Fact And Truth (September 1995 | Volume: 46, Issue: 5)

Fact And Truth

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September 1995 | Volume 46, Issue 5

Wyatt Harp, the most famous of all frontier lawmen, has been the subject of at least two dozen Hollywood Westerns. The mere mention of his name immediately evokes the image of a sharpshooting marshal bringing law and order to the wild towns of the West. “This may not be Dodge City,” said a spokesman for the U.S. Marines occupying war-torn Mogadishu, Somalia, in 1993, “but Wyatt Earp’s in town.”

In 1931 a popular writer named Stuart Lake secured the lawman’s legend when he published Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal , which featured a hero who single-handedly cleaned up the worst frontier hellholes. This book subsequently became the authority for nearly all the film portraits of Earp, but the trouble was that Lake created his legend from whole cloth. The real Earp, born on an Illinois farm in 1848, was introduced to the Far West in 1864, when his restless father moved the family across the continent. Later arrested in Indian Territory for horse stealing, Earp jumped bail and fled to Kansas. In 1874 he turned up in the booming cow town of Wichita, where his brother James was tending bar and James’s wife ran a brothel. Wyatt found work as a town policeman, but he kept company with the saloon crowd and quickly developed a reputation as a hard case.

In 1876 Wyatt moved on to Dodge City, where he and his brother Morgan found jobs as deputy marshals. The Earps considered themselves “sporting men,” cavorting with the likes of John (“Doc”) Holliday—a tubercular gambler with a reputation for violence—and prostitutes, such as Doc’s woman, Kate Elder (also known as Kate Fisher), and Mattie Blaylock, who became Wyatt’s common-law wife. Hostile cattlemen called the Earp brothers the “fighting pimps.”

Meanwhile, older brother Virgil had won an appointment as a deputy U.S. marshal in the boomtown of Tombstone, in Arizona Territory. In 1880 the three Earp brothers joined him there, followed by friends, who included Doc Holliday. The Earps continued to run with the saloon crowd, but in Tombstone they also made a serious bid for respectability.

Southeastern Arizona at the time was torn by conflict between the Republican business community and the mostly Democratic ranchers of the arid countryside. The “cowboys,” as the Republican Tombstone Epitaph labeled the ranchers, were led by Newman (“Old Man”) Clanton and his hotheaded sons and were backed by such violent gunmen as “Curly” Bill Brocius and Johnny Ringo. The trouble in Tombstone was just one episode in a series of local wars that pitted men with traditional rural values and Southern sympathies against mostly Yankee capitalist modernizers. As the hired guns of the businessmen in town, the Earps became the enemies of the Clantons.

In 1881 Wyatt ran for county sheriff against the incumbent, John Behan, an ally of the rural Democrats. The political competition became personal when Earp took up with Behan’s lover,