Is your surname Judson?

Connect to 2,422 Judson profiles on Geni

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Edward Zane Carroll Judson

Also Known As: "Ned Buntline", "E. Z. C. Judson"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Stamford, Delaware Co., New York in the Hamilton House (Westholm), Main Street, west of the Delaware, and in the part of the village locally known as
Death: July 16, 1886 (63)
Eagles Nest, Stamford, Delaware Co., NY
Immediate Family:

Son of Levi Carroll Judson; Sarah Ann Judson and Elizabeth Judson
Husband of Katherine Kate Judson
Father of Mary Corrolita Judson; Irene Elizabeth Brush; Alexander McClintock Judson; Edwardina McCormick (Judson); Alexander McClintock Judson and 2 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Ned Buntline

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ned_Buntline

Edward Zane Carroll Judson, Sr. (March 20, 1821/1823 – July 16, 1886), known as E. Z. C. Judson and by his pseudonym Ned Buntline, was an American publisher, journalist, writer, and publicist. In his largely fictionalized biography, Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal, author Stuart Lake credits Buntline with having commissioned from Colt's Manufacturing Company a Colt Buntline Special that he gave to Wyatt Earp and four other famous Western lawmen in thanks for their help with contributing "local color" to his many dozens of western yarns. But modern researchers have not found any supporting evidence of the gun's existence prior to the publication of Lake's book from secondary sources or in available primary documentation.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=13861177

American publisher, journalist and writer. Best known for his dime novels and the Colt Buntline Special he invented. Born Edward Zane Carroll Judson in Harpersfield near Stamford, New York, he moved with his family to Pennsylvania at age 8 and by age 12 had run away from home. Passionate about travel and writing; one of his first trips was on a freighter into the Caribbean as a cabin boy. He later became a midshipman under General Zachary Taylor at age 15, and was involved in the Seminole War in Florida. Then traveled west. A great reconteur, he also loved to write about his travel and adventures and assumed the pen name Ned Buntline, a surname reminicent of the rope at the bottom of a square sail. He saw and did a lot in his years as a sailor, newspaperman and on the Western Frontier. He had an affair with the wife of Robert Porterfield in Tennessee in the mid-1840s and killed Porterfield in a duel. At Buntline's murder trial, Porterfield's brother opened fire on him, and Buntline managed to escape from the courthouse amid the chaos. Upon recapture, he was ready to hang for his crime. Miracuously, the noose "broke" as the trap door opened (it had been partially cut by a friend) and his neck was still intact; as a result, Tennessee law allowed him to be freed. During the late 1840s, he started his own newspaper in New York City, called "Ned Buntline's Own," a publication that was no stranger to controversy. In those pre-Industrial Revolution times, he declared to expose the employers of sewing girls in sweatshops. While he didn't do the exposé, he blasted competing newspapers about their stands on controversies of the time. Buntline's Own" circulation grew, and he added staff to ferret out gossip on prominent citizens and their scandals. About this time, he was convicted of starting the Astor Place Riot of May 1849, as well as another riot on Election Day 1852 in St. Louis. Moving west in 1869, he met a young buffalo scout named William F. Cody. By naming him "Buffalo Bill," he brought the scout's life in the Old West to the public through books and articles. A good producer, he wrote a stage play "Scouts of the Prairies," starring Buffalo Bill Cody and he also acted in this and other productions. During his life he wrote over 400 inexpensive adventure books and earned the title "King of the Dime Novel." Buntline's personal life had its share of controversy as he was well-known as a ladies' man and was married four times. He retired to Stamford, New York, in 1873 where he designed and built his home, Eagle's Nest, and spent time reading, writing and "gentleman farming." He continued to write until he died at age 64 of a heart ailment in Stamford, New York. (bio by: Fred Beisser)


view all

Ned Buntline's Timeline

1823
March 20, 1823
Stamford, Delaware Co., New York in the Hamilton House (Westholm), Main Street, west of the Delaware, and in the part of the village locally known as
1862
1862
1863
1863
1863
1863
1865
1865
1865
1867
1867
1886
July 16, 1886
Age 63
Eagles Nest, Stamford, Delaware Co., NY