Walt Longmire


Walter Longmire is the title character of Walt Longmire Mysteries, a series of mystery novels written by best-selling author Craig Johnson, and of its televised adaptation - Longmire, a crime drama series developed by John Coveny and Hunt Baldwin. On the show, he is portrayed by Australian actor Robert Taylor.

Walt Longmire Mysteries

History

A native of Durant, Wyoming, Walt attended the University of Southern California, where he played offensive lineman for the USC Trojans and graduated with a degree in English literature. He then served in the Marine Corps and completed boot camp at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island and Officer Candidates School at Marine Corps Base Quantico. He was assigned to the 1st Marine Division as a military police officer, and served in country at Tan Son Nhut Air Base during the Vietnam War. He served in the Marines for four years, and earned, among other decorations, the Navy Cross, Silver Star, Bronze Star, and Purple Heart. After serving in Vietnam, Walt spent six weeks assigned as security at Johnston Atoll.
Upon his discharge from the Marines, Walt spent some time working at an oil rig in Anchorage, Alaska, before returning home to Wyoming, where he was hired by Sheriff Lucian Connally as a deputy sheriff in 1972. Walt was elected as the Absaroka County Sheriff after Lucian all but threw the race and decided to retire.

In the series

In the first book, The Cold Dish, Walt is mentioned as having been the sheriff of Absaroka County and plans to run for re-election again the following year. He investigates the murders of two white teenagers who had been found guilty, but not severely punished, for raping a local Indian girl, Melissa Little Bird.
In Death Without Company, Walt investigates the death of a Basque woman who was, for a few hours in the 1940s, married to Lucian before her family had the marriage annulled. During his tenure as sheriff "of the least populated county in the least populated state in the union", five murders have occurred in Absaroka County with three of them taking place since 2004.
In Kindness Goes Unpunished, Walt visits Cady in Philadelphia, where he joins forces with the Philadelphia Police Department to investigate an assault on Cady that has left her in a coma.
In Another Man's Moccasins, Walt investigates the murder of a young Vietnamese woman, which reminds him of his first murder investigation – the death of a prostitute outside of Tan Son Nhut Air Base by an American officer in 1968.
In The Dark Horse, Walt goes undercover as an insurance investigator from Billings, Montana, in Campbell County, Wyoming, to determine if a woman truly murdered her husband, a man with a dubious past and a gift for making enemies, after he allegedly burned down their barn and killed their horses for the insurance money.
In Hell is Empty, Walt became lost on the Big Horn Mountains with a federal prisoner/serial killer.
In As the Crow Flies, Walt assists the newly appointed chief of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation Tribal Police, Iraq War-veteran Lolo Long, with the investigation into the death of a young woman who fell from a cliff with her child in her arms, while simultaneously preparing for Cady's wedding.
In A Serpent's Tooth, Walt deals with a multistate polygamous cult when he tries to help a Mormon "lost boy" that leads to Big Oil, the Central Intelligence Agency, and a Mexican drug cartel, which ultimately costs the life of one of his deputies and the grievous injury of another.
In Spirit of Steamboat, Walt flashes back to Christmas Eve 1988 when Lucian, a World War II veteran of the 38th Bombardment Group, and he transport an injured girl from Durant to Denver during a snowstorm in a decommissioned North American B-25 Mitchell.
In Any Other Name, Walt investigates the suicide of a Campbell County Sheriff's Investigator at the request of Lucian and Sheriff Sandy Sandburg, which nearly causes him to miss the birth of his grandchild in Philadelphia.
In Dry Bones, Walt deals with the discovery of a Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton on Native American land within his county and the subsequent death of the property's owner, resulting in a joint investigation with the FBI under the scrutiny of the newly announced deputy United States attorney for the district of Wyoming. In the middle of the investigation, Walt learns that his son-in-law, Officer Michael Moretti, was killed in the line of duty in Philadelphia; although he desperately wants to fly east and assist in the investigation, he remains stuck in Durant to complete his own case.
During his career, he becomes well-respected by not only his county, but also by the Wyoming State Attorney General's Office, the DCI, and even the governor of Wyoming. Later mentioned, somewhat jokingly, if a police officer is murdered in Wyoming, Walt Longmire is on the case.
As sheriff, Walt carries a M1911A1 in.45 ACP as his primary weapon, and drives a pickup truck that he calls the Silver Bullet.

