in the family cabin. He stepped to the door and opened it. A voice in the
darkness shouted, “Throw up your hands!”
Jeff Power raised his hands. Three shots cracked and the old
man fell, shot down in his own doorway.
The gunfight that followed was the deadliest in Arizona
history. The posse fired into the cabin. John and Tom Power grabbed Winchesters
and fought back. The family’s hired hand, an ex-Army scout named Tom Sisson,
took cover. When the smoke cleared, Jeff Power and three lawmen were dead, a
fourth escaped, and the Power brothers had suffered wounded eyes from flying
splinters and glass. The attackers never identified themselves as lawmen. Only
after standing over the bodies did the Powers realize the dead men wore badges.
John
Power, left, Tom Power, right
The shootout at Powers’ cabin sent Arizona into hysteria. A
massive manhunt ensued, posses swearing to kill the fugitives on sight. Three
hundred soldiers from El Paso joined the hunt. The Power brothers and Sisson
were on the run twenty-five days before they managed to cross the border into
Mexico. They should’ve been safe, but the US Army tore down the border fence and
illegally entered Mexico, chasing after them.
Tom Power convinced his brother and Sisson they should
surrender. The soldiers wouldn’t kill them. They could go back to Arizona and
plead self-defense, let the truth come out in court.
When the Power brothers stepped out of hiding, the lieutenant
leading the patrol was so frightened he fell off his horse. Lt. Wolcott P. Hayes
wrote, “The three of them could have killed me with ease… I wanted to know why
they had not resisted…”
“We wouldn’t shoot a soldier boy,” Tom Power told him.
The patrol rode north with their prisoners, hurrying to leave
Mexico before they were caught breaking the law. They’d just crossed back into
the US when a Mexican Border Patrol spotted them. The Mexicans were furious
about the invasion and hit the ground and mounted a machine gun. The US patrol
scattered and ran.
In jail in Clifton, Arizona, the Powers and Sisson suffered
threats of lynching. Local newspapers openly called them murderers and stirred
hatred for the “slackers,” draft dodgers who refused to fight for Woodrow
Wilson. Demands were made for capital punishment to be reinstated. Arizona had
abolished the death penalty in 1916, but as a result of the Power cabin
shootout, it was reinstituted after the Powers’ trial.
The trial began on May 13, 1918. The court transcript
mysteriously disappeared soon afterwards. Tom Power’s recollection of events is
recorded in his book
Shoot-out At Dawn.
John Power testified that Sisson, their hired hand, never
fired a single shot. The doctor for the coroner’s jury testified that Sheriff
McBride could only have been killed by a .30 and the only manwith a .30 rifle
was the sheriff’s own Deputy Kempton.
The jury was out for thirty minutes before they returned the
verdict. The Power brothers and Sisson were guilty of murder in the first
degree. On May 20, Judge Frank B. Laine sentenced the three men to life in
prison, without hope of pardon or parole.
“I did study law in prison,” Tom Power said. “After I read the
law books, I threw them in the corner. I found that every principle of the law
had been violated in everything connected with our trial, so I decided the law
was not worth studying.”
The Powers and Sisson were transported to prison in Florence,
Arizona. The state legislature passed a bill for the relief of the widows of the
“slain officers.” The widows received $17,500 of tax payer funds, then promptly
sued the Power brothers. The warden refused to let the brothers attend the court
case, so the suit went by default. The Power mining claim was awarded to the
families of the men who’d killed Jeff Power. Barbara Wolfe writes: “The Power
boys sat helpless in their cells while everything they owned was sold… The
sheriff auctioned machinery, ore cars, rail tracks, mining tools…”
Twenty-one years passed. Young men when they entered prison,
the Powers were now in their mid-forties. Tom and John were serving life
sentences—they had nothing to lose. They escaped from prison the night of
December 28, 1939. The brothers lived in Mexico City for a time, but soon ran
out of money. The Mexican government was retaliating against gringos for FDR’s
Mexican Repatriation, making it hard for the brothers to find work. They decided
to cross the border and wire friends for money. It was a mistake.
Crossing into Texas near Piedras Negras, the Powers were
captured when border guards spotted them. They were taken into custody. While
awaiting the warden to arrive from Florence prison, a Texas border official
named Cleveland listened to the Powers’ story. “You men got a dirty deal,” he
told them. Cleveland contacted a lawyer who told the Powers he could secure
their release in Texas, but it would never be safe for them to leave the state.
