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			<title><![CDATA[1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper SHOOT OUT OK CORRAL]]></title>
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			<description><![CDATA[<h3>
<a href="http://deadwoodsdnow.blogspot.com/2012/11/1881-tombstone-epitaph-newspaper-shoot.html">1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper SHOOT OUT OK CORRAL</a>
</h3><p>June 28, 1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper
<br>
An Efficient Man in the Right Place<br>
<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING-cln-Old-West-Cowboy-Outfits/Categories">CLOTHING OUTFIT WORN IN 1881</a><br>
One of pleasing features of journalism is in being able to pay a 
deserved tribute to an efficient, faithful and brave public officer. It 
is such a duty that we now attempt to perform. Mr. Sippy, late Chief of 
Police, did the public of Tombstone one very great service when he asked
 for leave of absence for two weeks and insisted that Mr. Virgil Earp be
 appointed to fill the vacancy, that was believed by most people at that
 time, to be merely temporary. We might go further and say that he did 
the people two great favors--first in taking himself away and second in 
the nomination of his successor. The peace and good order of Tombstone 
has never before been so perfect as now, and that too under the most 
trying circumstances that have ever occurred in this community. The 
first duty Mr. Earp performed after assuming command of the police 
department was to familiarize himself with the conduct of the force, for
 which purpose he patrolled the streets two whole nights, during which 
time he saw sufficient to satisfy himself that there was something 
rotten not in Denmark, but in Tombstone. He quickly weeded out the 
suspected and replaced them by men he could depend upon, the result 
being that on Wednesday last his force, with the assistance of the 
Sheriff and his deputies, kept perfect order and protected life and 
property in a manner that deserves the highest praise. Yesterday he 
caused the arrest of late officer Cornelison, whom he had dismissed from
 the force on the 18th of the month, for grand larceny, the proof being 
overwhelming. This was for the breaking open and robbing a trunk that 
was taken to Cornelison's house for safe keeping during the fire. 
Inasmuch as the examination of the late officer will take place tomorrow
 and all the evidence will come out, we forbear further remarks on this 
occasion. Again, after the fire, the next day when jumpers appeared on 
the burned district, Mr. Earp solved the whole problem by using the 
power vested in him for preserving the public peace, by rein stating the
 owners to their possessions and compelling all to respect each other's 
rights. After the first two days there was no confusion and no more 
efforts to jump or dispossess those who were in quiet possession before 
the fire. It would be easy to call to the public mind other important 
services Mr. Earp rendered this community at an earlier day, but this 
must suffice for this time. It is to be hoped that our city council will
 confirm, by permanent appointment. Mr. Earp in the position he so 
efficiently and honorably fills. We have no doubt but what they will, 
for in the language of the immortal Lincoln, we do not believe the 
council will "swap horses in the middle of the stream," and that is just
 where we now are in the guardianship of the public peace and order of 
the town. Find <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">Old West Clothing online</a></p><p>
_______________________________________________________________________</p><p>
September 10, 1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper</p><p>
Stage Robbery</p><p>The Bisbee Stage Robbed by Three Masked Men<br>
Thursday night, about 10 o'clock, as the stage was nearing Bisbee, 
being some four miles or five miles this side in the broken ground, it 
was stopped by three (some say four) masked men, who, with pistols 
leveled at the driver and passengers, demanded Wells, Fargo &amp; Co's 
treasure box. The box was thrown out when they went through the 
passengers, getting eight dollars and a gold watch from one and about 
six hundred dollars from another. From the treasure box they got a fat 
haul, there being $2,500 in it. The report is that they also went 
through all the baggage and the mail sacks, but this is rather doubtful.
 About 9:30 yesterday morning two messengers rode into Tombstone with 
their horses upon a lope, halting in front of the Wells, Fargo &amp; 
Co's office, dismounted and went in. Those seeing the men come in such 
hot haste, at once surmised something wrong, and in a short time the 
robbery was the talk of the street. Marshal Williams, agent for W., F. 
&amp; Co., immediately notified the Sheriff's office, and in a few hours
 himself, Deputy Breakenridge, Wyatt and Morgan Earp were in the saddle 
or on the way to the place of the robbery, from whence they will take up
 the trail and do their best to overhaul the robbers. This, we fear, is a
 hopeless task, as so much valuable time was lost by the messengers 
riding from Charleston into Tombstone, when they might better have 
telegraphed and had the whole thing managed in secrecy.</p><p>
____________________________________________________________________<img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/old-tombstone-az.jpg" style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, Verdana, Tahoma, sans-serif; font-size: 15px;">____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
"<a href="http://www.cityoftombstone.com/">Tombstone's look</a> has changed since it was captured in this photograph.  Once it was a hard-scrabble mining <a href="http://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/opdb/goes/soundings/skewt23L/html/mdpc.html">town</a>
 prone to fire and drought.  Today tourists visit the city to relive the
 history and pioneer spirit that it embodies.  Many still travel to 
various tropical destinations in <a href="http://bookit.com/caribbean/dominican-republic/punta-cana/">Punta Cana Dominican Republic</a> or <a href="http://bookit.com/caribbean/jamaica/">Jamaica vacation packages</a>, but those that have a love of history, western <a href="http://weather.noaa.gov/weather/JM_cc.html">culture</a>, and desire to learn more about the American past still travel to Tombstone and the sites of early western history."</p><p>
________________</p><p>
September 13, 1881  Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper</p><p>
Important Capture </p><p>
A Deputy Sheriff Arrested on a Charge of Robbing the Bisbee Stage</p><p>
Wyatt and Morgan Earp, Marshall Williams and Deputy Sheriff 
Breakenridge, who went to Bisbee to arrest the stage robbers, on Sunday 
evening brought in Deputy Sheriff T. C. Stillwell and P. Spencer, whom 
the evidence strongly points out as the robbers. They were examined 
before Wells Spicer, Esq., yesterday, and were admitted to bail in the 
sum of $7000 each--$5,000 for robbing the mail and $2,000 for robbing D.
 B. Rea. The evidence against Deputy Sheriff Stillwell is 
circumstantial, and rests principally upon the tracks made by his boot 
heels in the mud, which corresponded with those he had removed by a 
shoemaker upon his return to Bisbee. The Epitaph has no desire to 
pre-judge the case, but if it turns out as now anticipated, that the 
officers of the law are implicated in this nefarious business, it would 
seem to be in order for Sheriff Behan to appoint another deputy.</p><p>_____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
September 13, 1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper</p><p>
The Stage Robbery    Arrest of the Supposed Culprits</p><p>
As before reported, Morgan and Wyatt Earp, Marshal Williams, Fred Dodge
 and Deputy Sheriffs Breakenridge and Nagle started out last Friday, 
immediately after receiving information of the robbery of the Bisbee 
stage, and arrived at the place where the robbery was committed at about
 dark. By that time all the tracks had become obliterated except one 
that of a bare-footed horse which had evidently been ridden in the 
direction of this place. From there they proceeded to Bisbee and at 
about _____ o'clock Sunday morning.  Frank Stillwell, Deputy Sheriff at 
that place and Peter Spencer, a resident of Tombstone. but engaged in 
business in Bisbee, were arrested upon a warrant sworn out by Marshal 
Williams, agent for Wells Fargo &amp; Co., and brought here and placed 
in jail. When taken before Justice Spicer yesterday, they were 
rearrested by United States Deputy Marshal Wyatt Earp, charged with 
robbing the United States mail, upon a warrant sworn out by Marshal 
Williams. They will have an examination upon the first charge next 
Thursday and upon the last next Monday.</p><p>_____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
September 18, 1881<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories"> Tombstone Epitaph and Clothing</a></p><p>
The Cow-boy Nuisance.</p><p>
Tombstone Sept. 16--Has anyone stopped for a moment to consider the 
present state of affairs in Arizona, and what the end will be? It has 
come to pass in this county that life and personal property are unsafe; 
even in the town of Tombstone it seems as if one of the leading 
industries is to be destroyed. There is not a teamster to-day who is not
 in fear and dread of the cow-boys, or so-styled "rustlers" depriving 
him of his hard earnings (I say hard earnings, for if there is a man who
 gains his living by the sweat of his brow, it is the man who from early
 morn till late at night pulls and tugs along through mud and rain, 
dust, and heat, with a six or eight mule team, or the man who shoulders a
 bull whip and tramps all day long yelling and pounding seven or eight 
yoke of oxen) How must such men feel to be robbed by a hand of thieves 
and cutthroats, who take pride in announcing to the public that they are
 "rustlers!" Where is the teamsters protection? Can you find any 
officers who will follow, arrest and recover your property? If you can, I
 would like to see him. And how do teamsters act to one another in such 
matters? They stand still, for the "rustlers" tell them, "you won't be 
troubled if you leave us alone." So they take the man's cattle ahead of 
you, and you won't help him, for you have had an understanding; and then
 they take yours; the man behind you won't help you for he is "solid," 
having had an understanding with them; and then they take his, and so it
 goes. Another thing, teamsters are afraid; they follow, intending to 
fight, they get close to their stock, are met and told to go back, and 
back they go. These chaps seem to have no difficulty in evading the law,
 while others, not inclined to work, daily join the band and they are 
increasing fast in numbers. Our town is filled with spies watching every
 move of the officers and imparting their information to their comrades.
