Lady at the O.K. Corral: The True Story of Josephine Marcus Earp

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Lady at the O.K. Corral: The True Story of Josephine Marcus Earp Page 31

by Ann Kirschner


  Rickard, Tex, 101, 103–4, 106, 111, 113, 118, 124, 134, 138, 174

  as fight promoter, 124, 138

  Ringo, Johnny, 168

  Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 40

  Rosenthal, Toby, 20

  “Rose Still Grows beyond the Wall, The” (Frank), 218

  Saga of Billy the Kid, The (Burns), 161, 163

  Saidie (ship), 111

  St. John, Adela Rogers, 174

  Saint Johnson (Burnett), 184, 187, 188

  Salt Lake City, Utah, 71–72

  San Antonio, Texas, 208

  San Bernardino, California, 35

  Earp’s common-law wife Mattie in, 63, 68

  Earp’s parents in, 38, 63, 249n 38

  San Diego, California, 9, 125

  as boomtown, 76

  Coronado Island, 78, 147–48

  Earp brothers in, 77

  “Golden Poppy” brothel, Wyatt Earp’s ties to, 82

  horseracing, 79–82

  moral reforms in, 83

  Oyster Bar and Gambling Hall, 77, 82

  real estate market collapse, 83

  Wyatt and Bat Masterson law enforcement assignment, 78–79

  Wyatt and brothels in, 82

  Wyatt and Josephine Earp in, 76–84, 252n 82

  Wyatt Earp’s business ventures in, 77–83

  San Diego Union, 64, 83

  Clara Brown writing for, 39–40

  San Francisco, California, 125

  Academy of Music, 20

  affluence in, 16, 17, 22, 74

  art and culture in, 20, 21

  Baldwin Hotel, 79, 91, 130

  commerce and economic conditions in, 19th century, 16–17

  depression of 1876, 21–22

  earthquake, 1868, 18

  earthquake and fire, 1906, 141–42, 173, 182

  Eureka Benevolent Association, 19

  Goodfellow’s Grotto Café, 90

  Hills of Eternity Cemetery, Colma, California,1, 4, 85, 145–46, 176, 218, 221, 258n 176

  Israel Benjamin’s description of, 18–19

  Jewish community of, 4, 16–17, 19, 20–21, 142, 248n 16

  Jewish newspapers in, 16

  Jewish women, careers of, 20–21

  Lucky Baldwin’s hotel, 79

  Marcus family in, 14, 18–21, 69–71, 74, 82, 102

  social stratification in, 19, 248n 19

  theaters and acting companies, 20, 23

  Wyatt and Josephine Earp in, 117

  Wyatt and Josephine Earp in, 1890–1897, 85–88, 90–91

  Wyatt and Josephine Earp’s home in, 86

  Wyatt Earp and fight-fixing scandal, 90–91, 143, 253n 91

  Wyatt Earp buried in, 1, 4, 176, 218, 221, 258n 176

  Wyatt Earp’s accident in, 93

  Wyatt Earp’s horseracing and stables, 85–86

  San Francisco Chronicle, 91, 119, 192

  San Francisco Examiner, 90

  Saturday Evening Post, 161, 162, 164, 191

  Scanland, J. M., 149

  Schieffelin, Ed, 29, 32, 96

  Seattle, Washington, 116–17, 125, 254n 119

  Alaska gold rush and, 100, 116–17, 254n 100

  exodus to Nome from, 119

  as “Nome crazy,” 116

  Wyatt and Josephine Earp in, 117, 254n 119

  Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 124, 128

  Sharkey, Tom, 90–91, 124, 253n 91

  Sherman, William Tecumseh, 66

  Short, Luke, 73

  Shurtleff, Dr. Fred, 174, 175

  Sieber, Al, 25

  “Significance of the Frontier in American History” (Turner), 87, 253n 87

  Sinclair, Addie, 216, 260n 216

  Skagway, Alaska, 93

  Skookum (ship), 131

  Smith, Jefferson Randolph “Soapy,” 93

  Spence, Mariette “Maria” Duarte, 28, 30, 42, 164, 251n 63

  testifies against husband, 62–63

  Spence, Pete, 42

  as Morgan killer suspect, 62, 63, 251n 63

  as stagecoach robbery suspect, 52

  Spicer, Judge Wells, 59, 60

  Spoilers, The (Beach), 107, 125, 134

  Spolidoro, Grace Welsh, 4, 140–41, 176

  Squaw Man, The (film), 151

  Brixon (ship), 95

  Roanoke (ship), 134

  Stegner, Wallace, 8

  Stein, Gertrude, 21, 248n 20, 248n 21

  Stilwell, Frank

  as stagecoach robbery suspect, 52

  Wyatt Earp kills, 64, 154

  St. Michael, Alaska, 103, 104

  Wyatt and Josephine Earp in, 104–7

  Strauss, Levi, 16

  Sunset Trail, The (Lewis), 183, 175

  Suppressed Murder of Wyatt Earp (Boyer), 230

  Tabor, Baby Doe, 72, 252n 72

  Tefertiller, Casey, 228–29, 234

  Thompson, Lydia, 23

  Tijuana, Mexico, 77

  Toklas, Alice B., 248n 20

  Tombstone (film), 234

  Tombstone, Arizona, 9, 13, 182. See also Earp, Josephine “Sadie” Marcus; Earp, Wyatt