Tom Power said the lawyer advised them to get the warden’s promise before
witnesses that he would release them within a reasonable length of time.
When the Florence warden arrived, he swore in front of the
Texas officials he’d see the Power brothers were paroled as soon as possible.
John and Tom Power returned to prison in Arizona on April 20, 1940. The warden
never honored his promise. Angry letters arrived from Texas, but the warden
ignored them.
Sisson, the hired hand and ex-Army scout, died in 1957 after
thirty-nine years in prison. He was eighty-seven, Arizona’s oldest prisoner. The
Power brothers and one other inmate were the only mourners at his funeral.
The next year, a newspaper columnist named Don Dedera began
writing about the Power brothers. His articles brought their case to public
attention and finally in March, 1960, a Parole Board hearing was held. The board
consisted of Reverend Walter Hoffman, Chairman of the Board, W. W. Dick, State
Superintendent of Instruction, and Wade Church, Arizona Attorney General.
Reverend Hoffman brought up the killing of the “brave” officers and the Powers
brothers’ “cowardly slacking.”
“Wait a minute,” Wade Church said. “Did the officers identify
themselves before the shooting started?”
Hoffman admitted they hadn’t.
“Then the shooting of a man with his hands up was nothing but
cold-blooded murder,” Church said. After the hearing, Church put his hand on Tom
Power’s shoulder. “We’re going to get you out of here,” he said.
A month later, the Power brothers were paroled. After
forty-two years in prison, innocent of any crime, the brothers were now in their
late sixties. The state had stolen their lives, but they were finally free.
The governor pardoned the Power brothers on January 25, 1969.
Five days earlier, Richard Nixon had been sworn in as president. Nixon would
continue Lyndon Johnson’s undeclared war in Vietnam. Once again, American boys
were being forced to fight a rich man’s war. The War to End All Wars had changed
nothing. Some chose resistance. Young men burned draft cards, escaped to Canada,
or went to prison for their refusal to kill.
John
Power, left, Tom Power, right in 1970
Tom Power died in 1970. He was seventy-seven years-old and he
departed this life free of hatred and bitterness. “I don’t hold no grudge
against nobody,” he’d say. “I figure that just makes you old before your time.”
Tom told of his family’s fight for liberty in his book,
Shoot-out At Dawn.
John Power lived alone in his father’s old mine tunnel for a
while. He reburied his father’s bones in the Klondyke, Arizona cemetery. The
headstone reads: “T. J. Power, Sr. 1918-Age 54. Shot down with his hands up in
his own door.”
In 1976, John Power was eighty-five, living out of his pickup
parked in the ghost town of Klondyke. Roderick Roberts interviewed the old man.
Roberts noted, “His memory is beginning to fail, and he is a very bitter man
with marked paranoid tendencies, but in his case paranoia may represent the only
intelligent approach to life.”
“They was out to kill us,” John Power said. “They weren’t
trying to arrest us… They just started shooting, shot down our daddy in the
doorway. You’d fight back too, wouldn’t you, if they shot down your pa?”
John Power died in April, 1976. Friends sang the hymn “I Saw
the Light” at his funeral. He was buried beside his family in the Klondyke
cemetery.
A neighbor wrote of the boys’ father, Jeff Power: “he seemed
to have an idea that American boys would rebel against their government before
they should allow themselves to be shipped across the water. ‘If you sign the
register,’ he would say to his boys, ‘you become a soldier and will have to
obey, but there is not a law in the world to make a man put his name on
something he doesn’t want to.’”
We owe a debt of gratitude to those brave enough to resist the
draft. We should thank anyone who spoke out against unjust war and risked the
terror of the state. Without their public dissent, conscription would’ve
continued.
To me, the Power brothers are true heroes of this country.
They could have registered for the WWI draft and been killed in the trenches,
lost among the forgotten fodder who died to fatten the wallets of international
bankers. Instead, they chose to resist. I hope the Power family is remembered
for their pride and freedom, for refusing to bow down to the state, refusing to
fight in an evil war. May the government that imprisoned them be totally
forgotten by history.
Reprinted with permission from Max
McNabb.