 Just let a stage be robbed and in less than twelve hours no less than 
twelve "rustlers" will come and go. It is having a dreadfully depressing
 effect upon all kinds of business. Men who come to examine different 
mines outside of town, when they learn how the cow-boys stand fellows 
up, do not wish to run such risks; they quietly take the road they came 
and get into civilization as soon as possible. Just look at the number 
of oxen stolen in the last six weeks between here and Morse's Mills; 
and, to cap off with, they stopped what was left of the train they had 
robbed, and told the owners; "Travel this no further: if you do we will 
kill you and take your oxen," and they there and then forced them there 
and then unyoke. That was done within four miles of this town on last 
Sunday morning. I think it is time the people did something. There are 
men not afraid of them, but those men are in various employments. They 
won't quit work and go on the trail unless the people will make it an 
object. Ten armed men, well mounted, can, in sixty days, bring to 
justice many a "rustler." Put the right men in the field and give them 
the proper leader, and see how soon peace will be restored to the 
community, and business will resume its happy and prosperous course 
again.  CHIRICAHUA (Written one month before the Shootout in Tombstone) <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">They wore Old West Clothes.</a></p><p>_________________________________________________________________<br>
<ins></ins><img alt="" src="http://oldwesthistory.net/files/percival.jpg" style="height: 334px; width: 572px;"><br>
"Looking south...Don Perceval's 1965 Gunfight at the OK Corral painting...Above copy courtesy McLelland Collection<br>
An interesting look at the scene through the picture frame of the artists interpretation<br>
L-R...Papago's Cash Store...OK Corral north entrance (see OK 
sign)...small white adobe....C.S. Flys Boardinghouse &amp; Photo 
Gallery...Harwood House <em> R-5/10/13</em><br>
_____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
October 27, 1881  Tombstone Nugget Newspaper</p><p>Marshal Virgil Earp, Morgan and Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday Meet the 
Cowboys...Three Men Killed and Two Wounded, One Seriously...Origins of 
the Trouble and its Tragic Termination.</p><p>
The 26th of October, 1881, will always be marked as one of the crimson 
days in the annals of Tombstone, a day when blood flowed as water, and 
human life was held as a shuttlecock, a day always to be remembered as 
witnessing the bloodiest and deadliest street fight that has ever 
occurred in this place, or probably in the Territory.</p><p>The origin of the trouble dates back to the first arrest of Stilwell 
and Spencer for the robbery of the Bisbee stage. The co-operation of the
 Earps and the Sheriff and his deputies in the arrest caused a number of
 cowboys to, it is said, threaten the lives of all interested in the 
capture. Still, nothing occured to indicate that any such threats would 
be carried into execution. But Tuesday night Ike Clanton and Doc 
Holliday had some difficulty in the Alhambra saloon. Hard words passed 
between them, and when they parted it was generally understood that the 
feeling between the two men was that of intense hatred. Yesterday 
morning Clanton came on the street armed with a rifle and revolver, but 
was almost immediately arrested by Marshal Earp, dismissed and fined by 
Justice Wallace for carrying concealed weapons. While in the Court room 
Wyatt Earp told him that as he had made threats against his life he 
wanted him to make his fight, to say how, when and where he would fight,
 and to get his crowd, and he (Wyatt) would be on hand.<br>
In reply, Clanton said: "Four feet of ground is enough for me to fight 
on, and I'll be there." A short time after this William Clanton and 
Frank McLowry came into town, and as Thomas McLowry was already here the
 feeling soon became general that a fight would ensue before the day was
 over, and crowds of expectant men stood on the corner of Allen and 
Fourth streets awaiting the coming conflict.<br>
It was now about two o'clock, and at this time Sheriff Behan appeared 
upon the scene and told Marshal Earp that if he disarmed his posse, 
composed of Morgan and Wyatt Earp, and Doc Holliday, he would go down to
 the O.K. Corral where Ike and James Clanton and Frank and Tom McLowry 
were and disarm them. The Marshal did not desire to do this until 
assured that there was no danger of attack from the other party. The 
Sheriff went to the corral and told the cowboys that they must put their
 arms away and not have any trouble. Ike Clanton and Tom McLowry said 
they were not armed, and Frank McLowry said he would not lay his aside. 
In the meantime the Marshal had concluded to go and, if possible, end 
the matter by disarming them, and as he and his posse came down Fremont 
Street towards the corral, the Sheriff stepped out and said: "Hold up 
boys, don't go down there or there will be trouble: I have been down 
there to disarm them." But they passes on, and when within a few feet of
 the the Marshal said to the Clantons and McLowrys: "Throw up your hands
 boys, I intend to disarm you."<br>
As he spoke, Frank McLowry made a motion to draw his revolver, when 
Wyatt Earp pulled his and shot him, the ball striking on the right side 
of his abdomen. About the same time Doc Holliday shot Tom McLowry in the
 right side using a short shotgun, such as is carried by Wells-Fargo 
&amp; Co.'s messengers. IN the meantime Billy Clanton had shot at Morgan
 Earp, the ball passing through the point of the left shoulder blade 
across the back, just grazing the backbone and coming out at the 
shoulder, the ball remaining inside his shirt. He fell to the ground but
 in an instant gathered himself, and raising in a sitting position fired
 at Frank McLowry as he crossed Freemont Street, and at the same instant
 Doc Holliday shot at him, both balls taking effect either of which 
would have proved fatal, as one struck him in the right temple and the 
other in the left breast. As he started across the street, however, he 
pulled his gun down on Holliday saying, "I've got you now." "Blaze away!
 You're a daisy if you have, " replied Doc. This shot of McLowry's 
passed through Holliday's pistol pocket, just grazing the skin.<br>
While this was going on Billy Clanton had shot Virgil Earp in the right
 leg, the ball passing through the calf, inflicting a severe flesh 
wound. In turn he had been shot by Morgan Earp in the right wrist and 
once in the left breast. Soon after the shooting commenced Ike Clanton 
ran through the O.K. Corral, across Allen Street into Kellogg's saloon 
and thence into Toughnut street where he was arrested and taken to the 
county jail. The firing altogether didn't occupy more than twenty-five 
seconds, during which time fully thirty shots wree fired. After the 
fight was over Billy Clanton, who, with wonderful vitality, survived his
 wounds for fully an hour, was carried by the editor and foreman of the 
Nugget into a house near where he lay, and everything possible was done 
to make his last moments easy. He was "game" to the last, never uttering
 a word of complaint, and just before breathing his last he said, 
"Goodbye boys; go away and let me die." The wounded were taken to their 
houses, and at three o'clock next morning were resting comfortably. The 
dead bodies were taken in charge by the Coroner, and an inquest will be 
held upon them at 10 o'clock today. Upon the person of Thomas McLowry 
was found between $300 and $400 and checks and certificates of deposit 
to the amount of nearly $3,000.<br>
During the shooting Sheriff Behan was standing nearby commanding the 
contestants to cease firing but was powerless to prevent it. Several 
parties who were in the vicinity of the shooting had "narrow escapes" 
from being shot. One man who had lately arrived from the east had a ball
 pass through his pants. He left for home this morning. A person called 
"the Kid" who shot Hicks at Charleston recently, was also grazed by a 
ball. When the Vizina [mine&91; whistle gave the signal that there was a 
conflict between the officers and cowboys, the mines on the hill shut 
down and the miners were brought to the surface. From the Contention 
mine a number of men, fully armed, were sent to town on a four-horse 
carriage. At the request of the Sheriff the "Vigilantes," or Committee 
of Safety, wre called from the streets by a few sharp toots from the 
Vizina's whistle. During the early part of the evening there was a rumor
 that a mob would attempt to take Ike Clanton frm the jail and lynch 
him, and to prevent any such unlawful proceedings a strong guard of 
deputtes was placed around that building and will be so continued until 
all danger is past.<br>
At 8 o'clock last evening Finn Clanton, a brother of Billy and Ike, 
came to town, and placing himself under the guard of the Sheriff, 
visited the morgue to see the remains of his brother, and then passed 
the night in jail in company with the other.<br>
Ominous Sounds<br>
Shortly after the shooting ceased the whistle at the Vizina mine 
sounded a few short toots, and almost simultaneously a large number of 
citizens appeared on the streets armed with rifles and a belt of 
cartridges around their waists. These men formed in line and offered 
their services to the peace officers to preserve orderin case any 
attempt at disturbance was made, or any interference offered to the 
authorities of the law. However, no hostile move was made by anyone, and
 the quiet and order was fully restored, and in a short time the 
excitement died away.<br>
At the Morgue<br>
The bodies of the three slain cowboys lay side by side, covered with a 
sheet. Very little blood appeared on their clothing, and only on the 
face of young Billy Clanton was there any distortion of the features or 
evidence of pain in dying. The features of the two McLowry boys looked 
as calm and placid in death as if they had died peaceably, surrounded by
 loving friends and sorrowing relatives. No unkind remarks were made by 
anyone, but feeling of unusual sorrow seemed to prevail at the sad 
occurrence. Of the two McLowry brothers we could learn nothing of their 
previous history before coming to Arizona. The two brothers owned quite 
an extensive ranch on the lower San Pedro, some seventy or eighty miles 
from this city, to which they had removed their band of cattle since the
 recent Mexican and Indian troubles. They did not bear the reputation of
 being of a quarrelsome disposition, but were known as fighting men, and
 have generally conducted themselves in a quiet and orderly manner when 
in Tombstone.<br>
<em><a href="http://www.oldwesthistory.net/g.s._mclelland%27s_tombstone_shoot-out_near_the_ok_c.html"><img alt="" src="http://oldwesthistory.net/files/TombStore1.gif" style="height: 81px; width: 730px;"></a></em>____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
<u>December 30, 1881</u></p><p>
THE BEGINNING OF TROUBLES</p><p>
A BRIEF REVIEW, FROM THE KILLING OF BUD PHILPOT TO THE PRESENT TIME</p><p>
It will be remembered that about the middle of March, last, an attempt 
was made to stop and rob the down stage to Benson near Drew's Station, 
and the murdering fiends shot and killed the driver, Bud Philpot. That 
event created a great sensation in Tombstone, and the sheriff, with a 
posse of men, among whom were Marshal Williams, Virgil Earp, Morgan and 
Wyatt Earp, started in pursuit. Marshal Williams remaining with the 
party for five days and returning with King, one of the gang, whom they 
captured somewhere down the San Pedro, the remainder of the party being 
absent for eighteen days, following the trail into New Mexico, but 
failing to capture more of the outlaws. It will also be remembered that 
King, while in custody of the under sheriff here in Tombstone, was 
permitted to escape and was never captured. </p><p>
THREATS OF VENGEANCE</p><p>
But a few weeks elapsed after this event before word was brought to the
 Earps and Marshall Williams by friends on whose integrity they could 
rely, that the gang had sworn vengeance on them and would kill them on 
the first opportunity. Some time in April Mrs. Williams had arranged for
 a visit to her relatives in the East, also, these gentlemen decided to 
take a private carriage, and in company go with their wives to Benson. 
At the last moment Mr. Williams with his wife took the stage, leaving 
Mr. Fickas and his wife the sole occupants of the carriage. When about 
two and a half or three miles this side of Benson, five horsemen, armed 
with rifles and revolvers, dashed past the carriage, wheeled around and 
opened ranks for the carriage to pass. The side curtains being down, 
they leaned over upon their horses to get a view of the back seat, and 
seeing no one thereon, rode off with a shower of curses. This startled 
Mr. Fickas, who could not account for the rudeness of the party. When 
this event was related to Mr. Williams by Mr. Fickas he very naturally 
drew inference that the party were looking for him. So long ago as June 
last, Virgil Earp told a friend that he and his brothers had received 
repeated warnings by those who came in contact with the gang that they 
were planning to come to town to clean out the Earp crowd, and further 
said they did not know at what moment they would be shot in the back as 
they were going home of a night.</p><p>
THE BISBEE STAGE  ROBBERY</p><p>
It will also be remembered that when the Bisbee stage was robbed, on 
the 8th day of September, that Morgan Earp, Wyatt Earp and Marshal 
Williams accompanied the sheriff and helped to make the arrest of 
Stilwell, who is now under bonds awaiting the action of the United 
States grand jury for robbing the United States mail. This naturally 
further aggravated the cow-boy gang, and the threats became still more 
plentiful and open. Matters rapidly culminated, the rupture being made 
by Ike Clanton coming into town and walking the streets with revolver 
and Winchester rifle hunting for Virgil Earp, threatening to shoot him 
on sight. What followed is all too fresh in the minds of the people to 
need recapitulation here.</p><p>
MRS. COYLER'S STATEMENT </p><p>
We now wish to call the reader's attention to the statement of a most 
estimable lady, reprinted from the columns of the Kansas City Daily 
Star, which will throw light upon several points heretofore obscured in 
mystery, and that is as to the shots alleged to have been fired at the 
officers from behind a horse. She also says in the most emphatic manner,
 and without the fear of intimidation brought to bear upon her, that the
 Clanton party opened fire the moment the marshal called upon them to 
throw up their hands. Another feature of this lady's statement we wish 
to call attention to, and that is, that two separate raids, deliberately
 planned for murder and plunder, were providentially frustrated by 
alarms of fire, at which many of the Citizens' protective league turned 
out with their rifles, prepared for any emergency. This fact was known 
to many of our citizens at the time, but the inside history was not so 
clear as since her statement appeared.</p><p>
THE MYSTERIOUS ROOM</p><p>
During the examination of the Earp-Holliday case before Judge Spicer 
there was a certain room in the Grand hotel occupied by Clanton and his 
friends, the shutters of which were never opened like the others on that
 floor, which was a matter of frequent comment. The examination before 
Judge Spicer was one of the most searching and thorough in the annals of
 justice's court, lasting as it did for nearly four weeks, with able 
counsel on both sides. The judge, in a most clear and concise review of 
the evidence, held that the marshal and his party were acting in the 
discharge of their legal duty, therefore very justly, discharged them. 
