In order to dislodge the settlers, gunmen were hired in large numbers that outmanned and outgunned the former. Reverend Franklin J. Tolby, a staunch ally of the settlers and squatters opposing the Maxwell Land Grant Company, was found murdered in Cimarron Canyon on September 14, 1875. It was quickly assumed that someone from the company was responsible, and the blame was pinned on a gunman named Cruz Vega. Vega and his family were originally sided with the Hispanic settlers in the area, and his uncle, Francisco Griego, was one of the leaders among the Hispanic people during the conflict. However, they soon shifted sides when Griego and his family were faced with charges of killing three cavalry men in an altercation in a card game, and also implicated in the suspected murder of another soldier on June 1. They were said to have been blackmailed in exchange for dropping the charges the family would have faced. A notorious gunfighter by the name of
Clay Allison threw his hat with the settlers. In 1874, while having dinner, Allison shot and killed assassin
Chunk Colbert. Later that year, Allison formed a mob who apprehended Cruz Vega, before torturing him and hanging him by a pole. The Vega family mourned Cruz's death, and his uncle Francisco swore to avenge him by killing Allison. On November 1, Griego managed to trap and confront Allison in the saloon of the St. James Hotel. As Griego drew his pistol, Allison drew faster and shot Griego twice in the chest, killing him. The settlers did not like the incursion of the soldiers on to the land, and this caused a great deal of violence between the factions.
Buffalo soldiers of the 9th U.S. Cavalry were among the units sent, and on one occasion, some of them had a shootout with a group of Texas
cowboys in the St. James Hotel. Three soldiers died during the shootout and a few months later one of the cowboys,
Davy Crockett, who was involved, was killed by the local sheriffs. Clay Allison himself shot and killed a black sergeant in a bar where he was drinking. A man named Cardenas eventually confessed to the murder of Tolby, and he was subsequently hanged by a group of 20 gunmen on November 10. Soon the conflict started to dwindle down between the leaders of each party. Clay Allison was arrested in late 1876 by a posse consisting of a sheriff, a captain and lieutenant with 45 U.S. cavalrymen. He later left the county in December of that year. The English owners of the Maxwell Land Grant Company foreclosed on the land by 1879, and the company was purchased by new owners from the Netherlands. Finally, in 1885, the lawn of the
Colfax County Courthouse was the site of one of the last gun battles of the Colfax County War. A group led by
George Curry was assaulted by a group of sheriff's deputies on the courthouse lawn. Curry's brother and one of his followers were killed in the gun battle. Curry pleaded guilty to unlawfully carrying firearms and was fined five dollars. The Dutch owners also faced financial instability and were sued by the United States government in the early 1880s for making claims on land within the public domain in Colorado. On March 8, 1887, the company finally sent its plea to the
United States Supreme Court. In its ruling five weeks later, the court confirmed the company's ownership of the land when it concluded “We are entirely satisfied that the Grant, as confirmed by the action of Congress, is a valid grant, that the survey and the patent issued upon it are entirely free from any fraud.” Some of the settlers left the land but many managed to settle with the company. The conflict calmed down between some of the settlers who were allowed to remain and the land owners who won over the property. However, some were still being evicted as late as 1894. The last victim of the war, Richard Russell, was killed in a shootout with company enforcers near his ranch in Stonewall, Colorado, in 1888. ==Popular culture==