  beef demand in, 44–45

  Behan in, 31

  Bird Cage Theatre, 26, 178, 209, 224

  books about, 167–69, 191–94, 199–200, 228

  Citizens Safety Committee, 53, 56

  city in 21st century, 9–10

  city in 1880, 28–30

  city in 1881, 42–49

  Clantons in, 45

  conventional citizens of, 39

  Cosmopolitan Hotel, 30, 45, 60, 61

  cowboys’ funeral after Gunfight, 56–57

  cowboys in, 36, 43, 44–45, 169, 179

  crime in, 43, 44–45, 50–51, 53

  demimonde of (and lesbian reference), 39, 40, 47–48, 250n 40

  demise of, 1882-1886, 66–68

  doctor in, 48

  “downtown” of, 41

  Earp brothers in, 10, 209

  Earp-cowboy war, 59–64

  Earp family arrives, 24, 32, 37, 38

  Earp family departure, 66

  Earp’s Vendetta Ride, 64–66, 148, 168

  eyewitness accounts of, 39–41

  factions in, 10, 50–51

  fire department formed in, 45–46

  fire of 1881, 45

  first mayor, John Clum, 29

  “Forty-Dollar Sadie,” 48, 185–86

  General Sherman visits, 66

  Grand Hotel, 30, 32, 45, 60, 251n 60

  Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, 2–3, 10, 12, 55–56, 140, 221

  Helldorado festival, 9–10, 177–79

  Hollywood and, 152, 154

  influx of people to, 29–30

  Jewish community of, 42

  Josephine Earp returns, 1937, 208–9

  Josephine Marcus arrives, 1880, 7, 13–14, 247n 13

  Josephine Marcus departs, 7, 63, 251n 63

  Josephine Marcus in acting troupe, 1879, 24–25

  killing of Morgan Earp, 61–62, 251n 61, 251n 63

  lawmen as tax collectors, 39

  Lotta Crabtree estate case, 166

  Markham “Pinafore on Wheels” Troupe in, 24–25

  McLaurys in, 45

  mining in, 29, 42–43

  newspapers, 51

  Oriental Saloon, 59, 60, 171

  origins of, 29

  politics in, 32, 44, 50–51

  prostitution in, 47–49, 144, 209, 250n 49, 258n 186, 260n 209

  ratio of men to women, 49

  Schieffelin Hall, 61, 178, 251n 61

  shooting of Virgil Earp, 61

  social stratification in, 10, 39, 40

  support for Earps following Gunfight, 57

  television series about Earp and, 222

  Union News Depot, 42, 49

  weather of, 38, 50

  Wells Fargo Company office, 29

  women in, 41, 45–46, 49

  Wyatt Earp’s business ventures in, 38–39

  Tombstone: An Iliad of the Southwest (Burns), 33, 161–62, 163, 168

&
nbsp; Tombstone Epitaph, 51, 63, 117, 128, 144, 177, 208, 228

  Tombstone Nugget, 51, 169

  Tombstone Vendetta (Boyer), 233

  Tonopah, Nevada, 135–38

  Northern Saloon, 137, 138

  Wyatt Earp’s business ventures in, 137

  Tonopah Bonanza, 137

  Tonopah Mining Company, 137

  transportation/travel

  to Alaska’s gold fields, 93

  railroads, 13, 21

  San Francisco-Los Angeles railroad completed (1876), 21

  boat travel between Nome to Seattle, 115, 119–20

  stagecoach, 13, 28

  transcontinental railroad (1869), 18

  wagontrains, 34–35

  westward via Isthmus of Panama, 17–18

  Tucson, Arizona, 28

  killing of Frank Stilwell, 63

  Old Pueblo Club, 168

  Turner, Frederick Jackson, 87, 253n 87

  Twain, Mark, 87, 223

  Unalaska, Alaska, 95, 120

  Under Cover for Wells Fargo (Dodge), 200

  Unga, Alaska, 132

  Van Buren, Martin, 10

  Vawter, Cornelius, 106, 125, 130, 131, 132

  Vawter, Sarah, 106, 125, 131, 132

  Vidal, California, 140, 165, 173, 180, 194

  Virginian, The (Wister), 88

  Walsh, Raoul, 152, 153

  Waters, Frank, 206, 207, 209, 228–29

  Waters, Naomi, 207

  Weekly Arizona Miner, 25

  Wiener, Aaron, 69, 71, 85, 142, 248n 19

  Wiener, Rebecca Lewis (half-sister), 19, 20, 69, 85, 142, 147, 248n 19

  Wells, Alice Earp, 200, 225

  Wells Fargo Bank, 16

  Wells Fargo Company

  attack on Benson stagecoach, 51–52

  Morgan Earp and, 28

  reward for Benson killers, 52

  Tombstone office, 29

  Virgil Earp and, 71

  Wyatt Earp and, 38–39, 52, 70, 75, 149

  Welsh, Charlie, 140, 158, 175, 255n 120

  Welsh, Christenne, 180

  Welsh, Grace, 180

  Wichita, Kansas, 36

  Wilcox, Arizona, 127

  Wister, Owen, 87–88

  women,

  biographies of, 6

  life of, in Tombstone, 41, 45–46

  in Nome, Alaska, 113–14

  as prostitutes, 7, 47–49

  as “shrill or strident,” 6

  in wagontrains, 34–35, 249n 34

  Western frontier life and, 7

  in Western history, 6, 164

  working, on the frontier, 47

  Wrangell, Alaska, 93

  Wurtzel, Sol, 215

  Wyatt Earp (film), 234

  Wyatt Earp (ship), 197–99

  Wyatt Earp: The Life Behind the Legend (Tefertiller), 234

  Yuma, Arizona, 89, 92

  | About the Author

  Ann Kirschner is University Dean of Macaulay Honors College at the City University of New York. She began her career as a lecturer in Victorian literature at Princeton University, where she earned her Ph.D. A writer of wide-ranging interests, she is the author of Sala’s Gift and an innovator in digital media and education. She lives in New York City with her family.

  www.ladyattheokcorral.com

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.

  | Praise

  Advance Praise for Ann Kirschner’s Lady at the O.K. Corral

  “Ann Kirschner brings a fresh, lively perspective to one of the great stories of the American frontier. Lady at the O.K. Corral reveals a fascinating intersection of Jewish history and the Wild West; its engaging narrative both celebrates and demystifies a legendary time and place.”

  —Julie Salamon, author of Wendy and the Lost Boys

  “In this remarkable feat of historical sleuthing, Ann Kirschner coaxes the stubbornly evasive Josephine Marcus Earp out from behind the shadow of her famous partner, painting a vibrant portrait of an uncommon couple whose love for one another and shared thirst for adventure took them to the farthest reaches of the Wild West during its blustery boom times. Thanks to Kirschner’s exhaustive research and fluid pen, Josephine Earp joins the ranks of Jessie Benton Frémont, Elizabeth Custer, and other spirited nineteenth-century women who defied custom to forge their own lives and shape the legends of the men they loved.”

  —Bruce J. Dinges, Arizona Historical Society

  “A tour de force in the detective work of biography, Ann Kirschner’s Lady at the O.K. Corral writes Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp back into American history. Mining unpublished manuscripts, personal letters, diaries, and court documents, Kirschner’s fine narration tells the real story of the woman behind the man.”

  —David S. Ferriero, former director of the New York Public Libraries

  “Ann Kirschner delivers a frontier story for the ages—part Unsinkable Molly Brown, part Mama Rose, part Queen Esther, the story of Josephine Earp proves that even the best lawman in the Wild West needed a good woman to stand beside him, as improbable as their romance was, and as riveting a read as this book most certainly is.”

  —Thane Rosenbaum, author of The Golems of Gotham and Payback

  “Thanks to Ann Kirschner’s brilliant Lady at the O.K. Corral, we finally have the definitive story of Josie Earp, a key player not only in the events leading up to and after the infamous shootout, but in crafting much of the mythology that’s been widely accepted ever since. This is a must-read book for anyone who loves narrative nonfiction, or simply enjoys a hellaciously well-told tale.”

  —Jeff Guinn, author of The Last Gunfight

  “Old West aficionados will find in this book a fresh account of the most famous of gunfights, but Ann Kirschner’s engrossing biography of Josephine Marcus Earp offers much more. The life of Josephine that unfolds so vividly in these pages is as colorful and complicated as that of Wyatt, and as the reader will discover, hers was the more remarkable journey.”

  —Stephen Aron, UCLA and Autry National Center

  “With a passion for research and an engaging flair for prose, Ann Kirschner has composed a biography of Josephine Marcus Earp that is a pleasure to read. No previous account has equaled in depth and understanding Kirschner’s portrayals of Josephine and Wyatt—their families, their diverse associates, their lives in a rapidly changing American West.”