This event only the more intensified cow-boy element, who now added to 
their list of proscription and death, judge Spicer, Tom Fitch, and Mayor
 Clum. The blinds of the mysterious room still remained closed. About 
two or three days previous to the departure of Mayor Clum, a man, whose 
name can be given if necessary, happened to go to his den and found a 
man standing at the window with a Winchester rifle, full cocked, at his 
shoulder, drawing a bead upon some one on the opposite side of the 
street. (We should have before stated that for convenience of 
observation and other purposes a slat in one of the blinds had been 
removed.) The new-comer sung out to the gunner, "What in h__l are you 
doing there?" he replied, "I'm going to shoot that d__d son of a B____, 
Rickabaugh!" It was Mr. Rickabaugh, partner of Wyatt Earp in the 
Oriental saloon, who was, unconscious of danger, walking down the 
opposite side of the street. The new-comer forbid the deed to be done, 
saying, as reported to Mr. Rickabough, "Don't you do that; he has never 
injured us. He has only spent his money for his friends, the Earps, and 
that is what either you or I would do for our friends." It was in this 
room that it is reported that Milt Hicks, Ringo and four other men were 
closeted the night and day previous to the fire in the rear of the 
hotel, which fact forms a link in the chain of circumstantial evidence 
corroborating the statement of Mrs. Colyer, above referred to, it being 
stated upon good authority that they made their escape from the room 
about the breaking out of the fire.</p><p>
THE ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATE MAYOR CLUM</p><p>
On the night of the 14th instant, John P. Clum, mayor of Tombstone, 
took the stage for Benson on his way to Tucson. When about four miles 
below town, it was attacked by armed men, whose shots frightened the 
team so that the driver could not hold them, and they ran a quarter of a
 mile or more, when one of the leaders which had been struck in the neck
 fell from loss of blood, and soon expired. It was well known fact that 
this stage carried neither mail nor treasure: therefore robbery could 
not have been the object of the band of highwaymen who attempted to stop
 it. Knowing the deep and murderous threats of the gang against his 
life, but one logical inference could be drawn, and that was, the party 
only wanted the life of Mr. Clum. </p><p>
THE LAST ACT</p><p>
The events of the last twenty-four hours prove conclusively that the 
information briefly given in the above narration of facts was true in 
every particular. having miscarried in every one of their hellish plots 
against lives of those whom they hated or feared, three of the gang 
crept into the town under the cover of darkness, last night, and like 
the midnight assassins that they are, shot in the back United States 
Deputy Marshal Virgil Earp, thinking, no doubt, that from the five loads
 of buckshot they poured at him that he was dead beyond all recovery. 
Here again the hand of God is manifest in frustrating the damnable 
actions of these vicious murderers: for, though dangerously wounded, he 
will not die.</p><p>
THE SADDEST OF ALL</p><p>The recitation of the foregoing facts has not been a pleasant task; for
 we are aware that many honest citizens of Tombstone will say that it 
were better that these things should be kept from the public, that they 
are ruinous to the business interests of the town, and that by reminding
 the public of them it will deter immigration. It is not the province of
 a respectable journal to delude the public by a cry of peace, nor to 
ridicule or make light of the public danger when the people are daily 
treading upon a slumbering volcano. There are three things in this 
community as dangerous to the permanent peace and prosperity of our city
 as the cow-boys themselves. These are-first, the apathy, or the 
inability of our public officials to cope with with the evil complained 
of; second, the general indifference of the better class of society to 
the present state of things; and third, the openly expressed sympathy of
 a certain class with those outlaws from society, giving them aid and 
comfort in various ways, thereby emboldening them to make this city 
their headquarters. The cure for this state of things can be speedily 
and surely worked if our people will lay aside personal jealousies and 
antagonisms and stand more fully by the legally constituted authorities 
in the enforcement of the laws against this organized band of outlaws. 
An active, manful spirit on the part of our citizens will inspire 
confidence in the officers that they have a substantial backing in their
 efforts to rid the country of this overshadowing evil. There need be no
 violation of law on the part of citizens or officers, if public spirit 
is properly aroused. There are those, who will, no doubt, ridicule what 
we are writing for the public good, as they have ridiculed in the past 
the danger of those who have for months been walking in the shadow of 
death</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>
<a href="http://deadwoodsdnow.blogspot.com/2012/11/1881-tombstone-epitaph-newspaper-shoot.html">1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper SHOOT OUT OK CORRAL</a>
</h3><p>June 28, 1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper
<br>
An Efficient Man in the Right Place<br>
<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING-cln-Old-West-Cowboy-Outfits/Categories">CLOTHING OUTFIT WORN IN 1881</a><br>
One of pleasing features of journalism is in being able to pay a 
deserved tribute to an efficient, faithful and brave public officer. It 
is such a duty that we now attempt to perform. Mr. Sippy, late Chief of 
Police, did the public of Tombstone one very great service when he asked
 for leave of absence for two weeks and insisted that Mr. Virgil Earp be
 appointed to fill the vacancy, that was believed by most people at that
 time, to be merely temporary. We might go further and say that he did 
the people two great favors--first in taking himself away and second in 
the nomination of his successor. The peace and good order of Tombstone 
has never before been so perfect as now, and that too under the most 
trying circumstances that have ever occurred in this community. The 
first duty Mr. Earp performed after assuming command of the police 
department was to familiarize himself with the conduct of the force, for
 which purpose he patrolled the streets two whole nights, during which 
time he saw sufficient to satisfy himself that there was something 
rotten not in Denmark, but in Tombstone. He quickly weeded out the 
suspected and replaced them by men he could depend upon, the result 
being that on Wednesday last his force, with the assistance of the 
Sheriff and his deputies, kept perfect order and protected life and 
property in a manner that deserves the highest praise. Yesterday he 
caused the arrest of late officer Cornelison, whom he had dismissed from
 the force on the 18th of the month, for grand larceny, the proof being 
overwhelming. This was for the breaking open and robbing a trunk that 
was taken to Cornelison's house for safe keeping during the fire. 
Inasmuch as the examination of the late officer will take place tomorrow
 and all the evidence will come out, we forbear further remarks on this 
occasion. Again, after the fire, the next day when jumpers appeared on 
the burned district, Mr. Earp solved the whole problem by using the 
power vested in him for preserving the public peace, by rein stating the
 owners to their possessions and compelling all to respect each other's 
rights. After the first two days there was no confusion and no more 
efforts to jump or dispossess those who were in quiet possession before 
the fire. It would be easy to call to the public mind other important 
services Mr. Earp rendered this community at an earlier day, but this 
must suffice for this time. It is to be hoped that our city council will
 confirm, by permanent appointment. Mr. Earp in the position he so 
efficiently and honorably fills. We have no doubt but what they will, 
for in the language of the immortal Lincoln, we do not believe the 
council will "swap horses in the middle of the stream," and that is just
 where we now are in the guardianship of the public peace and order of 
the town. Find <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">Old West Clothing online</a></p><p>
_______________________________________________________________________</p><p>
September 10, 1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper</p><p>
Stage Robbery</p><p>The Bisbee Stage Robbed by Three Masked Men<br>
Thursday night, about 10 o'clock, as the stage was nearing Bisbee, 
being some four miles or five miles this side in the broken ground, it 
was stopped by three (some say four) masked men, who, with pistols 
leveled at the driver and passengers, demanded Wells, Fargo &amp; Co's 
treasure box. The box was thrown out when they went through the 
passengers, getting eight dollars and a gold watch from one and about 
six hundred dollars from another. From the treasure box they got a fat 
haul, there being $2,500 in it. The report is that they also went 
through all the baggage and the mail sacks, but this is rather doubtful.
 About 9:30 yesterday morning two messengers rode into Tombstone with 
their horses upon a lope, halting in front of the Wells, Fargo &amp; 
Co's office, dismounted and went in. Those seeing the men come in such 
hot haste, at once surmised something wrong, and in a short time the 
robbery was the talk of the street. Marshal Williams, agent for W., F. 
&amp; Co., immediately notified the Sheriff's office, and in a few hours
 himself, Deputy Breakenridge, Wyatt and Morgan Earp were in the saddle 
or on the way to the place of the robbery, from whence they will take up
 the trail and do their best to overhaul the robbers. This, we fear, is a
 hopeless task, as so much valuable time was lost by the messengers 
riding from Charleston into Tombstone, when they might better have 
telegraphed and had the whole thing managed in secrecy.</p><p>
____________________________________________________________________<img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/old-tombstone-az.jpg" style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, Verdana, Tahoma, sans-serif; font-size: 15px;">____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
"<a href="http://www.cityoftombstone.com/">Tombstone's look</a> has changed since it was captured in this photograph.  Once it was a hard-scrabble mining <a href="http://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/opdb/goes/soundings/skewt23L/html/mdpc.html">town</a>
 prone to fire and drought.  Today tourists visit the city to relive the
 history and pioneer spirit that it embodies.  Many still travel to 
various tropical destinations in <a href="http://bookit.com/caribbean/dominican-republic/punta-cana/">Punta Cana Dominican Republic</a> or <a href="http://bookit.com/caribbean/jamaica/">Jamaica vacation packages</a>, but those that have a love of history, western <a href="http://weather.noaa.gov/weather/JM_cc.html">culture</a>, and desire to learn more about the American past still travel to Tombstone and the sites of early western history."</p><p>
________________</p><p>
September 13, 1881  Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper</p><p>
Important Capture </p><p>
A Deputy Sheriff Arrested on a Charge of Robbing the Bisbee Stage</p><p>
Wyatt and Morgan Earp, Marshall Williams and Deputy Sheriff 
Breakenridge, who went to Bisbee to arrest the stage robbers, on Sunday 
evening brought in Deputy Sheriff T. C. Stillwell and P. Spencer, whom 
the evidence strongly points out as the robbers. They were examined 
before Wells Spicer, Esq., yesterday, and were admitted to bail in the 
sum of $7000 each--$5,000 for robbing the mail and $2,000 for robbing D.