Relationships

Walt is a widower; Martha, his wife, was murdered in Denver, Colorado, while suffering from cancer. With Martha, he had a daughter, Cady, who is now an attorney in Philadelphia. In As the Crow Flies, Walt mentions that he dated Martha before he was drafted, and that their relationship resumed after he came home from the war. The two eloped and were married by a justice of the peace in Miles City, Montana, when her father refused to pay for a big church wedding. In the same book, Cady marries Philadelphia Police Officer Michael Moretti, the brother of Walt's undersheriff, Vic Moretti, on the Rez; Michael and she had been seeing each other since Kindness Goes Unpunished and engaged since The Dark Horse. In Any Other Name, Cady guves birth to a daughter, Lola Longmire Moretti. In The Western Star, it is revealed that Walt and Martha first got pregnant in 1972, but they lost the baby in a first-trimester miscarriage.
Walt's closest friend and confidant is Henry Standing Bear. They have been friends since they were 12 years old, and both went to Vietnam, where they were both highly decorated. When Cady was born, Walt appointed Henry her godfather.
After Cady is assaulted in Philadelphia, Vic and Walt have sex. In the aftermath, Walt mentions that he has had sex with only six women in his life. The two continue their relationship after returning to Durant; in A Serpent's Tooth, Walt learns from the doctor that Vic was pregnant, but lost the baby after being stabbed during the confrontation with Tomás Bidarte. As of Any Other Name, neither Walt nor Vic knows that the other is aware of the pregnancy, but in Dry Bones, Vic reveals that she knows Walt had been told.

Deputies

In the books, Walt is assisted in his duties by a number of deputy sheriffs.
Walt also frequently consults with T.J. "Little Lady" Sherwin, the director of the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation's lab unit.
Ruby runs the sheriff's office and serves as dispatcher, and retired sheriff Lucian Connally works part-time as the dispatcher on the weekends.

Appearances

To date, Walt has appeared in these books:
  1. The Cold DishDecember 29, 2004
  2. Death Without Company – September 2006
  3. Kindness Goes Unpunished – March 15, 2007
  4. Another Man's Moccasins – May 26, 2009
  5. The Dark Horse – May 25, 2010
  6. Junkyard DogsOctober 22, 2010
  7. Hell is Empty – October 7, 2011
  8. Divorce Horse – April 16, 2012
  9. Christmas in Absaroka County – December 4, 2012
  10. Messenger – April 23, 2013
  11. As the Crow Flies – May 28, 2013
  12. A Serpent's Tooth – June 4, 2013
  13. Spirit of Steamboat – October 17, 2013
  14. Any Other Name – May 13, 2014
  15. Wait for Signs: Twelve Longmire Stories – October 21, 2014
  16. Dry Bones – May 12, 2015
  17. The Highwayman – May 17, 2016
  18. An Obvious Fact – September 13, 2016
  19. The Western Star – September 5, 2017
  20. Depth of Winter - September 4, 2018
  21. Land of Wolves - September 17, 2019

    Longmire (TV series)

History

Absaroka County native Walt Longmire is the well-respected sheriff that resides there. When the series begins, it is believed by most that his wife, Martha Longmire, died of cancer.
His father was a rancher who managed the stables of Absaroka County's most wealthy family, the Van Blarcoms. He is a graduate of Durant High School Class of '71, and his football jersey still hangs in the school's trophy case.
In their 20s, he and Henry worked at Prudhoe Bay Oil Field in Alaska.
Walt has been the Sheriff of Absaroka County since at least 2005; his immediate predecessor is Sheriff Lucian Connally, the uncle of Branch.
In 2010, Walt arrested Malachi Strand, the Chief of the Cheyenne Reservation Tribal Police, for extortion; he also has an adversarial relationship with the current CRTP Chief, Mathias, although the two have a bond of mutual respect.