  —Harriet Rochlin, author of Pioneer Jews: A New Life in the Far West

  “ Lady at the O.K. Corral is the remarkable true story of Josephine Earp, who lived through the transformation of the western frontier from gold rush boomtowns to the back lots of Hollywood. In this vivid tale of romance and high drama, Ann Kirschner reveals the dark secrets of Wyatt Earp’s past and Josephine’s Jewish immigrant family.”

  —Abigail Pogrebin, author of Stars of David

  “In a great piece of historical detection, Kirschner brings to life a woman who had previously been just a footnote, just an oddity. This book brims with the vibrancy of the Arizona Territory and situates the daughter of Polish Jewish immigrants into the rough and tumble of a half century of American life. This is a story that has never been told and that is just fine. It awaited Ann Kirschner’s imagination, research, and sweeping prose.”

  —Hasia R. Diner, author of A Time for Gathering

  | Other Books

  ALSO BY ANN KIRSCHNER

  Sala’s Gift

  | Earpnotes

  Lucky me, I had the benefit of interviews and insights from a group of people who don’t know each other—and in some cases, don’t like or trust each other. That’s Planet Earp.

  I would like to acknowledge conversations and contributions from Fred Agree, Allan Barra, Lynn Bailey, Mark Boardman, Glenn Boyer, Walter Cason, Robert Chandler, Jane Candia Coleman, Anne Collier, Burt Devere, Dorothy Devere, Dino DiConcini, Hasia Diner, Bruce Dinges, Scott Dyke, Mark Dworkin, Marge Elliott, Stephen Elliott, Karen Franklin, Leslie Fried, Tom Gaumer, Murdock Gilchriese, Ga
ry Greene, Jeff Guinn, Rachel Tarlow Gul, George Laughead, Denise Lundin, Roger Lustig, Ray Madzia, Felton Macartney, Paula Marks Mitchell, Carol Mitchell, Jeff Morey, Christine Rhodes, Harriet Rochlin, Ava Kahn, Marguerite La Riviere, Bev Mulkins, Kevin Mulkins, Robert Palmquist, Roger Peterson, Bob Pugh, Mark Ragsdale, Gary Roberts, Christine Rhodes, Alice Rogoff, John Rose, Nona Safra, Laura Samuelson, William Shillingberg, Casey Tefertiller, Suzanne Westaway, Jeff Wheat, Steve Weiner, and Eric Weider.

  The single most important source for the true story of Josephine Marcus Earp is the Cason manuscript of her memoir, based on interviews with her and written by Mabel Earp Cason and Vinnolia Earp Ackerman. I have mined the manuscript but cross-checked its assertions with many other sources. Unless otherwise indicated, all references are from this manuscript.

  With some notable exceptions, Josephine’s letters are still mostly in the hands of private collectors, and I am grateful to those who have shared their treasures with me. In particular, I am deeply indebted to Mark and Lauri Ragsdale and their children Wyatt and Isabella for their warm hospitality. All quotes from Josephine’s letters not otherwise noted are from the Ragsdale Collection, which also included some of Flood’s original notes and diagrams from his interviews with Wyatt Earp, as well as photographs, clippings, and documents.

  Glenn Boyer granted permission to use his papers at the University of Arizona and Dodge City, and provided many other documents and photographs, and recordings of the extensive interviews that he did with the Cason and extended Marcus families; many of these are discussed here for the first time. Casey Tefertiller provided access to his recorded interviews with the Cason and Welsh families, and with Frank Waters and his wife. Roger Peterson shared his recorded interviews with William S. Hart, Jr., Jeanne Laing, and the Marcus family, as well as some unpublished articles. Suzanne Westaway provided access to the personal papers of Edna Lehnhardt Stoddart.

  First stop for any Earp researcher is the remarkable Stuart Lake Collection at the Huntington Library. The papers of the Houghton Mifflin Company, the preeminent publisher of early western-themed books, reside at the Houghton Library at Harvard, and include important correspondence with Stuart Lake, William MacLeod Raine, Frederick Bechdolt, and William Breakenridge.

  Other important archival sources include the Zaff-Behan divorce papers at the Arizona Historical Society Collection in Tucson, Behan’s papers at the University of Arizona Special Collections, the recorded interview with Hildreth Halliwell at the University of Arizona Special Collections, and the letters of Louisa Earp at the Ford County Historical Society, with permission from Glenn Boyer. There is a treasure trove of Tombstone real estate, voting, and legal records at the Cochise County Courthouse and County Recorders Office in Bisbee, Arizona. The records of the first synagogues in San Francisco are in the Western Jewish History Center at the Judah L. Magnes Museum at the University of California, Berkeley. The records of the Marcus family burial plots are in the Hills of Eternity cemetery in Colma, California. The archives of the Alaska Commercial Company reside in Green Library at Stanford University. I spent an unforgettable week in Alaska, working in Nome’s Carrie McLain Memorial Museum and the Kegoayah Kozga Library, and the University of Anchorage Special Collections.

 

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