 B. Rea. The evidence against Deputy Sheriff Stillwell is 
circumstantial, and rests principally upon the tracks made by his boot 
heels in the mud, which corresponded with those he had removed by a 
shoemaker upon his return to Bisbee. The Epitaph has no desire to 
pre-judge the case, but if it turns out as now anticipated, that the 
officers of the law are implicated in this nefarious business, it would 
seem to be in order for Sheriff Behan to appoint another deputy.</p><p>_____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
September 13, 1881 Tombstone Epitaph Newspaper</p><p>
The Stage Robbery    Arrest of the Supposed Culprits</p><p>
As before reported, Morgan and Wyatt Earp, Marshal Williams, Fred Dodge
 and Deputy Sheriffs Breakenridge and Nagle started out last Friday, 
immediately after receiving information of the robbery of the Bisbee 
stage, and arrived at the place where the robbery was committed at about
 dark. By that time all the tracks had become obliterated except one 
that of a bare-footed horse which had evidently been ridden in the 
direction of this place. From there they proceeded to Bisbee and at 
about _____ o'clock Sunday morning.  Frank Stillwell, Deputy Sheriff at 
that place and Peter Spencer, a resident of Tombstone. but engaged in 
business in Bisbee, were arrested upon a warrant sworn out by Marshal 
Williams, agent for Wells Fargo &amp; Co., and brought here and placed 
in jail. When taken before Justice Spicer yesterday, they were 
rearrested by United States Deputy Marshal Wyatt Earp, charged with 
robbing the United States mail, upon a warrant sworn out by Marshal 
Williams. They will have an examination upon the first charge next 
Thursday and upon the last next Monday.</p><p>_____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
September 18, 1881<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories"> Tombstone Epitaph and Clothing</a></p><p>
The Cow-boy Nuisance.</p><p>
Tombstone Sept. 16--Has anyone stopped for a moment to consider the 
present state of affairs in Arizona, and what the end will be? It has 
come to pass in this county that life and personal property are unsafe; 
even in the town of Tombstone it seems as if one of the leading 
industries is to be destroyed. There is not a teamster to-day who is not
 in fear and dread of the cow-boys, or so-styled "rustlers" depriving 
him of his hard earnings (I say hard earnings, for if there is a man who
 gains his living by the sweat of his brow, it is the man who from early
 morn till late at night pulls and tugs along through mud and rain, 
dust, and heat, with a six or eight mule team, or the man who shoulders a
 bull whip and tramps all day long yelling and pounding seven or eight 
yoke of oxen) How must such men feel to be robbed by a hand of thieves 
and cutthroats, who take pride in announcing to the public that they are
 "rustlers!" Where is the teamsters protection? Can you find any 
officers who will follow, arrest and recover your property? If you can, I
 would like to see him. And how do teamsters act to one another in such 
matters? They stand still, for the "rustlers" tell them, "you won't be 
troubled if you leave us alone." So they take the man's cattle ahead of 
you, and you won't help him, for you have had an understanding; and then
 they take yours; the man behind you won't help you for he is "solid," 
having had an understanding with them; and then they take his, and so it
 goes. Another thing, teamsters are afraid; they follow, intending to 
fight, they get close to their stock, are met and told to go back, and 
back they go. These chaps seem to have no difficulty in evading the law,
 while others, not inclined to work, daily join the band and they are 
increasing fast in numbers. Our town is filled with spies watching every
 move of the officers and imparting their information to their comrades.
 Just let a stage be robbed and in less than twelve hours no less than 
twelve "rustlers" will come and go. It is having a dreadfully depressing
 effect upon all kinds of business. Men who come to examine different 
mines outside of town, when they learn how the cow-boys stand fellows 
up, do not wish to run such risks; they quietly take the road they came 
and get into civilization as soon as possible. Just look at the number 
of oxen stolen in the last six weeks between here and Morse's Mills; 
and, to cap off with, they stopped what was left of the train they had 
robbed, and told the owners; "Travel this no further: if you do we will 
kill you and take your oxen," and they there and then forced them there 
and then unyoke. That was done within four miles of this town on last 
Sunday morning. I think it is time the people did something. There are 
men not afraid of them, but those men are in various employments. They 
won't quit work and go on the trail unless the people will make it an 
object. Ten armed men, well mounted, can, in sixty days, bring to 
justice many a "rustler." Put the right men in the field and give them 
the proper leader, and see how soon peace will be restored to the 
community, and business will resume its happy and prosperous course 
again.  CHIRICAHUA (Written one month before the Shootout in Tombstone) <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">They wore Old West Clothes.</a></p><p>_________________________________________________________________<br>
<ins></ins><img alt="" src="http://oldwesthistory.net/files/percival.jpg" style="height: 334px; width: 572px;"><br>
"Looking south...Don Perceval's 1965 Gunfight at the OK Corral painting...Above copy courtesy McLelland Collection<br>
An interesting look at the scene through the picture frame of the artists interpretation<br>
L-R...Papago's Cash Store...OK Corral north entrance (see OK 
sign)...small white adobe....C.S. Flys Boardinghouse &amp; Photo 
Gallery...Harwood House <em> R-5/10/13</em><br>
_____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
October 27, 1881  Tombstone Nugget Newspaper</p><p>Marshal Virgil Earp, Morgan and Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday Meet the 
Cowboys...Three Men Killed and Two Wounded, One Seriously...Origins of 
the Trouble and its Tragic Termination.</p><p>
The 26th of October, 1881, will always be marked as one of the crimson 
days in the annals of Tombstone, a day when blood flowed as water, and 
human life was held as a shuttlecock, a day always to be remembered as 
witnessing the bloodiest and deadliest street fight that has ever 
occurred in this place, or probably in the Territory.</p><p>The origin of the trouble dates back to the first arrest of Stilwell 
and Spencer for the robbery of the Bisbee stage. The co-operation of the
 Earps and the Sheriff and his deputies in the arrest caused a number of
 cowboys to, it is said, threaten the lives of all interested in the 
capture. Still, nothing occured to indicate that any such threats would 
be carried into execution. But Tuesday night Ike Clanton and Doc 
Holliday had some difficulty in the Alhambra saloon. Hard words passed 
between them, and when they parted it was generally understood that the 
feeling between the two men was that of intense hatred. Yesterday 
morning Clanton came on the street armed with a rifle and revolver, but 
was almost immediately arrested by Marshal Earp, dismissed and fined by 
Justice Wallace for carrying concealed weapons. While in the Court room 
Wyatt Earp told him that as he had made threats against his life he 
wanted him to make his fight, to say how, when and where he would fight,
 and to get his crowd, and he (Wyatt) would be on hand.<br>
In reply, Clanton said: "Four feet of ground is enough for me to fight 
on, and I'll be there." A short time after this William Clanton and 
Frank McLowry came into town, and as Thomas McLowry was already here the
 feeling soon became general that a fight would ensue before the day was
 over, and crowds of expectant men stood on the corner of Allen and 
Fourth streets awaiting the coming conflict.<br>
It was now about two o'clock, and at this time Sheriff Behan appeared 
upon the scene and told Marshal Earp that if he disarmed his posse, 
composed of Morgan and Wyatt Earp, and Doc Holliday, he would go down to
 the O.K. Corral where Ike and James Clanton and Frank and Tom McLowry 
were and disarm them. The Marshal did not desire to do this until 
assured that there was no danger of attack from the other party. The 
Sheriff went to the corral and told the cowboys that they must put their
 arms away and not have any trouble. Ike Clanton and Tom McLowry said 
they were not armed, and Frank McLowry said he would not lay his aside. 
In the meantime the Marshal had concluded to go and, if possible, end 
the matter by disarming them, and as he and his posse came down Fremont 
Street towards the corral, the Sheriff stepped out and said: "Hold up 
boys, don't go down there or there will be trouble: I have been down 
there to disarm them." But they passes on, and when within a few feet of
 the the Marshal said to the Clantons and McLowrys: "Throw up your hands
 boys, I intend to disarm you."<br>
As he spoke, Frank McLowry made a motion to draw his revolver, when 
Wyatt Earp pulled his and shot him, the ball striking on the right side 
of his abdomen. About the same time Doc Holliday shot Tom McLowry in the
 right side using a short shotgun, such as is carried by Wells-Fargo 
&amp; Co.'s messengers. IN the meantime Billy Clanton had shot at Morgan
 Earp, the ball passing through the point of the left shoulder blade 
across the back, just grazing the backbone and coming out at the 
shoulder, the ball remaining inside his shirt. He fell to the ground but
 in an instant gathered himself, and raising in a sitting position fired
 at Frank McLowry as he crossed Freemont Street, and at the same instant
 Doc Holliday shot at him, both balls taking effect either of which 
would have proved fatal, as one struck him in the right temple and the 
other in the left breast. As he started across the street, however, he 
pulled his gun down on Holliday saying, "I've got you now." "Blaze away!
