Finding Out What Really Happened at the O.K. Corral In Tombstone

Here is an interesting article that discusses a bit of the true story about what really happened at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona:

Past Boothill Graveyard and around the bend where Arizona 80 becomes Fremont Street, a larger-than-life statue of a man rises from a low sandstone pedestal. Clad in a duster and broad-brimmed hat, a sawed-off shotgun over one shoulder, Wyatt Earp stands guard at the entrance to this dusty town that calls itself “too tough to die.”

Since the Oct. 26, 1881, “gunfight at the O.K. Corral,” the famed frontier lawman has loomed large over this former boomtown. The silver deposits that gave birth to the city have long since been played out, but Tombstone has survived largely by mining the legend of the West’s most infamous shootout.

And in popular culture, the Earps have always been the good guys; the McLaurys and Clantons, the bad guys.

But something peculiar has happened at the O.K. Corral: The white hats and the black hats have all gotten a bit grayer.

Hanging on the stucco wall surrounding the little amphitheater where the fusillade is re-enacted daily is a tiny bronze plaque. Unpretentious and easy to miss, it is dedicated, not to the badge-wearing Earps or their tubercular friend, John Henry “Doc” Holliday, but to the memory of brothers Frank and Tom McLaury — two of the three men who died that day.

Beneath oval portraits of the two is a short, but enigmatic epitaph: “One owes respect to the living, but to the dead, one owes nothing but the truth.”  [Associated Press]

You can read the rest at the link that goes into more detail about the gunfight where really there was no good guys and bad guys, just the tough guys that populated the American West back then.  I have been to Tombstone before and it is a some what interesting place to visit though the Disneyland like commercialization of the place is a bit annoying.  That is why I have found ghost towns like Shakespeare, New Mexico to be more interesting to visit because of their authenticity.

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Jack
Jack
13 years ago

The gunfight at the O.K. Corral has always interested me and I love learning about the old west. A new book “DOC” just came out, all about Doc Holliday’s life. It looks fantastic and even more fantastic is that the author is matching fan donations to Smile Train in memory of Doc Holliday. Learning and helping at the same time!

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