
Myra Maybelle Shirley Reed Starr (February 5, 1848 – February 3, 1889, known asBelle Starr) was anAmericanoutlaw. She knewJesse James, the Younger brothers, and other criminals and outlaws. She wasconvicted of stealing horses in 1883. She was sent toprison. In 1889, she was ambushed inOklahoma. She died ofshotgun wounds. No one knows who killed her.
Belle Starr was born as Myra Maybelle Shirley on her father's farm near Carthage,Missouri. Her family called her May. Her father was John Shirley.[1] Her mother was Eliza Pennington. .[1]
In the 1860s, Starr's father sold the farm. He moved his family to Carthage. There he bought an inn andlivery stable on thetown square. May Shirley received a classical education. She also learned to play thepiano. Shegraduated from Missouri's Carthage Female Academy.[2]

TheUnion army attacked Carthage in 1864. The Shirleys moved to Scyene,Texas. Legend says that the Shirleys knew a number of Missouri-born criminals, includingJesse James and the Youngers. Starr knew theYounger brothers and the James boys because she had grown up with them in Missouri. People thought that Starr's brother Bud was in favor of theConfederate States of America. He was killed in 1864 byUnion troops.[3]
Starr married Jim Reed in 1866. In 1868, their first child was born. Starr was good at usingguns. She used to ridesidesaddle to her criminal activities wearing a black velvetriding habit and a feathered hat. She carried twopistols. Cartridge belts were strapped across her hips.[2] Jim Reed started committing crimes. He was wanted formurder inArkansas. The family moved toCalifornia. Starr gave birth to their second child, James Edwin (Eddie), in 1871.
Jim Reed returned toTexas. He was involved with severalcriminal gangs. He triedfarming. He became restless. He was friendly with the Starr clan. This clan was aCherokee Indian family. They were well known for whiskey,cattle, and horse thievery in theIndian Territory (nowOklahoma). Jim also was involved with his wife's old friends, the James and Younger gangs.
In April 1874, an arrest warrant was issued for Starr. People said she was involved in astagecoachrobbery. The robbery had been done by her husband and others. There was no proof she was involved in this robbery. Reed was killed in August of that year in Paris,Texas. He had settled there with his family.
Starr may have been briefly married to Charles Younger in 1878. There is no proof that they were married. In 1880, she married aCherokee man named Sam Starr. She settled with him in the Indian Territory. There, she learned ways to help the cattle thieves, horse thieves and other criminals. She also hid them from the law. Starr's illegal activities made money. She used this money to free other outlaws from jail.
In 1883, Starr and Sam were charged with horsetheft. They were tried in Fort Smith,Arkansas. She was found guilty. She spent nine months at the Detroit House of Corrections inDetroit, Michigan.
In 1886, she was again charged with theft. This time she was not convicted. On December 17, Sam Starr was involved in a gunfight with Officer Frank West.[4] Both men were killed. After this, Starr stopped being an outlaw.

During the last years of her life, Starr had relationships with several men. These men had colorful names like Jack Spaniard, Jim French, and Blue Duck. She married a relative of Sam Starr named Jim July Starr. He was about 15 years younger than Starr.
On February 3, 1889, Starr was killed inOklahoma. She was ambushed. She died fromshotgun wounds to her back, neck, shoulder, and face. Legend says she was shot with her own double barrel shotgun.[2]
There were no witnesses. No one was ever convicted of the murder. Some say the murderer was one of hersharecroppers. He was afraid she was going to turn him in to the police. He was an escaped murderer fromFlorida. He was tried for Starr's murder. He was found not guilty. The murder of Belle Starr remains unsolved.
Starr's story interested publisher Richard K. Fox. Her story was printed in dime novels and theNational Police Gazette. Fox made her name famous with his novel,Bella Starr, the Bandit Queen, or the Female Jesse James. This book was published in 1889. This novel is sometimes cited as a historical reference. It was the first of many popular stories that used her name.