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Gunfight at the O. Watch Revenge Of The Nerds Online Full Movie more. K. Corral"The OK Corral" redirects here. For the episode of Doctor Who titled "The OK Corral", see The Gunfighters. Gunfight at the O.
K. Corral. Tombstone in 1. Date. October 2. 6, 1. Location. Tombstone, Arizona Territory, United States. Participants. Virgil, Morgan, and Wyatt Earp, and. Doc Holliday vs. Tom and Frank Mc. Laury, Billy and Ike Clanton, and Billy Claiborne.
Outcome. Virgil and Morgan wounded, Holliday grazed; Tom and Frank Mc. Laury and Billy Clanton killed. Deaths. Three. The Gunfight at the O.
K. Corral was a 3. Cowboys that took place at about 3: 0. Wednesday, October 2. Tombstone, Arizona Territory. It is generally regarded as the most famous shootout in the history of the American Wild West. The gunfight was the result of a long- simmering feud, with Cowboys Billy Claiborne, Ike and Billy Clanton, and Tom and Frank Mc.
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Laury on one side and town Marshal. Virgil Earp, Special Policeman. Morgan Earp, Special Policeman Wyatt Earp, and temporary policeman Doc Holliday on the other side. All three Earp brothers had been the target of repeated death threats made by the Cowboys, who objected to the Earps' interference in their illegal activities. Billy Clanton and both Mc.
Laury brothers were killed. Ike Clanton claimed that he was unarmed and ran from the fight, along with Billy Claiborne. Virgil, Morgan, and Doc Holliday were wounded, but Wyatt Earp was unharmed. The shootout has come to represent a period of the American Old West when the frontier was virtually an open range for outlaws, largely unopposed by law enforcement officers who were spread thin over vast territories. The gunfight was not well- known to the American public until 1. Stuart Lake published the initially well- received biography Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal two years after Earp's death.[1] The book was the basis for the 1.
My Darling Clementine, directed by John Ford,[1] and the 1. Gunfight at the O.
K. Corral, after which the shootout became known by that name. Since then, the conflict has been portrayed with varying degrees of accuracy in numerous Western films and books, and has become an archetype for much of the popular imagery associated with the Old West. Despite its name, the gunfight did not take place within or next to the O. K. Corral, which fronted Allen Street and had a rear entrance lined with horse stalls on Fremont Street.
The shootout actually took place in a narrow lot on the side of C. S. Fly's Photographic Studio on Fremont Street, six doors west of the O. K. Corral's rear entrance. Some members of the two opposing parties were initially only about 6 feet (1. About 3. 0 shots were fired in 3.
Tom and Frank Mc. Laury and Billy Clanton were killed. Ike Clanton filed murder charges against the Earps and Doc Holliday. The lawmen were eventually exonerated by a local justice of the peace after a 3. The gunfight was not the end of the conflict. On December 2. 8, 1. Virgil Earp was ambushed and maimed in a murder attempt by the Cowboys.
On March 1. 8, 1. Cowboys fired from a dark alley through the glass door of a saloon, killing Morgan Earp. The suspects in both incidents furnished alibis supplied by other Cowboys and were not indicted. Wyatt Earp, newly appointed as Deputy U.
S. Marshal in Cochise County, then took matters into his own hands in a personal vendetta. He was pursued by county sheriff Johnny Behan, who had received a warrant from Tucson for Wyatt's shooting of Frank Stilwell. Background[edit]. Southeastern Arizona near Tombstone in 1. Tombstone, near the Mexican border, was founded in March 1.
After silver was discovered in the area, Tombstone grew rapidly into a frontierminingboomtown. At its founding, it had a population of just 1. Chinese, Mexicans, women, and children), making it the largest boomtown in the Southwest.
Silver mining and its attendant wealth attracted many professionals and merchants, who brought their wives and families. With them came churches and ministers.
They brought a Victorian sensibility and became the town's elite. By 1. 88. 1 there were fancy restaurants, a bowling alley, four churches, an ice house, a school, an opera house, two banks, three newspapers, and an ice cream parlor, along with 1. Horse rustlers and bandits from the countryside often came to town, and shootings were frequent. In the 1. 88. 0s, illegal smuggling and theft of cattle, alcohol, and tobacco across the Mexico–United States border, about 3.
Tombstone, were common. The Mexican government assessed heavy export taxes on these items, and smugglers earned a handsome profit by stealing them in Mexico and selling them across the border.[5][6]. Fire insurance map of Tombstone in 1. James, Virgil, and Wyatt Earp arrived in Tombstone on December 1, 1. Virgil had been hired as Deputy U. S. Marshal for eastern Pima County, with his offices in Tombstone, only days before his arrival.
In June 1. 88. 1 he was also appointed as Tombstone's town marshal (or police chief). Though not universally liked by the townspeople, the Earps tended to protect the interests of the town's business owners and residents; even so, Wyatt Earp helped protect Cowboy "Curly Bill" Brocius from being lynched after he accidentally killed Tombstone city Marshal Fred White. In contrast, Cochise County Sheriff Johnny Behan was generally sympathetic to the interests of the rural ranchers and members of the loosely organized outlaw group called the Cochise County Cowboys, or simply the Cowboys (in that time and region, the term cowboy generally meant an outlaw; legitimate cowmen were instead referred to as cattle herders or ranchers.[7]: 1. Conflicting versions of events[edit]. Newspaper coverage of the fight.
Many of the supporting facts about the events leading up to the gunfight and details of the gunfight itself are uncertain. Newspapers of the day were not above taking sides, and news reporting often editorialized on issues to reflect the publisher's interests.[8]John Clum, publisher of The Tombstone Epitaph, had helped organize a "Committee of Safety" (a vigilance committee) in Tombstone in late September 1. He was elected as the city's first mayor under the new city charter of 1.
Clum and his newspaper tended to side with the interests of local business owners and supported Deputy U. S. Marshal Virgil Earp. Harry Woods, the publisher of the other major newspaper, The Daily Nugget, was an undersheriff to Behan. He and his newspaper tended to side with Behan, the Cowboys (some of whom were part- time ranchers and landowners), and the rural interests of the ranchers.[1. Much of what is known of the event is based on a month- long preliminary hearing held afterward, generally known as the Spicer hearings.
Reporters from both newspapers covered the hearings and recorded the testimony there and at the coroner's inquest, but only the reporter from The Daily Nugget knew shorthand. The testimony recorded by the court recorder and the two newspapers varied greatly.[1. According to the Earps' version of events, the fight was in self- defense because the Cowboys, armed in violation of local ordinance, aggressively threatened the lawmen and defied a lawful order to hand over their weapons.
The Cowboys maintained that they raised their hands, offering no resistance, and were shot in cold blood by the Earps. Sorting out who was telling the truth was difficult and remains so.[1. Though usually opposing each other in their reporting of events, reporting by both the Epitaph and the Nugget initially supported the lawmen's version of events. Woods, the publisher of the pro- Cowboy Nugget, was out of town during the hearings, and an experienced reporter, Richard Rule, wrote the story.
The Nugget staff had a close relationship with Sheriff Behan, but Rule's story, as printed in the Nugget the day after the shootout, backed up the Earps' version of events. This varied widely from Behan's and the Cowboys' later court testimony.[1. Subsequent stories about the gunfight published in the Nugget after that day supported Behan's and the Cowboys' view of events.
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