In the series

Laconic and introspective with a strong sense of duty and justice, Walt is a throwback to the iconic lone hero of classical Westerns. He is an able detective with a knack for finding the truth behind various crimes committed in his county.
As the series starts in 2012, Walt is slowly coming out of a deep grieving period where he delegated most of the day-to-day police duties to Deputies Branch Connally, Archie "The Ferg" Ferguson, and Victoria "Vic" Moretti. This is complicated by Branch running against Walt in the upcoming sheriff election.
Walt is investigated by Denver PD Detective Fales for the murder of Miller Beck, a meth-head suspected of murdering Walt's wife, Martha. It is revealed that Fales is pushing the case of Beck, a drug-using suspected mugger and killer, so hard because of Fales' own experience with a small-town sheriff, whose racism and abuse of authority left Fales with a deep distrust of those particular law enforcement officers.
In 2015, after killing Barlow Connally on his own front porch, Walt spends six weeks on administrative leave while the death is investigated by the FBI. A number of weeks later, Walt learns that he is being sued for wrongful death by Barlow's estate.
As sheriff, Walt carries a Colt Government Model in.45 ACP and a Winchester Model 1894 in.30-30 as his primary weapons, and drives a Ford Bronco as his duty vehicle. He does not own a cell phone and takes his calls on a land line at home or in the office, or over the radio in his vehicle.

Kill count

In the TV series, Walt has been forced to use deadly force on a number of occasions.
  1. Chance Gilbert's brother – shot
  2. Dan Estes – shot
  3. Octavio Mora – shot
  4. Wayne Durell – beaten
  5. Zip – shot
  6. David Ridges – stabbed
  7. Barlow Connally – shot
  8. One of Malachi Strand's Henchmen – shot
  9. Brian O'Keane – shot
  10. Malachi Strand – shot

    Relationships

Walt was married for 25 years to Martha Longmire, with whom he has a daughter, Cady, an attorney. Martha was diagnosed with cancer in the late 2000s/early 2010s, and died in 2011. Although Walt let everybody assume it was the cancer that took her life, Martha was murdered in an apparent mugging in Denver, Colorado, by a man named Miller Beck. During his own investigation into his wife's death, Walt learned that Beck was hired to kill Martha, and then he was killed shortly thereafter to prevent him from talking to Walt. In "High Noon", Walt gets a drunken confession out of Barlow Connally, who admits to killing his own son and having Martha murdered; in the ensuing confrontation, Walt fatally shoots Barlow, avenging his deputy and his wife.
In "Highway Robbery", Walt asks out Dr. Donna Sue Monaghan, a psychiatrist who works for the VA in Sheridan, Wyoming.
Walt's closest friend and confidant is Henry Standing Bear. They have been friends since they were 12 years old. When Cady was born, Walt appointed Henry her godfather.
Shortly before the show's timeline begins, Walt hired Vic Moretti, a former Philadelphia PD homicide detective, as a deputy sheriff. The two are believed by many to be having an affair, including at one point Vic's husband, Sean Keegan. In the Season6 finale Walt and Vic finally realize and admit their feelings for one another, and begin a relationship.
Walt's relationship with the Cheyenne Nation is strained, but he is still liked by many members of its community.

Deputies

In the series, Walt is assisted with his duties by three deputy sheriffs. After Branch's death, Walt hires Zachary Heflin, but fires him after he assaults a rejected deputy applicant who was stalking him.
In addition, Deputy Sheriff Eamonn O'Neill was on loan from Cumberland County to assist the office when both Walt and Branch were otherwise occupied, leaving Vic to run day to day affairs.
Ruby runs the sheriff's office and serves as dispatcher.

Differences between the books and TV series

Among the key differences between the books and the TV series are the character's age and backstory. In the books, it is established that Walt is a college graduate and Vietnam War veteran, and has been the Absaroka County Sheriff since the early 1980s. However, on the TV show, no mention have been made or alluded to of a college or a military career, and Walt's age has been established multiple times, via his having graduated from high school in 1981 and having been friends with Henry since they were 12 years old, 38 years earlier.
In a significant departure from the books, on the show, Walt's wife Martha did not die from cancer. Although she was diagnosed with the disease, in the TV series she was murdered, and the associated details are slowly revealed over several seasons, significantly affecting Walt's relationships with his deputy Branch and the Connally family.
While the TV series portrays Vic as being interested in Walt, her feelings aren't reciprocated like they are in the books. Instead, the TV series has Walt slowly recovering from losing his wife, unable or unwilling to maintain a relationship with a woman called Lizzie Ambrose, before finally showing enough interest in a member of the opposite sex to actively court Dr. Donna Sue Monaghan. Only as the show draws to a close does Walt start a relationship with Vic.
In the books, Absaroka County sees five murders in 24 years. The TV series sees 27 confirmed murders in the two first seasons alone.

Longmire Days

In 2012, the first Annual "Longmire Days" was held in the city of Buffalo, Wyoming, celebrating the series and local community.