 You're a daisy if you have, " replied Doc. This shot of McLowry's 
passed through Holliday's pistol pocket, just grazing the skin.<br>
While this was going on Billy Clanton had shot Virgil Earp in the right
 leg, the ball passing through the calf, inflicting a severe flesh 
wound. In turn he had been shot by Morgan Earp in the right wrist and 
once in the left breast. Soon after the shooting commenced Ike Clanton 
ran through the O.K. Corral, across Allen Street into Kellogg's saloon 
and thence into Toughnut street where he was arrested and taken to the 
county jail. The firing altogether didn't occupy more than twenty-five 
seconds, during which time fully thirty shots wree fired. After the 
fight was over Billy Clanton, who, with wonderful vitality, survived his
 wounds for fully an hour, was carried by the editor and foreman of the 
Nugget into a house near where he lay, and everything possible was done 
to make his last moments easy. He was "game" to the last, never uttering
 a word of complaint, and just before breathing his last he said, 
"Goodbye boys; go away and let me die." The wounded were taken to their 
houses, and at three o'clock next morning were resting comfortably. The 
dead bodies were taken in charge by the Coroner, and an inquest will be 
held upon them at 10 o'clock today. Upon the person of Thomas McLowry 
was found between $300 and $400 and checks and certificates of deposit 
to the amount of nearly $3,000.<br>
During the shooting Sheriff Behan was standing nearby commanding the 
contestants to cease firing but was powerless to prevent it. Several 
parties who were in the vicinity of the shooting had "narrow escapes" 
from being shot. One man who had lately arrived from the east had a ball
 pass through his pants. He left for home this morning. A person called 
"the Kid" who shot Hicks at Charleston recently, was also grazed by a 
ball. When the Vizina [mine&91; whistle gave the signal that there was a 
conflict between the officers and cowboys, the mines on the hill shut 
down and the miners were brought to the surface. From the Contention 
mine a number of men, fully armed, were sent to town on a four-horse 
carriage. At the request of the Sheriff the "Vigilantes," or Committee 
of Safety, wre called from the streets by a few sharp toots from the 
Vizina's whistle. During the early part of the evening there was a rumor
 that a mob would attempt to take Ike Clanton frm the jail and lynch 
him, and to prevent any such unlawful proceedings a strong guard of 
deputtes was placed around that building and will be so continued until 
all danger is past.<br>
At 8 o'clock last evening Finn Clanton, a brother of Billy and Ike, 
came to town, and placing himself under the guard of the Sheriff, 
visited the morgue to see the remains of his brother, and then passed 
the night in jail in company with the other.<br>
Ominous Sounds<br>
Shortly after the shooting ceased the whistle at the Vizina mine 
sounded a few short toots, and almost simultaneously a large number of 
citizens appeared on the streets armed with rifles and a belt of 
cartridges around their waists. These men formed in line and offered 
their services to the peace officers to preserve orderin case any 
attempt at disturbance was made, or any interference offered to the 
authorities of the law. However, no hostile move was made by anyone, and
 the quiet and order was fully restored, and in a short time the 
excitement died away.<br>
At the Morgue<br>
The bodies of the three slain cowboys lay side by side, covered with a 
sheet. Very little blood appeared on their clothing, and only on the 
face of young Billy Clanton was there any distortion of the features or 
evidence of pain in dying. The features of the two McLowry boys looked 
as calm and placid in death as if they had died peaceably, surrounded by
 loving friends and sorrowing relatives. No unkind remarks were made by 
anyone, but feeling of unusual sorrow seemed to prevail at the sad 
occurrence. Of the two McLowry brothers we could learn nothing of their 
previous history before coming to Arizona. The two brothers owned quite 
an extensive ranch on the lower San Pedro, some seventy or eighty miles 
from this city, to which they had removed their band of cattle since the
 recent Mexican and Indian troubles. They did not bear the reputation of
 being of a quarrelsome disposition, but were known as fighting men, and
 have generally conducted themselves in a quiet and orderly manner when 
in Tombstone.<br>
<em><a href="http://www.oldwesthistory.net/g.s._mclelland%27s_tombstone_shoot-out_near_the_ok_c.html"><img alt="" src="http://oldwesthistory.net/files/TombStore1.gif" style="height: 81px; width: 730px;"></a></em>____________________________________________________________________</p><p>
<u>December 30, 1881</u></p><p>
THE BEGINNING OF TROUBLES</p><p>
A BRIEF REVIEW, FROM THE KILLING OF BUD PHILPOT TO THE PRESENT TIME</p><p>
It will be remembered that about the middle of March, last, an attempt 
was made to stop and rob the down stage to Benson near Drew's Station, 
and the murdering fiends shot and killed the driver, Bud Philpot. That 
event created a great sensation in Tombstone, and the sheriff, with a 
posse of men, among whom were Marshal Williams, Virgil Earp, Morgan and 
Wyatt Earp, started in pursuit. Marshal Williams remaining with the 
party for five days and returning with King, one of the gang, whom they 
captured somewhere down the San Pedro, the remainder of the party being 
absent for eighteen days, following the trail into New Mexico, but 
failing to capture more of the outlaws. It will also be remembered that 
King, while in custody of the under sheriff here in Tombstone, was 
permitted to escape and was never captured. </p><p>
THREATS OF VENGEANCE</p><p>
But a few weeks elapsed after this event before word was brought to the
 Earps and Marshall Williams by friends on whose integrity they could 
rely, that the gang had sworn vengeance on them and would kill them on 
the first opportunity. Some time in April Mrs. Williams had arranged for
 a visit to her relatives in the East, also, these gentlemen decided to 
take a private carriage, and in company go with their wives to Benson. 
At the last moment Mr. Williams with his wife took the stage, leaving 
Mr. Fickas and his wife the sole occupants of the carriage. When about 
two and a half or three miles this side of Benson, five horsemen, armed 
with rifles and revolvers, dashed past the carriage, wheeled around and 
opened ranks for the carriage to pass. The side curtains being down, 
they leaned over upon their horses to get a view of the back seat, and 
seeing no one thereon, rode off with a shower of curses. This startled 
Mr. Fickas, who could not account for the rudeness of the party. When 
this event was related to Mr. Williams by Mr. Fickas he very naturally 
drew inference that the party were looking for him. So long ago as June 
last, Virgil Earp told a friend that he and his brothers had received 
repeated warnings by those who came in contact with the gang that they 
were planning to come to town to clean out the Earp crowd, and further 
said they did not know at what moment they would be shot in the back as 
they were going home of a night.</p><p>
THE BISBEE STAGE  ROBBERY</p><p>
It will also be remembered that when the Bisbee stage was robbed, on 
the 8th day of September, that Morgan Earp, Wyatt Earp and Marshal 
Williams accompanied the sheriff and helped to make the arrest of 
Stilwell, who is now under bonds awaiting the action of the United 
States grand jury for robbing the United States mail. This naturally 
further aggravated the cow-boy gang, and the threats became still more 
plentiful and open. Matters rapidly culminated, the rupture being made 
by Ike Clanton coming into town and walking the streets with revolver 
and Winchester rifle hunting for Virgil Earp, threatening to shoot him 
on sight. What followed is all too fresh in the minds of the people to 
need recapitulation here.</p><p>
MRS. COYLER'S STATEMENT </p><p>
We now wish to call the reader's attention to the statement of a most 
estimable lady, reprinted from the columns of the Kansas City Daily 
Star, which will throw light upon several points heretofore obscured in 
mystery, and that is as to the shots alleged to have been fired at the 
officers from behind a horse. She also says in the most emphatic manner,
 and without the fear of intimidation brought to bear upon her, that the
 Clanton party opened fire the moment the marshal called upon them to 
throw up their hands. Another feature of this lady's statement we wish 
to call attention to, and that is, that two separate raids, deliberately
 planned for murder and plunder, were providentially frustrated by 
alarms of fire, at which many of the Citizens' protective league turned 
out with their rifles, prepared for any emergency. This fact was known 
to many of our citizens at the time, but the inside history was not so 
clear as since her statement appeared.</p><p>
THE MYSTERIOUS ROOM</p><p>
During the examination of the Earp-Holliday case before Judge Spicer 
there was a certain room in the Grand hotel occupied by Clanton and his 
friends, the shutters of which were never opened like the others on that
 floor, which was a matter of frequent comment. The examination before 
Judge Spicer was one of the most searching and thorough in the annals of
 justice's court, lasting as it did for nearly four weeks, with able 
counsel on both sides. The judge, in a most clear and concise review of 
the evidence, held that the marshal and his party were acting in the 
discharge of their legal duty, therefore very justly, discharged them. 
This event only the more intensified cow-boy element, who now added to 
their list of proscription and death, judge Spicer, Tom Fitch, and Mayor
 Clum. The blinds of the mysterious room still remained closed. About 
two or three days previous to the departure of Mayor Clum, a man, whose 
name can be given if necessary, happened to go to his den and found a 
man standing at the window with a Winchester rifle, full cocked, at his 
shoulder, drawing a bead upon some one on the opposite side of the 
street. (We should have before stated that for convenience of 
observation and other purposes a slat in one of the blinds had been 
removed.) The new-comer sung out to the gunner, "What in h__l are you 
doing there?" he replied, "I'm going to shoot that d__d son of a B____, 
Rickabaugh!" It was Mr. Rickabaugh, partner of Wyatt Earp in the 
Oriental saloon, who was, unconscious of danger, walking down the 
opposite side of the street. The new-comer forbid the deed to be done, 
saying, as reported to Mr. Rickabough, "Don't you do that; he has never 
injured us. He has only spent his money for his friends, the Earps, and 
that is what either you or I would do for our friends." It was in this 
room that it is reported that Milt Hicks, Ringo and four other men were 
closeted the night and day previous to the fire in the rear of the 
hotel, which fact forms a link in the chain of circumstantial evidence 
corroborating the statement of Mrs. Colyer, above referred to, it being 
stated upon good authority that they made their escape from the room 
about the breaking out of the fire.</p><p>
THE ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATE MAYOR CLUM</p><p>
On the night of the 14th instant, John P. Clum, mayor of Tombstone, 
took the stage for Benson on his way to Tucson. When about four miles 
below town, it was attacked by armed men, whose shots frightened the 
team so that the driver could not hold them, and they ran a quarter of a
 mile or more, when one of the leaders which had been struck in the neck
 fell from loss of blood, and soon expired. It was well known fact that 
this stage carried neither mail nor treasure: therefore robbery could 
not have been the object of the band of highwaymen who attempted to stop
 it. Knowing the deep and murderous threats of the gang against his 
life, but one logical inference could be drawn, and that was, the party 
only wanted the life of Mr. Clum. </p><p>
THE LAST ACT</p><p>
The events of the last twenty-four hours prove conclusively that the 
information briefly given in the above narration of facts was true in 
every particular. having miscarried in every one of their hellish plots 
against lives of those whom they hated or feared, three of the gang 
crept into the town under the cover of darkness, last night, and like 
the midnight assassins that they are, shot in the back United States 
Deputy Marshal Virgil Earp, thinking, no doubt, that from the five loads
 of buckshot they poured at him that he was dead beyond all recovery. 
Here again the hand of God is manifest in frustrating the damnable 
actions of these vicious murderers: for, though dangerously wounded, he 
will not die.</p><p>
THE SADDEST OF ALL</p><p>The recitation of the foregoing facts has not been a pleasant task; for
 we are aware that many honest citizens of Tombstone will say that it 
were better that these things should be kept from the public, that they 
are ruinous to the business interests of the town, and that by reminding
 the public of them it will deter immigration. It is not the province of
 a respectable journal to delude the public by a cry of peace, nor to 
ridicule or make light of the public danger when the people are daily 
treading upon a slumbering volcano. There are three things in this 
community as dangerous to the permanent peace and prosperity of our city
 as the cow-boys themselves. These are-first, the apathy, or the 
inability of our public officials to cope with with the evil complained 
of; second, the general indifference of the better class of society to 
the present state of things; and third, the openly expressed sympathy of
 a certain class with those outlaws from society, giving them aid and 
comfort in various ways, thereby emboldening them to make this city 
their headquarters. The cure for this state of things can be speedily 
and surely worked if our people will lay aside personal jealousies and 
antagonisms and stand more fully by the legally constituted authorities 
in the enforcement of the laws against this organized band of outlaws. 
