On this day in history, Nov. 23, 1859, western outlaw Billy the Kid is born in New York City

Legendary western outlaw Billy the Kid was allegedly born in New York City on this day in history, Nov. 23, 1859.

One of the Wild West’s most wanted men was most likely born in a poor Irish neighborhood on the east side of Manhattan, although much of the Kid’s early life is unknown or unverified, according to History.com.

Billy the Kid’s original name was thought to be Henry McCarthy — but he called himself William H. Bonney. The name Bonney was his mother Catherine’s maiden name, while William was the name of her longtime companion, William Antrin.

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Antrin stepped in as Billy’s father figure after his biological father disappeared.

It was believed that Billy first traveled west around 1865 when he and his brother — along with Antrin and the boys' mother — moved to Indiana and then to Wichita, Kansas, in 1870.

In 1873, legally married Catherine and William Antrin showed up on record in New Mexico, as History.com reports.

The following year, Catherine Antrin died of lung cancer in Silver City, according to reports.

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After his mother’s death, Billy abandoned his brother and stepfather and became a ranch hand, History.com has noted.

He reportedly killed his first victims, a group of Apache Indians, in the Guadalupe Mountains in 1876.

Not long after, Billy killed a blacksmith in Camp Grant, Arizona, according to legend.

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The outlaw then took a job as British rancher John Tunstall’s bodyguard in Lincoln, New Mexico.

Billy and several other gunmen were hired to protect Tunstall and his property from a rival cattle gang known as "The House."

In February 1878, Tunstall was gunned down by a posse organized by Sheriff William Brady, who supported The House.

In pursuit of revenge, Billy and other former Tunstall employees started the vigilante group known as "The Regulators," History.com also notes.

The new gang murdered Sheriff Brady and spent the following weeks in shootouts with forces of The House.

This became known as the Lincoln County War, which concluded after a fatal, five-day firefight in July 1878 and ended in a peace agreement as The Regulators left town.

The war branded Billy as one of the west’s "most skilled gunmen," according to history.com, but he remained wanted for the murder of Sheriff Brady.

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For this, he’d spend the rest of his young life running from the law.

Two years later, Lincoln Sheriff Pat Garrett — a former friend of his — arrested Billy the Kid.

The Kid was found guilty of the murder of Sheriff Brady in April 1881 and was sentenced to hanging. 

But two weeks before his scheduled execution, the outlaw outsmarted the law.

On April 28, he wrangled a gun from a jailer, shot him dead and escaped his confines in a maneuver that received national attention. 

A few months later, on July 14, 1881, Garrett found Billy the Kid at a ranch near Fort Sumner, New Mexico, where he was visiting a girlfriend.

Garrett surprised him in the dark of night and fired a bullet through the Kid’s chest.

Billy the Kid was dead at just 21 years old.

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In the four-year span from 1877 to 1881, the Kid was involved in at least nine murders, History.com reports.

This includes a legendary gunfight in a New Mexico saloon in January 1880, when Billy shot Joe Grant dead for terrorizing the bar in a drunken stupor.

Unlike other outlaws, Billy the Kid never robbed a train or a bank — but his first arrest occurred for stealing clothes from a Chinese laundry.

Many people have theorized that the legendary gunslinger never really died by Garrett’s bullet and instead went on to live under an alias.

Ever since Billy the Kid left his mark on the western frontier, the outlaw has been the subject of more than 50 films and several TV series.

'Law & Order' criticized by fans for 'disrespectful' portrayal of service member with uniform mistake

"Law & Order" fans have been trained to follow the clues, and they caught a glaring mistake on a character's military uniform during Thursday's episode of the popular crime show.

In the episode "Chain of Command," Michael Bakkensen portrayed Sgt. Brice Crawford, with Hugh Dancy as Executive District Attorney Nolan Price and Odelya Halevi as Assistant District Attorney Samantha Maroun.

Social media users noticed the uniform was not aligned with the storyline as his character was supposed to be a sergeant major.

"How do you have a guy in an army uniform that shows he's a sergeant first class and have him say he's a sergeant major," one user tweeted. "Really? You want me to ignore that?"

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One Twitter fan wrote, "I just retired after 28 years of service. I served in Iraq at the exact time as the characters on Camp Victory. It was a disgrace when the NCO wearing Sergeant First Class stripes introduced himself as a Sergeant Major. Get the rank right. If you paid a military expert fire them."

Another devoted follower wrote, "Uhhh they messed up on the Sargent major, his stripes weren't right...do better."

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"I love these shows, but y’all have got to do better when portraying members of the military," another Twitter user commented.

"The latest episode of Law & Order had a ‘sergeant major’ who was wearing the rank of a sergeant first class. It completely ruined the entire episode and really makes it unbelievable."

Some fans weren't bothered by the uniform though and praised the program on Twitter, "Excellent relevant heartbreaking episode, exuded empathy and understanding."

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Fox News Digital has reached out to NBC for comment.

Dick Wolf created the "Law & Order" franchise in 1990, which has since spawned several spinoffs and more than 1,000 episodes of television.

John Oliver recently blasted the show for pushing a "fantasy" version of what real law enforcement entails, with fictional characters being openly "pro-law enforcement."

"For as much as Dick Wolf brags about how the show is written in shades of gray or how it’ll show both sides of an issue, there is one side that it is always on and that’s the police," Oliver said.

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