I just completed reading a book by Jossie Earp.It gave me more insight into the truth about Wyatt Earp then all of the movies and other books I have read put together. I would suggest you get a copy of this book and read it if you are and are Earp fan or tombstone historical not like me. I am not trying to sell books only give you facts about the truth from the shootout at the okay corral and I believe Jossies version makes more the others and makes more sense and sheds more light. Below is a small biography of Wyatt.
Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp is best known for his participation in the controversial "Gunfight at
the O.K. Corral," which took place at Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26,
1881. In this legendary Old West encounter, Wyatt Earp, his brothers
Virgil and Morgan, and Doc Holliday faced off with Ike and Billy Clanton
and Tom and Frank McLaury. The shootout and the bloody events that
followed, combined with Wyatt Earp's penchant for storytelling, resulted
in Wyatt Earp acquiring the reputation as being one of the Old West's
toughest and deadliest gunmen of his day. Wyatt Earp would become the
fearless Western hero in countless novels and films.
Wyatt Earp is often portrayed by writers as a man of few words
who did not like to talk about his past. Nevertheless, Wyatt Earp on
several occasions, categorically and without corroboration, told
interviewers accounts of his deed from the Old West. In 1896, Wyatt
Earp claimed that he backed down gunman Clay Allison in Dodge City
during 1878. Around 1919, Wyatt Earp told Forrestine Hooker that he
killed the notorious Johnny Ringo on his way out of Arizona during 1882.
Wyatt Earp later repeated the claim that he killed Johnny Ringo to at
least three other people. In the late 1920s, Wyatt Earp told his future
biographer, Stuart Lake, that he arrested Ben Thompson, a notorious
gunslinger, in Ellsworth, Kansas, on August 15, 1873. None of these
claims made by Wyatt Earp have been corroborated by contemporary
documents.
Today many writers and historians continue to view Wyatt Earp
through rose-colored glasses. Neil Carmony, in his Editor’s Foreword to
The Real Wyatt Earp, A Documentary Biography (2000), commented
about this trend: “Typically, when all is said and done the unrealistic
superstar of Stuart Lake’s 1931 biography (Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal), and the numerous Tombstone movies is the Earp who emerges from their books and articles.”
This is the story of the real Wyatt Earp. PS the hat Wyatt Earp wore, was a great hollywood design and stretchedthe truth a little.
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