An active, manful spirit on the part of our citizens will inspire 
confidence in the officers that they have a substantial backing in their
 efforts to rid the country of this overshadowing evil. There need be no
 violation of law on the part of citizens or officers, if public spirit 
is properly aroused. There are those, who will, no doubt, ridicule what 
we are writing for the public good, as they have ridiculed in the past 
the danger of those who have for months been walking in the shadow of 
death</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.]]></title>
			<link>https://www.theoldwestgallery.com/blog/doc-holliday-commits-his-first-murder-killing-a-man-for-shooting-up-his-new-mexico-saloon/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 31 Aug 2014 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.theoldwestgallery.com/blog/doc-holliday-commits-his-first-murder-killing-a-man-for-shooting-up-his-new-mexico-saloon/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<h3>
<a href="http://dochollidaymurder.blogspot.com/2012/10/doc-holliday-commits-his-first-murder.html">Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.</a>
</h3><p><a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/">Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.</a><br>
Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.<br>
<br>
Despite his formidable reputation as a deadly gunslinger, Doc Holliday 
only engaged in eight shootouts during his life, and it has only been 
verified that he killed two men. Still, the smartly dressed ex-dentist 
from Atlanta had a remarkably fearless attitude toward death and danger,
 perhaps because he was slowly dying from tuberculosis.<br>
<br>
In 1879, Holliday settled in Las Vegas, New Mexico, where he opened a 
saloon with a partner. Holliday spent his evenings gambling in the 
saloon and he seemed determined to stress his health condition by heavy 
drinking. A notorious cad, Holliday also enjoyed the company of the 
dance hall girls that the partners hired to entertain the 
customers–which sometimes sparked trouble.<br>
<br>
On this day in 1879, a former army scout named Mike Gordon tried to 
persuade one of Holliday's saloon girls to quit her job and run away 
with him. When she refused, Gordon became infuriated. He went out to the
 street and began to fire bullets randomly into the saloon. He didn't 
have a chance to do much damage–after the second shot, Holliday calmly 
stepped out of the saloon and dropped Gordon with a single bullet. 
Gordon died the next day.<br>
<br>
The following year, Holliday abandoned the saloon business and joined 
his old friend Wyatt Earp in Tombstone, Arizona. There he would kill his
 second victim, during the famous "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" in 
October 1881. During the subsequent six years, Holliday assisted at 
several other killings and wounded a number of men in gun battles. His 
hard drinking and tuberculosis eventually caught up with him, and he 
retired to a Colorado health resort where he died in 1887. Struck by the
 irony of such a peaceful end to a violent life, his last words 
reportedly were "This is funny."</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>
<a href="http://dochollidaymurder.blogspot.com/2012/10/doc-holliday-commits-his-first-murder.html">Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.</a>
</h3><p><a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/">Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.</a><br>
Doc Holliday commits his first murder, killing a man for shooting up his New Mexico saloon.<br>
<br>
Despite his formidable reputation as a deadly gunslinger, Doc Holliday 
only engaged in eight shootouts during his life, and it has only been 
verified that he killed two men. Still, the smartly dressed ex-dentist 
from Atlanta had a remarkably fearless attitude toward death and danger,
 perhaps because he was slowly dying from tuberculosis.<br>
<br>
In 1879, Holliday settled in Las Vegas, New Mexico, where he opened a 
saloon with a partner. Holliday spent his evenings gambling in the 
saloon and he seemed determined to stress his health condition by heavy 
drinking. A notorious cad, Holliday also enjoyed the company of the 
dance hall girls that the partners hired to entertain the 
customers–which sometimes sparked trouble.<br>
<br>
On this day in 1879, a former army scout named Mike Gordon tried to 
persuade one of Holliday's saloon girls to quit her job and run away 
with him. When she refused, Gordon became infuriated. He went out to the
 street and began to fire bullets randomly into the saloon. He didn't 
have a chance to do much damage–after the second shot, Holliday calmly 
stepped out of the saloon and dropped Gordon with a single bullet. 
Gordon died the next day.<br>
<br>
The following year, Holliday abandoned the saloon business and joined 
his old friend Wyatt Earp in Tombstone, Arizona. There he would kill his
 second victim, during the famous "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral" in 
October 1881. During the subsequent six years, Holliday assisted at 
several other killings and wounded a number of men in gun battles. His 
hard drinking and tuberculosis eventually caught up with him, and he 
retired to a Colorado health resort where he died in 1887. Struck by the
 irony of such a peaceful end to a violent life, his last words 
reportedly were "This is funny."</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[HIstory Of Deadwood And Wild Bill Hickok]]></title>
			<link>https://www.theoldwestgallery.com/blog/history-of-deadwood-and-wild-bill-hickok/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 31 Aug 2014 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.theoldwestgallery.com/blog/history-of-deadwood-and-wild-bill-hickok/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<h2>Wednesday, October 31, 2009</h2><p>1868 - In April the U.S. Government signs the Fort Laramie Treaty, 
giving ownership of the Black Hills to the Lakota Sioux nation.<br>
The 1880 census places Deadwood’s population at 3,777 people. <br>
•The 1890 census lists the population of Deadwood at 2,366 people.<br>
<br>
•US 7th Cavalry surround an encampment of Lakota Indians near Wounded 
Knee Creek with the goal of disarming and escorting them to a 
reservation. After a deaf tribesman fails to hear the order to give up 
his rifle, the Army opens fire killing 146 men, women and children.  The
 massacre effectively ends the Indian wars.<br>
<br>
•Hard rock mining booms during the decade as new technologies are developed to extract gold from low grade ore.<br>
<br>
•The Fremont, Elkhorn, and Missouri Valley Railroad is the first passenger train to arrive in Deadwood.</p><h2>
Prostitution in Deadwood</h2><p>Back in the days of the Old West, Deadwood, South Dakota was famous for 
its gold-filled creeks, wild gaming halls and “frontier hospitality.”  
Back then miners came to Deadwood seeking more than just their fortunes.
 They were also looking for a good time with one of the town’s working 
women. Prospecting and prostitution went hand and hand in Deadwood.  In 
fact, an entire city block was occupied by nothing but brothels until 
1980. <br>
<br>
The first of the Working Girls, along with infamous Madams Mustache and Dirty Em, arrived in Deadwood via <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/coloradocharlieutter/">Colorado Charlie Utter’s </a>wagon train—the same wagon train that carried <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/wildbillhickok/">Wild Bill Hickok </a>and <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/calamityjane/">Calamity Jane.</a>  Miners were so happy to see the prostitutes roll into town that they lined the streets and clapped as the wagon passed by.  <br>
<br>
Long after the Black Hills gold rush ended, the brothels of Deadwood’s 
Main Street continued to operate.  They were shut down briefly in 1950 
when an overeager State’s Attorney tried to shut them down. But just a 
few months later, many of the establishments reopened due to a legal 
technicality. <br>
<br>
In 1980, federal and state authorities were finally able to shut down 
the last four remaining brothels.  Local supporters protested the raid 
with a Main Street parade—much like the one that happened when Madam 
Mustache and Dirty Em rolled into town on <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/coloradocharlieutter/">Charlie Utter’s </a>wagon train.</p><h2>
Wild Bill Hickok</h2><p>Wild Bill is probably the most famous Deadwood resident, even though he 
was only in town a few short weeks.  James Butler Hickok arrived in 
Deadwood, along with Colorado Charlie Utter and Calamity Jane, in July 
of 1876.  He was a well-known gambler and gunslinger, participating in 
many shootouts before coming to Deadwood <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">they all wore old west clothing from the 1880s..</a>  <br>
<br>
He was killed on August 2, 1876 when Jack McCall shot him from behind 
while playing poker. When he died, Wild Bill was holding a pair of aces 
and eights, that series of cards became known to poker players all 
around the world as the “Dead Man’s Hand.”  In 1979, Wild Bill Hickok 
was inducted as a charter member into the World Series of Poker’s Hall 
of Fame.<br>
</p><h2>
Calamity Jane</h2><p>Martha Jane Canary was a tobacco-spitting, beer-guzzling, foul-mouthed 
woman who preferred men’s clothing to dresses. She was well known 
through the Hills as Calamity Jane, but how she got this nickname is a 
legendary debate.  According to Old West legend, Calamity Jane rode into
 a group of fighting hostiles to save a wounded army captain.  Jane 
emerged from the fight untouched so the captain named her “Calamity 
Jane.” Or did he?  <br>
<br>
Some say Jane made the whole thing up because she was looking for 
attention from the town’s legendary men—especially Wild Bill Hickok who 
she claimed to love.  It’s widely reported that Hickok, who was married,
 had little interest in Jane and that’s why the townsfolk buried her 
next to him in Mount Moriah Cemetery—so she could spend eternity with 
him and they could play the ultimate joke on Hickok.</p><h2>
<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">Seth Bullock bought all his clothes from the old west gallery.</a></h2><p>In its early days the town of Deadwood took pride in being lawless, 
murdering anyone who dared to bring civility. After the death of Wild 
Bill Hickok and the acquittal of his killer, Jack McCall, it became 
apparent that Deadwood needed law and order.  Seth Bullock, a Deadwood 
businessman, answered the call to be the town’s first sheriff. <br>
<br>
According to local legend, Bullock’s tall stature, broad shoulders and 
steel-gray eyes were so intimidating that he could stare down an angry 
cobra.  His fearlessness helped Bullock tame the wildest town in the 
West without killing anyone. Ironically, Bullock arrived in the gold 
camp one day before Hickok was killed.  <br>
<br>
Bullock and his business partner, Sol Star, owned and operated the 
town’s first hardware store. But when it burned in 1894, they decided 
not to rebuild but construct Deadwood's first hotel instead. The 
three-story, 64-room <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/Lodging/Browse/Hotels_and_Motels/Bullock_Hotel">Bullock Hotel </a>was
 the most luxurious of its time with steam heat and indoor bathrooms on 
each floor. The Bullock is still a Main Street fixture today. Seth 
Bullock is buried at the top of the hill in Deadwood’s Mount Moriah 
Cemetery.<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">Where did he get his old west clothing outfits for the movie?</a> From an online store.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Wednesday, October 31, 2009</h2><p>1868 - In April the U.S. Government signs the Fort Laramie Treaty, 
giving ownership of the Black Hills to the Lakota Sioux nation.<br>
The 1880 census places Deadwood’s population at 3,777 people. <br>
•The 1890 census lists the population of Deadwood at 2,366 people.<br>
<br>
•US 7th Cavalry surround an encampment of Lakota Indians near Wounded 
Knee Creek with the goal of disarming and escorting them to a 
reservation. After a deaf tribesman fails to hear the order to give up 
his rifle, the Army opens fire killing 146 men, women and children.  The
 massacre effectively ends the Indian wars.<br>
<br>
•Hard rock mining booms during the decade as new technologies are developed to extract gold from low grade ore.<br>
<br>
•The Fremont, Elkhorn, and Missouri Valley Railroad is the first passenger train to arrive in Deadwood.</p><h2>
Prostitution in Deadwood</h2><p>Back in the days of the Old West, Deadwood, South Dakota was famous for 
its gold-filled creeks, wild gaming halls and “frontier hospitality.”  
Back then miners came to Deadwood seeking more than just their fortunes.
