Read Lady at the O.K. Corral Online

Authors: Ann Kirschner

Lady at the O.K. Corral (45 page)

I traveled back to the early days of Nome in the company of two fine writers, popular in their own day and hardly known at all today. Rex Beach's best seller
The Spoilers
deserves yet another generation of readers, or perhaps another movie version to add to the five that have already been made, beginning with a silent film in 1914 (preceding
The Birth of a Nation
) and ending with a 1942 version starring John Wayne and Marlene Dietrich. I also feel privileged to have stumbled upon the work of actor, writer, and activist Elizabeth Robins. Her time in Nome in search of her brother Raymond inspired two novels and several short stories. Her journal was edited by Victoria J. Moessner and Joanne E. Gates and published as
The Alaska-Klondike Diary of Elizabeth Robins, 1900
. The original is in the Fales Library and Special Collections of New York University.

The development of the San Francisco Jewish community is an important backdrop for Josephine's life. For the Marcus family, the tale began in Europe and in the Prussian province of Posen (sometimes known as Posnan); I found Hasia Diner's
A Time for Gathering: The Second Migration, 1820–1880
an invaluable introduction, which led me to Isaac Benjamin and his fascinating account of Jewish life in America right after the Civil War,
Three Years in America: 1859–1862.
Benjamin did have a prejudice against the Emanu-El crowd, as Ava Kahn notes in her indispensable
Jewish Voices of the California Gold Rush.

For excellent histories of Tombstone, see William Shillingberg,
Tombstone, A.T.: A History of Early Mining, Milling, and Mayhem,
and Lynn Bailey's
Tombstone, Arizona: “Too Tough to Die”; The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a Silver Camp, 1878 to 1990.
All Tombstone historians are indebted to Lynn Bailey and Don Chaput for
Cochise County Stalwarts: A Who's Who of the Territorial Years.

And then there is Wyatt Earp and the O.K. Corral. Most roads begin with Stuart Lake's
Frontier Marshal
, Walter Noble Burns's
Tombstone: An Iliad of the Southwest
, and William Breakenridge's
Helldorado: Bringing the Law to the Mesquite
. With a groaning bookshelf of modern Wyatt Earp biographies to choose from, the discriminating reader will start with Casey Tefertiller's
Wyatt Earp: The Life behind the Legend
. Jeff Guinn's
Last Gunfight
is the most definitive (and most enjoyable) book about Wyatt Earp in decades. Other important sources include Allan Barra,
Inventing Wyatt Earp: His Life and Many Legends
; Don Chaput,
The Earp Papers: In a Brother's Image
; William Shillingberg,
Dodge City: The Early Years, 1872–1886
; and Gary Roberts,
Doc Holliday: The Life and Legend.

Roger Jay filled in some critical gaps—and documented the existence of Wyatt's first common-law relationship, with Sally Earp—in
Wyatt Earp's Lost Year
and
Reign of the Rough-Scuff, Law and Lucre in Wichita.
Carol Mitchell wrote one of the earliest and most important reconsiderations of Josephine in her article “Lady Sadie.” I am indebted to Anne Collier for new documentation on Josephine's early days, and to Bob Palmquist for his encyclopedic knowledge of all things Tombstone.

For the essential trio of Tombstone contemporary observers, see George Parsons's original diaries at the Arizona Historical Society, Tucson. A portion of the diaries has been edited by Lynn R. Bailey in
A Tenderfoot in Tombstone: The Private Journal of George Whitwell Parsons; The Turbulent Years, 1880–82.
Endicott Peabody's observations on Tombstone are available in
A Church for Helldorado: The 1882 Tombstone Diary of Endicott Peabody and the Building of St. Paul's Episcopal Church.
Of the three observers, only Clara Spalding Brown wrote for the public; see Lynn R. Bailey,
Tombstone from a Woman's Point of View: The Correspondence of Clara Spalding Brown, July 7, 1880, to November 14, 1882
.

I am grateful to these people and places, especially to the heroic librarians and archivists who are a writer's best friend.

For additional sources, see ladyattheokcorral.com.

| Sources
BOOKS

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Lockley, Fred.
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———.
And Die in the West: The Story of the O.K. Corral Gunfight
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———.
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———.
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NEWSPAPER AND JOURNAL ARTICLES

Carlson, T. H. “The Discovery of Gold at Nome, Alaska.”
Pacific Historical Review
15, no. 3 (1946): 259–78.

Chandler, Robert J. “A Smoking Gun? Did Wells Fargo Pay Wyatt Earp to Kill Curly Bill and Frank Stilwell? New Evidence Seems to Indicate Yes.”
True West,
July 2001.

———. “Under Cover for Wells Fargo: A Review Essay.”
Journal of Arizona History
41 (Spring 2000).

———. “Wells Fargo and the Earp Brothers: The Cash Books Talk.”
California Historical Quarterly
, no. 78 (Summer 2009).

Collier, Anne E. “Harriet ‘Hattie' Catchim: A Controversial Earp Family Member.”
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16, no. 2 (Summer 2007).

———. “Stuart N. Lake's Wyatt Earp and the Great Depression.” B.A. thesis, University of La Verne, 2011.

Dworkin, Mark. “Wyatt Earp's 1897 Yuma and Cibola Sojourns: Wyatt Earp Returned to Arizona Numerous Times after 1882 Despite Stillwell and Cruz Murder Warrants.”
Western Outlaw-Lawman History Association (WOLA) Journal
14, no. 1 (Summer 2005).

———. “Henry Jaffa and Wyatt Earp: Wyatt Earp's Jewish Connection; A Portrait of Henry Jaffa, Albuquerque's First Mayor.”
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19, no. 4 (December 2005).

Earl, Phillip I. “Tex Rickard—The Most Dynamic Fight Promoter in History.”
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Gatto, Steve. “Wyatt Earp Was a Pimp.”
True West
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