Popular culture comes in a variety of forms. There may be a traditional version (or versions) that is handed down from generation to generation. There may be underground variations that until recent years were not discussed in polite society. And there may be a “prime time” offering designed so as not to offend a broad general audience. As a case in point, I offer “Stagger Lee” — one of the most durable American crime ballads and a celebration of badass criminal violence that predates gangsta rap by about ninety years.
“Stagger Lee,” also known as “Stackolee” and “Stagolee,” has been recorded over four hundred times by artists from Mississippi John Hurt to Wilson Picket to, in more recent years, Bob Dylan and Amy Winehouse. It tells the story of a fight between a man named Billy Lyons and the title character — a tough-as-nails anti-hero who mercilessly shoots Billy down. Here is a recording with a traditional feel released in 1969 by Taj Mahal.
Lee Shelton, a pimp who actually did shoot Williams Lyons, a father of three, in a saloon in Deep Morgan, a St. Louis tenderloin district, on Christmas in 1895. The dispute involved an argument during which Lyons snatched Shelton’s Stetson, but there was a subtext. Lyons, whose brother-in-law was an influential ward heeler, was allied with the local Republican machine, while Shelton ran a Democratic club at a time when the parties were competing for African-American votes. In addition, Lyon’s step-brother had previously killed one of Shelton’s friends and, with the help of political connections, escaped punishment.
What happened next is chronicled in, among other sources, David J. Krajicek’s 2011 book True Crime: Missouri. Shelton was charged with first degree murder, but hired Nat Dryden, a prominent defense attorney, and claimed self-defense. After twenty-three hours of deliberation, the jury deadlocked. Unfortunately for Shelton, his talented counsel died of an overdose before he could be retired. He was convicted of second degree murder but, thanks to pressure from Democratic politicians, paroled by the governor in 1909. Two years later, he pistol-whipped a man over a debt and returned to prison. Political pressure was again applied, and Shelton was again ordered paroled but, while the matter was being contested, he died in prison of tuberculosis. Shelton was forgotten, but gained an unlikely musical immortality.