There was also a fictional cowboy called Tom Mix in an early Western fiction scenario.
Thomas E. Mix (January 6, 1880 - October 11, 1940) was an American film actor, the star of many early Western movies.
Tom Mix made a reported 336 films between 1910 and 1935, all but 9 of them silent features. Tom Mix was Hollywood’s first larger-than-life Western megastar. His films defined the genre for all actors that followed.
Mix was born on Jan 6th, 1880 into a relatively poor logging family in Mix Run, Pennsylvania. This region is still a heavily wooded area about 40 miles (60 km) north of State College, PA. His parents named him Thomas Hezikiah Mix, but he stated it as Thomas E. Mix when he enlisted in the Army in April 1898. He served in a heavy artillery unit during the Spanish-American War. After re-enlisting in 1901, he failed to return to duty after a 1902 extended furlough for his honeymoon--but was never court martialed or, apparently, even discharged.
After working a variety of odd jobs in the Oklahoma Territory, Mix went on to work at the 101 Ranch, the largest ranching outfit with 101,000 acres (409 km²), hence the name 101, in the US. He distinguished himself as a great horseman and expert shot, winning the 1909 national Riding and Rodeo Championship. He is rumored to have served a brief and undistinguished term with the Texas Rangers.
Mix was picked out to be a supporting cast member with the Selig Polyscope Company, one of the first silent film makers. His first shoot (1910) was called “Ranch Life in the Great Southwest” and he showed off his signature style as a cattle wrangler. The film was a success (partially because of America’s romantic interest in the American cowboy) and audiences began wanting more westerns: Tom Mix became a staple, and then a star. He did more than 100 films with Selig throughout the silent film era, and began to re-define what the western film was--with less humdrum cowboying, and more breathless chase-the-bad-guys action. Mix's career in the movies lasted 26 years and made him $6,000,000.
Selig folded in 1917, and Tom Mix signed with Fox Films. He went on to make more than 160 films throughout the 1920s, each growing in plot and complexity as the matinee film became a Saturday staple for escapist American youth. These were “packaged” dramatic films, no longer attempting to be the documentary style of the Selig days, with clear-cut heroes and villains, with a Ronald Reagan-style of clean cut cowboy saving the day in a John Wayne fashion. (Keep in mind that Ronald Reagan and John Wayne watched Tom Mix films when they were boys. Their acting styles were clearly adapted from various Tom Mix personas.)
Tom Mix did all of his own stunts in almost all of his pictures, and was frequently injured with his dangerous riding, roping, and varmint-catching tricks. Tom’s legend was even larger than his actual accomplishments, partially due to the breathless reporting of Hollywood studio promoters.
Mix married five times and had two children. He died October 12, 1940 in a freak auto accident in Florence, Arizona in which he was killed by a suitcase. Mix was driving at night along the dusty roads between Tucson and Phoenix, Arizona (which was then a two lane highway) in a convertible when he unknowingly came upon a bridge that had been washed away. Mix’s car catapulted across the empty space of about thirty feet (10 m) and crashed into the other side. Mix had been wearing his seat belt, and normally would have survived the accident despite being 60 years old-- but the metal-hardened suitcase he had packed and put on the seat behind him flew free and struck him in the back of the head, shattering his skull and killing him instantly. He is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
There is a Tom Mix museum in Dewey, Oklahoma and another in Mix Run, Pennsylvania.
Daryl Ponicsan's novel Tom Mix Died for Your Sins (1975) evokes the life and personality of the star.