 They were also looking for a good time with one of the town’s working 
women. Prospecting and prostitution went hand and hand in Deadwood.  In 
fact, an entire city block was occupied by nothing but brothels until 
1980. <br>
<br>
The first of the Working Girls, along with infamous Madams Mustache and Dirty Em, arrived in Deadwood via <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/coloradocharlieutter/">Colorado Charlie Utter’s </a>wagon train—the same wagon train that carried <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/wildbillhickok/">Wild Bill Hickok </a>and <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/calamityjane/">Calamity Jane.</a>  Miners were so happy to see the prostitutes roll into town that they lined the streets and clapped as the wagon passed by.  <br>
<br>
Long after the Black Hills gold rush ended, the brothels of Deadwood’s 
Main Street continued to operate.  They were shut down briefly in 1950 
when an overeager State’s Attorney tried to shut them down. But just a 
few months later, many of the establishments reopened due to a legal 
technicality. <br>
<br>
In 1980, federal and state authorities were finally able to shut down 
the last four remaining brothels.  Local supporters protested the raid 
with a Main Street parade—much like the one that happened when Madam 
Mustache and Dirty Em rolled into town on <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/history/famouscitizens/coloradocharlieutter/">Charlie Utter’s </a>wagon train.</p><h2>
Wild Bill Hickok</h2><p>Wild Bill is probably the most famous Deadwood resident, even though he 
was only in town a few short weeks.  James Butler Hickok arrived in 
Deadwood, along with Colorado Charlie Utter and Calamity Jane, in July 
of 1876.  He was a well-known gambler and gunslinger, participating in 
many shootouts before coming to Deadwood <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">they all wore old west clothing from the 1880s..</a>  <br>
<br>
He was killed on August 2, 1876 when Jack McCall shot him from behind 
while playing poker. When he died, Wild Bill was holding a pair of aces 
and eights, that series of cards became known to poker players all 
around the world as the “Dead Man’s Hand.”  In 1979, Wild Bill Hickok 
was inducted as a charter member into the World Series of Poker’s Hall 
of Fame.<br>
</p><h2>
Calamity Jane</h2><p>Martha Jane Canary was a tobacco-spitting, beer-guzzling, foul-mouthed 
woman who preferred men’s clothing to dresses. She was well known 
through the Hills as Calamity Jane, but how she got this nickname is a 
legendary debate.  According to Old West legend, Calamity Jane rode into
 a group of fighting hostiles to save a wounded army captain.  Jane 
emerged from the fight untouched so the captain named her “Calamity 
Jane.” Or did he?  <br>
<br>
Some say Jane made the whole thing up because she was looking for 
attention from the town’s legendary men—especially Wild Bill Hickok who 
she claimed to love.  It’s widely reported that Hickok, who was married,
 had little interest in Jane and that’s why the townsfolk buried her 
next to him in Mount Moriah Cemetery—so she could spend eternity with 
him and they could play the ultimate joke on Hickok.</p><h2>
<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">Seth Bullock bought all his clothes from the old west gallery.</a></h2><p>In its early days the town of Deadwood took pride in being lawless, 
murdering anyone who dared to bring civility. After the death of Wild 
Bill Hickok and the acquittal of his killer, Jack McCall, it became 
apparent that Deadwood needed law and order.  Seth Bullock, a Deadwood 
businessman, answered the call to be the town’s first sheriff. <br>
<br>
According to local legend, Bullock’s tall stature, broad shoulders and 
steel-gray eyes were so intimidating that he could stare down an angry 
cobra.  His fearlessness helped Bullock tame the wildest town in the 
West without killing anyone. Ironically, Bullock arrived in the gold 
camp one day before Hickok was killed.  <br>
<br>
Bullock and his business partner, Sol Star, owned and operated the 
town’s first hardware store. But when it burned in 1894, they decided 
not to rebuild but construct Deadwood's first hotel instead. The 
three-story, 64-room <a href="http://www.deadwood.com/Lodging/Browse/Hotels_and_Motels/Bullock_Hotel">Bullock Hotel </a>was
 the most luxurious of its time with steam heat and indoor bathrooms on 
each floor. The Bullock is still a Main Street fixture today. Seth 
Bullock is buried at the top of the hill in Deadwood’s Mount Moriah 
Cemetery.<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-MENS-OLD-WEST-CLOTHING/Categories">Where did he get his old west clothing outfits for the movie?</a> From an online store.</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[ The Truth About Wyatt Earp & Tombstone Shotout at the OK Corral ]]></title>
			<link>https://www.theoldwestgallery.com/blog/-the-truth-about-wyatt-earp-tombstone-shotout-at-the-ok-corral-/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 31 Aug 2014 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.theoldwestgallery.com/blog/-the-truth-about-wyatt-earp-tombstone-shotout-at-the-ok-corral-/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<h3>
<a href="http://tombstoneazokcoral.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-truth-about-wyatt-earp-tombstone.html">The Truth About Wyatt Earp &amp; Tombstone Shotout at the OK Corral</a>
</h3><p>
I
 just completed reading a book by Jossie Earp.It gave me more insight 
into the truth about Wyatt Earp then all of the movies and other books I
 have read put together. I would suggest you get a copy of this book and
 read it if you are and are Earp fan or tombstone historical not like 
me. I am not trying to sell books only give you facts about the truth 
from the shootout at the okay corral  and I believe Jossies version 
makes more the others and makes more sense and sheds more light.  Below 
is a small biography of Wyatt.<br>
<br>
<strong></strong><br>
<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-754/tombstone-movie-hat-%2CWyatt/Detail"><strong> Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp</strong></a><a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-754/tombstone-movie-hat-%2CWyatt/Detail"> </a>is best known for his participation in the controversial "Gunfight at 
the O.K. Corral," which took place at Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26,
 1881.  In this legendary Old West encounter, Wyatt Earp, his brothers 
Virgil and Morgan, and Doc Holliday faced off with Ike and Billy Clanton
 and Tom and Frank McLaury.  The shootout and the bloody events that 
followed, combined with Wyatt Earp's penchant for storytelling, resulted
 in Wyatt Earp acquiring the reputation as being one of the Old West's 
toughest and deadliest gunmen of his day.  Wyatt Earp would become the 
fearless Western hero in countless novels and films.</p><p>     Wyatt Earp is often portrayed by writers as a man of few words 
who did not like to talk about his past.  Nevertheless, Wyatt Earp on 
several occasions, categorically and without corroboration, told 
interviewers accounts of his deed from the Old West.  In 1896, Wyatt 
Earp claimed that he backed down gunman Clay Allison in Dodge City 
during 1878.  Around 1919, Wyatt Earp told Forrestine Hooker that he 
killed the notorious Johnny Ringo on his way out of Arizona during 1882.
  Wyatt Earp later repeated the claim that he killed Johnny Ringo to at 
least three other people.  In the late 1920s, Wyatt Earp told his future
 biographer, Stuart Lake, that he arrested Ben Thompson, a notorious 
gunslinger, in Ellsworth, Kansas, on August 15, 1873.  None of these 
claims made by Wyatt Earp have been corroborated by contemporary 
documents.</p><p>     Today many writers and historians continue to view Wyatt Earp 
through rose-colored glasses.  Neil Carmony, in his Editor’s Foreword to
 <em>The Real Wyatt Earp, A Documentary Biography</em> (2000), commented 
about this trend: “Typically, when all is said and done the unrealistic 
superstar of Stuart Lake’s 1931 biography (<em>Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal</em>), and the numerous Tombstone movies is the Earp who emerges from their books and articles.”</p><p>     This is the story of the real Wyatt Earp. <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-754/tombstone-movie-hat-%2CWyatt/Detail">PS the hat Wyatt Earp wore, </a>was a great hollywood design and stretchedthe truth a little.</p><p>


Posted by


<a href="http://www.blogger.com/profile/00865280029588072653">
Bms Biz
</a>



at

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<h2>Saturday, October 20, 2012</h2><p><em><strong>CONSIDERED BY MOST, THE GREATEST WESTERN ECER MADE.</strong></em><br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<em><strong>Tombstone</strong></em> is a 1993 American <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Western_%28genre%29?qsrc=3044">Western</a> directed by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/George_P._Cosmatos?qsrc=3044">George P. Cosmatos</a>, written by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Kevin_Jarre?qsrc=3044">Kevin Jarre</a> (who was also the original director, but was replaced early in production<sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-2">[3&91;</a></sup><sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-WPost-3">[4&91;</a></sup>) and starring <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Kurt_Russell?qsrc=3044">Kurt Russell</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Val_Kilmer?qsrc=3044">Val Kilmer</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Sam_Elliott?qsrc=3044">Sam Elliott</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Bill_Paxton?qsrc=3044">Bill Paxton</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Powers_Boothe?qsrc=3044">Powers Boothe</a> and <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Dana_Delany?qsrc=3044">Dana Delany</a>, and narrated by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Robert_Mitchum?qsrc=3044">Robert Mitchum</a>.</p><p>The film is based on events relating to the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Gunfight_at_the_O.K._Corral?qsrc=3044">Gunfight at the O.K. Corral</a>, along with the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Earp_Vendetta_Ride?qsrc=3044">Earp Vendetta</a> which followed it soon after in <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone,_Arizona?qsrc=3044">Tombstone, Arizona</a> during the 1880s. It depicts a number of western outlaws and lawmen, such as <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Wyatt_Earp?qsrc=3044">Wyatt Earp</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/William_Brocius?qsrc=3044">William Brocius</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Johnny_Ringo?qsrc=3044">Johnny Ringo</a>, and <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Doc_Holliday?qsrc=3044">Doc Holliday</a> as it explores crime, political corruption and law enforcement in the old American West.<sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-film-4">[5&91;</a></sup> The film was a co-production between <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Cinergi_Pictures?qsrc=3044">Cinergi Pictures</a> and <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Hollywood_Pictures?qsrc=3044">Hollywood Pictures</a>. It was commercially distributed by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Buena_Vista_%28Walt_Disney_Company%29?qsrc=3044">Buena Vista Pictures</a> theatrically and by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Walt_Disney_Studios_Home_Entertainment?qsrc=3044">Buena Vista Worldwide Home Entertainment</a> for home media.</p><p><em>Tombstone</em> premiered in theaters in wide release in the United 
States on December 24, 1993, grossing $56,505,065 in domestic ticket 
sales. The film was viewed as a moderate financial success after its 
theatrical run, and was generally met with mixed critical reviews. It 
failed to garner award nominations for production merits or acting from 
any mainstream motion picture organizations. A widescreen <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc?qsrc=3044">Blu-ray Disc</a> edition featuring the making of <em>Tombstone</em>,
 director's original storyboards, trailers and TV spots was released in 
the United States on April 27, 2010. The original soundtrack, composed 
by musician <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Bruce_Broughton?qsrc=3044">Bruce Broughton</a>, was released by the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Intrada_Records?qsrc=3044">Intrada Records</a>
 label on December 25, 1993. On March 16, 2006, an expanded two-disc 
version of the film score was released by Intrada Records; it features 
supplemental musical compositions by the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Sinfonia_of_London?qsrc=3044">Sinfonia of London</a> session orchestra.</p><p>For the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Western_%28genre%29?qsrc=3044">Western genre</a> as a whole, <em>Tombstone</em> ranks number 12 in the list of highest grossing films since 1979.<sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-5">[6&91;</a></sup><br>
<br>
<sup><strong>THE REAL Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp</strong>
 is best known for his participation in the controversial "Gunfight at 
the O.K. Corral," which took place at Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26,
 1881.  In this legendary Old West encounter, Wyatt Earp, his brothers 
Virgil and Morgan, and Doc Holliday faced off with Ike and Billy Clanton
 and Tom and Frank McLaury.  The shootout and the bloody events that 
followed, combined with Wyatt Earp's penchant for storytelling, resulted
 in Wyatt Earp acquiring the reputation as being one of the Old West's 
toughest and deadliest gunmen of his day.  Wyatt Earp would become the 
fearless Western hero in countless novels and films.</sup></p><p>     Wyatt Earp is often portrayed by writers as a man of few words 
who did not like to talk about his past.  Nevertheless, Wyatt Earp on 
several occasions, categorically and without corroboration, told 
interviewers accounts of his deed from the Old West.  In 1896, Wyatt 
Earp claimed that he backed down gunman Clay Allison in Dodge City 
during 1878.  Around 1919, Wyatt Earp told Forrestine Hooker that he 
killed the notorious Johnny Ringo on his way out of Arizona during 1882.
