
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On the second day of a siege, the gunfire matters less than the waiting.
Day Two of the Battle of Lincoln (July 16, 1878) does not erupt—it calcifies.
In this episode of Gallows & Gunfights, we examine Day Two of the Lincoln siege not as a shootout, but as a stress test applied to authority itself.
Inside the McSween house, Billy the Kid and the Regulators hold their ground under sustained but calculated fire. Outside, Sheriff George Peppin and the Murphy–Dolan faction confront an uncomfortable reality: numbers and badges are no longer enough.
This episode covers:
The full tactical stalemate of Day Two
Civilian confinement and the transformation of homes into firing positions
Billy the Kid’s role as a fixed defensive force
The request for federal artillery—and its legal denial
The firing upon a U.S. Army courier
How accusation, not evidence, reshaped the narrative
Why restraint—not bloodshed—became the hinge point of the siege
By nightfall, no ground has changed hands.
This is not myth.
If you value evidence-driven historical accountability, you can support this work at:
Patreon: https://patreon.com/DarkDialoguepod
Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/darkdialogue
Substack: https://darkdialoguecrime.substack.com
Help preserve the names erased by frontier violence at
Research, documentation, or formal inquiries:
By gallowsandgunfightsOn the second day of a siege, the gunfire matters less than the waiting.
Day Two of the Battle of Lincoln (July 16, 1878) does not erupt—it calcifies.
In this episode of Gallows & Gunfights, we examine Day Two of the Lincoln siege not as a shootout, but as a stress test applied to authority itself.
Inside the McSween house, Billy the Kid and the Regulators hold their ground under sustained but calculated fire. Outside, Sheriff George Peppin and the Murphy–Dolan faction confront an uncomfortable reality: numbers and badges are no longer enough.
This episode covers:
The full tactical stalemate of Day Two
Civilian confinement and the transformation of homes into firing positions
Billy the Kid’s role as a fixed defensive force
The request for federal artillery—and its legal denial
The firing upon a U.S. Army courier
How accusation, not evidence, reshaped the narrative
Why restraint—not bloodshed—became the hinge point of the siege
By nightfall, no ground has changed hands.
This is not myth.
If you value evidence-driven historical accountability, you can support this work at:
Patreon: https://patreon.com/DarkDialoguepod
Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/darkdialogue
Substack: https://darkdialoguecrime.substack.com
Help preserve the names erased by frontier violence at
Research, documentation, or formal inquiries: