Tombstone Epitaph Story The Day After
The OK Corral Shootout
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The links between the Xs are stories and picrures of
people
that had a part in Tombstone, AZ history
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About Doc Holiday
About
Wyatt Earp
About Virgil Earp
About Morgan
Earp
About James Earp
About Warren
Earp
About Newton Earp
About William "Curley Bill" Brocius (outlaw)
About Billy Claiborne (outlaw)
About
Pete Spence (outlaw)
About
Ike Clanton (outlaw)
About Phin Clanton (outlaw)
About Johnny Ringo (outlaw)
About "Old Man" Clanton" (outlaw)
Frank
Stillwell (outlaw)
About Frank McLaury (outlaw killed at the OK Corral)
About
Tom McLaury (outlaw killed at the OK Corral)
About Billy Clanton (outlaw killed at the OK Corral)
About
Johnny Behan (Sheriff)
William Breckinridge (Deputy Sheriff)
About Fred White (Marshal)
About George Parson
About Wells Spicer (Judge)
About George Goodfellow MD
About Nellie Cashman (Angel Of Mercy)
About Big Nose Kate (prostitute & Doc Holiday's girlfriend)
About Ed Schieffelin
About
John Clum (editor/publisher of Tombstone Epitaph)
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Morgan
Earps Death In The Tombstone Epitaph
Tombstone Epitaph Story The Day After
The OK Corral Shootout
Tombstone Pioneers Burial Places
Mistakes In The Movie
Tombstone
For fallacies in the movie
Tombstone please visit this web site:
http://www.ferncanyonpress.com/tombston/movie.shtml
This story is actually from the Tombstone
Epitath (written by John Clum, owner) on October 27, 1881
YESTERDAY'S TRAGEDY AT THE OK CORRAL
Tombstone Daily Epitaph - October 27, 1881
Three Men Hurled Into Eternity in the Duration of a
Moment
Stormy as were the early days of Tombstone nothing ever occurred equal to the
event of yesterday. Since the retirement of Ben Sippy as marshal and the
appointment of V.W. Earp to fill the vacancy the town has been noted for its
quietness and good order. The fractious and much dreaded cowboys when they came
to town were upon their good behaviour and no unseemly brawls were indulged in,
and it was hoped by our citizens that no more such deeds would occur as led to
the killing of Marshal White one year ago. It seems that this quiet state of
affairs was but the calm that precedes the storm that burst in all its fury
yesterday, with this difference in results, that the lightning bolt struck in a
different quarter from the one that fell a year ago. This time it struck with
its full and awful force upon those who, heretofore, have made the good name of
this county a byword and a reproach, instead of upon some officer in discharge
of his duty or a peaceable and unoffending citizen. Since the arrest of Stilwell
and Spence for the robbery of the Bisbee stage, there have been oft repeated
threats conveyed to the Earp brothers -- Virgil, Morgan and Wyatt -- that the
friends of the accused, or in other words the cowboys , would get even with them
for the part they had taken in the pursuit and arrest of Stilwell and Spence.
The active part of the Earps in going after stage robbers, beginning with the
one last spring where Budd Philpot lost his life, and the more recent one near
Contention, has made them exceedingly obnoxious to the bad element of this
county and put their lives in jeopardy every month. Sometime Tuesday Ike Clanton
came into town and during the evening had some little talk with Doc Holliday and
Marshal Earp but nothing to cause either to suspect, further than their general
knowledge of the man and the threats that had previously been conveyed to the
Marshal, that the gang intended to clean out the Earps, that he was thirsting
for blood at this time with one exception and that was that Clanton told the
Marshal, in answer to a question, that the McLowrys were in Sonora. Shortly
after this occurrence someone came to the Marshal and told him that the McLowrys
had been seen a short time before just below town. Marshal Earp, now knowing
what might happen and feeling his responsibility for the peace and order of the
city, stayed on duty all night and added to the police force his brother Morgan
and Holliday. The night passed without any disturbance whatever and at sunrise
he went home to rest and sleep. A short time afterwards one of his brothers came
to his house and told him that Clanton was hunting him with threats of shooting
him on sight. He discredited the report and did not get out of bed. It was not
long before another of his brothers came down, and told him the same thing,
whereupon he got up, dressed and went with his brother Morgan uptown. They
walked up Allen Street to Fifth, crossed over to Fremont and down to Fourth,
where, upon turning up Fourth toward Allen, they came upon Clanton with a
Winchester rifle in his hand and a revolver on his hip. The Marshal walked up to
him, grabbed the rifle and hit him a blow on the head at the same time, stunning
him so that he was able to disarm him without further trouble. He marched
Clanton off to the police court where he entered a complaint against him for
carrying deadly weapons, and the court fined Clanton $25 and costs, making
$27.50 altogether. This occurrence must have been about 1 o'clock in the
afternoon.
Close upon the heels of this came the finale, which is best told in the words of
R.F. Coleman who was an eye-witness from the beginning to the end. Mr. Coleman
says: I was in the O.K. Corral at 2:30 p.m., when I saw the two Clantons and the
two McLowrys in an earnest conversation across the street in Dunbar's corral. I
went up the street and notified Sheriff Behan and told him it was my opinion
they meant trouble, and it was his duty, as sheriff, to go and disarm them. I
told him they had gone to the West End Corral. I then went and saw Marshal
Virgil Earp and notified him to the same effect. I then met Billy Allen and we
walked through the O.K. Corral, about fifty yards behind the sheriff. On
reaching Fremont street I saw Virgil Earp, Wyatt Earp, Morgan Earp and Doc
Holliday, in the center of the street, all armed. I had reached Bauer's meat
market. Johnny Behan had just left the cowboys, after having a conversation with
them. I went along to Fly's photograph gallery, when I heard Virg Earp say,
"Give up your arms or throw up your arms." There was some reply made by Frank
McLowry, when firing became general, over thirty shots being fired. Tom McLowry
fell first, but raised and fired again before he died. Bill Clanton fell next,
and raised to fire again when Mr. Fly took his revolver from him. Frank McLowry
ran a few rods and fell. Morgan Earp was shot through and fell. Doc Holliday was
hit in the left hip but kept on firing. Virgil Earp was hit in the third or
fourth fire, in the leg which staggered him but he kept up his effective work.
Wyatt Earp stood up and fired in rapid succession, as cool as a cucumber, and
was not hit. Doc Holliday was as calm as though at target practice and fired
rapidly. After the firing was over, Sheriff Behan went up to Wyatt Earp and
said, "I'll have to arrest you." Wyatt replied: "I won't be arrested today. I am
right here and am not going away. You have deceived me. You told me these men
were disarmed; I went to disarm them." This ends Mr. Coleman's story which in
the most essential particulars has been confirmed by others. Marshal Earp says
that he and his party met the Clantons and the McLowrys in the alleyway by the
McDonald place; he called to them to throw up their hands, that he had come to
disarm them. Instantaneously Bill Clanton and one of the McLowrys fired, and
then it became general. Mr. Earp says it was the first shot from Frank McLowry
that hit him. In other particulars his statement does not materially differ from
the statement above given. Ike Clanton was not armed and ran across to Allen
street and took refuge in the dance hall there. The two McLowrys and Bill
Clanton all died within a few minutes after being shot. The Marshal was shot
through the calf of the right leg, the ball going clear through. His brother,
Morgan, was shot through the shoulders, the ball entering the point of the right
shoulder blade, following across the back, shattering off a piece of one
vertebrae and passing out the left shoulder in about the same position that it
entered the right. The wound is dangerous but not necessarily fatal, and
Virgil's is far more painful than dangerous. Doc Holliday was hit upon the
scabbard of his pistol, the leather breaking the force of the ball so that no
material damage was done other than to make him limp a little in his walk. Dr.
Matthews impaneled a coroner's jury, who went and viewed the bodies as they lay
in the cabin in the rear of Dunbar's stables on Fifth street, and then adjourned
until 10 o'clock this morning.
The moment the word of the shooting reached the Vizina and Tough Nut mines the
whistles blew a shrill signal, and the miners came to the surface, armed
themselves, and poured into the town like an invading army. A few moments served
to bring out all the better portions of the citizens, thoroughly armed and ready
for any emergency. Precautions were immediately taken to preserve law and order,
even if they had to fight for it. A guard of ten men were stationed around the
county jail, and extra policemen put on for the night.
The feeling among the best class of our citizens is that the Marshal was
entirely justified in his efforts to disarm these men, and that being fired upon
they had to defend themselves, which they did most bravely. So long as our peace
officers make an effort to preserve the peace and put down highway robbery --
which the Earp brothers have done, having engaged in the pursuit and capture,
where captures have been made of every gang of stage robbers in the county --
they will have the support of all good citizens. If the present lesson is not
sufficient to teach the cow-boy element that they cannot come into the streets
of Tombstone, in broad daylight, armed with six-shooters and Henry rifles to
hunt down their victims, then the citizens will most assuredly take such steps
to preserve the peace as will be forever a bar to such raids.
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