  Wyatt Earp later repeated the claim that he killed Johnny Ringo to at 
least three other people.  In the late 1920s, Wyatt Earp told his future
 biographer, Stuart Lake, that he arrested Ben Thompson, a notorious 
gunslinger, in Ellsworth, Kansas, on August 15, 1873.  None of these 
claims made by Wyatt Earp have been corroborated by contemporary 
documents.</p><p>     Today many writers and historians continue to view Wyatt Earp 
through rose-colored glasses.  Neil Carmony, in his Editor’s Foreword to
 <em>The Real Wyatt Earp, A Documentary Biography</em> (2000), commented 
about this trend: “Typically, when all is said and done the unrealistic 
superstar of Stuart Lake’s 1931 biography (<em>Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal</em>), and the numerous Tombstone movies is the Earp who emerges from their books and articles.” </p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>
<a href="http://tombstoneazokcoral.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-truth-about-wyatt-earp-tombstone.html">The Truth About Wyatt Earp &amp; Tombstone Shotout at the OK Corral</a>
</h3><p>
I
 just completed reading a book by Jossie Earp.It gave me more insight 
into the truth about Wyatt Earp then all of the movies and other books I
 have read put together. I would suggest you get a copy of this book and
 read it if you are and are Earp fan or tombstone historical not like 
me. I am not trying to sell books only give you facts about the truth 
from the shootout at the okay corral  and I believe Jossies version 
makes more the others and makes more sense and sheds more light.  Below 
is a small biography of Wyatt.<br>
<br>
<strong></strong><br>
<a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-754/tombstone-movie-hat-%2CWyatt/Detail"><strong> Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp</strong></a><a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-754/tombstone-movie-hat-%2CWyatt/Detail"> </a>is best known for his participation in the controversial "Gunfight at 
the O.K. Corral," which took place at Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26,
 1881.  In this legendary Old West encounter, Wyatt Earp, his brothers 
Virgil and Morgan, and Doc Holliday faced off with Ike and Billy Clanton
 and Tom and Frank McLaury.  The shootout and the bloody events that 
followed, combined with Wyatt Earp's penchant for storytelling, resulted
 in Wyatt Earp acquiring the reputation as being one of the Old West's 
toughest and deadliest gunmen of his day.  Wyatt Earp would become the 
fearless Western hero in countless novels and films.</p><p>     Wyatt Earp is often portrayed by writers as a man of few words 
who did not like to talk about his past.  Nevertheless, Wyatt Earp on 
several occasions, categorically and without corroboration, told 
interviewers accounts of his deed from the Old West.  In 1896, Wyatt 
Earp claimed that he backed down gunman Clay Allison in Dodge City 
during 1878.  Around 1919, Wyatt Earp told Forrestine Hooker that he 
killed the notorious Johnny Ringo on his way out of Arizona during 1882.
  Wyatt Earp later repeated the claim that he killed Johnny Ringo to at 
least three other people.  In the late 1920s, Wyatt Earp told his future
 biographer, Stuart Lake, that he arrested Ben Thompson, a notorious 
gunslinger, in Ellsworth, Kansas, on August 15, 1873.  None of these 
claims made by Wyatt Earp have been corroborated by contemporary 
documents.</p><p>     Today many writers and historians continue to view Wyatt Earp 
through rose-colored glasses.  Neil Carmony, in his Editor’s Foreword to
 <em>The Real Wyatt Earp, A Documentary Biography</em> (2000), commented 
about this trend: “Typically, when all is said and done the unrealistic 
superstar of Stuart Lake’s 1931 biography (<em>Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal</em>), and the numerous Tombstone movies is the Earp who emerges from their books and articles.”</p><p>     This is the story of the real Wyatt Earp. <a href="http://www.theoldwestgallery.com/servlet/the-754/tombstone-movie-hat-%2CWyatt/Detail">PS the hat Wyatt Earp wore, </a>was a great hollywood design and stretchedthe truth a little.</p><p>


Posted by


<a href="http://www.blogger.com/profile/00865280029588072653">
Bms Biz
</a>



at

<a href="http://tombstoneazokcoral.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-truth-about-wyatt-earp-tombstone.html"><abbr>2:59 PM</abbr></a>
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</p>
<h2>Saturday, October 20, 2012</h2><p><em><strong>CONSIDERED BY MOST, THE GREATEST WESTERN ECER MADE.</strong></em><br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<em><strong>Tombstone</strong></em> is a 1993 American <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Western_%28genre%29?qsrc=3044">Western</a> directed by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/George_P._Cosmatos?qsrc=3044">George P. Cosmatos</a>, written by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Kevin_Jarre?qsrc=3044">Kevin Jarre</a> (who was also the original director, but was replaced early in production<sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-2">[3&91;</a></sup><sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-WPost-3">[4&91;</a></sup>) and starring <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Kurt_Russell?qsrc=3044">Kurt Russell</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Val_Kilmer?qsrc=3044">Val Kilmer</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Sam_Elliott?qsrc=3044">Sam Elliott</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Bill_Paxton?qsrc=3044">Bill Paxton</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Powers_Boothe?qsrc=3044">Powers Boothe</a> and <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Dana_Delany?qsrc=3044">Dana Delany</a>, and narrated by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Robert_Mitchum?qsrc=3044">Robert Mitchum</a>.</p><p>The film is based on events relating to the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Gunfight_at_the_O.K._Corral?qsrc=3044">Gunfight at the O.K. Corral</a>, along with the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Earp_Vendetta_Ride?qsrc=3044">Earp Vendetta</a> which followed it soon after in <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone,_Arizona?qsrc=3044">Tombstone, Arizona</a> during the 1880s. It depicts a number of western outlaws and lawmen, such as <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Wyatt_Earp?qsrc=3044">Wyatt Earp</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/William_Brocius?qsrc=3044">William Brocius</a>, <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Johnny_Ringo?qsrc=3044">Johnny Ringo</a>, and <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Doc_Holliday?qsrc=3044">Doc Holliday</a> as it explores crime, political corruption and law enforcement in the old American West.<sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-film-4">[5&91;</a></sup> The film was a co-production between <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Cinergi_Pictures?qsrc=3044">Cinergi Pictures</a> and <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Hollywood_Pictures?qsrc=3044">Hollywood Pictures</a>. It was commercially distributed by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Buena_Vista_%28Walt_Disney_Company%29?qsrc=3044">Buena Vista Pictures</a> theatrically and by <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Walt_Disney_Studios_Home_Entertainment?qsrc=3044">Buena Vista Worldwide Home Entertainment</a> for home media.</p><p><em>Tombstone</em> premiered in theaters in wide release in the United 
States on December 24, 1993, grossing $56,505,065 in domestic ticket 
sales. The film was viewed as a moderate financial success after its 
theatrical run, and was generally met with mixed critical reviews. It 
failed to garner award nominations for production merits or acting from 
any mainstream motion picture organizations. A widescreen <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc?qsrc=3044">Blu-ray Disc</a> edition featuring the making of <em>Tombstone</em>,
 director's original storyboards, trailers and TV spots was released in 
the United States on April 27, 2010. The original soundtrack, composed 
by musician <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Bruce_Broughton?qsrc=3044">Bruce Broughton</a>, was released by the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Intrada_Records?qsrc=3044">Intrada Records</a>
 label on December 25, 1993. On March 16, 2006, an expanded two-disc 
version of the film score was released by Intrada Records; it features 
supplemental musical compositions by the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Sinfonia_of_London?qsrc=3044">Sinfonia of London</a> session orchestra.</p><p>For the <a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Western_%28genre%29?qsrc=3044">Western genre</a> as a whole, <em>Tombstone</em> ranks number 12 in the list of highest grossing films since 1979.<sup><a href="http://www.ask.com/wiki/Tombstone_%28film%29#cite_note-5">[6&91;</a></sup><br>
<br>
<sup><strong>THE REAL Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp</strong>
 is best known for his participation in the controversial "Gunfight at 
the O.K. Corral," which took place at Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26,
 1881.  In this legendary Old West encounter, Wyatt Earp, his brothers 
Virgil and Morgan, and Doc Holliday faced off with Ike and Billy Clanton
 and Tom and Frank McLaury.  The shootout and the bloody events that 
followed, combined with Wyatt Earp's penchant for storytelling, resulted
 in Wyatt Earp acquiring the reputation as being one of the Old West's 
toughest and deadliest gunmen of his day.  Wyatt Earp would become the 
fearless Western hero in countless novels and films.</sup></p><p>     Wyatt Earp is often portrayed by writers as a man of few words 
who did not like to talk about his past.  Nevertheless, Wyatt Earp on 
several occasions, categorically and without corroboration, told 
interviewers accounts of his deed from the Old West.  In 1896, Wyatt 
Earp claimed that he backed down gunman Clay Allison in Dodge City 
during 1878.  Around 1919, Wyatt Earp told Forrestine Hooker that he 
killed the notorious Johnny Ringo on his way out of Arizona during 1882.
  Wyatt Earp later repeated the claim that he killed Johnny Ringo to at 
least three other people.  In the late 1920s, Wyatt Earp told his future
 biographer, Stuart Lake, that he arrested Ben Thompson, a notorious 
gunslinger, in Ellsworth, Kansas, on August 15, 1873.  None of these 
claims made by Wyatt Earp have been corroborated by contemporary 
documents.</p><p>     Today many writers and historians continue to view Wyatt Earp 
through rose-colored glasses.  Neil Carmony, in his Editor’s Foreword to
 <em>The Real Wyatt Earp, A Documentary Biography</em> (2000), commented 
about this trend: “Typically, when all is said and done the unrealistic 
superstar of Stuart Lake’s 1931 biography (<em>Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal</em>), and the numerous Tombstone movies is the Earp who emerges from their books and articles.” </p>]]></content:encoded>
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