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" Final Resting Place of Doc Holliday"

 

Doc Holliday
14th August 1852 - 8th November 1887
Gunslinger & card sharp subject of many films which turned him into a western legend.
Pioneer Cemetery, Glenwood Springs, Colorado.


John Henry "Doc" Holliday (August 14, 1852 – November 8, 1887) was an American dentist, gambler and gunfighter of the Old West frontier, who is usually remembered for his associations with Wyatt Earp and the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

Genealogy and education
He was born in Griffin, Georgia to Henry Burroughs Holliday and Alice Jane Holliday née McKey.
John's mother died on September 16, 1866, of tuberculosis, when John was 15 years old. Three months later, his father remarried Rachel Martin. Shortly after the marriage, the family moved to Valdosta, Georgia, where John attended the Valdosta Institute. There he received a strong classical secondary education in rhetoric, grammar, mathematics, history and languages—principally Latin, but also French and some ancient Greek.
In 1870, 19 year-old John Henry left home to begin dental school in Philadelphia. On March 1, 1872, he received a degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery from the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery. Later that year he opened a dental office with Arthur C. Ford in Atlanta.

Health
At birth he had a cleft palate and partly cleft lip. At two months of age, this defect was repaired surgically by John's uncle J.S. Holliday, M.D., and a family cousin, the famous physician Crawford Long. The repair left no speech impediment, though speech therapy was needed. However, the repair is visible in John's upper lip-line, in the one authentic adult portrait-photograph which survives, taken on the occasion of his graduation from dental school.
Not long after beginning his dental practice, Doc was diagnosed with tuberculosis. It is possible he contracted the disease from his mother. He was given only a few months to live, although it was thought that moving to the drier and warmer southwestern part of the United States might help to reduce the deterioration of his health.

Early travels and dentistry
His first stop west (September, 1873) was Dallas, Texas, where he opened a dental office at 56 Elm Street, about three blocks east of the site of today's Dealey Plaza. He soon began gambling, and realized this was a more beneficial source of income. He was arrested in Dallas (January, 1875) after trading gunfire with a saloon-keeper, but no one was injured and he was found not guilty. He had already moved his offices to Denison, Texas. After being found guilty of "gaming" in Dallas, Texas and fined, he had had enough, and decided to leave the state.

In the years that followed, Holliday had many more such disagreements, fueled by a hot temper and an attitude that death by gun or knife was better than that by tuberculosis. The alcohol which Holliday used to control his cough may also have contributed. There was also the practical matter that a professional gambler, working on his own at the edge of the law, had to be able to back up disputed points of play with at least a threat of force. Over time, Holliday continued traveling on the western mining frontier where gambling was most likely to be lucrative and legal. In coming years Doc was found in Denver, Cheyenne, and Deadwood, site of the gold rush in the Dakota Territory in the fall of 1876. It was possibly in Deadwood that winter that Doc first heard of Wyatt Earp, who was also there at the same time.

By 1877 Doc was back in Fort Griffin, Texas, where Wyatt Earp remembered first meeting him. The two of them began to form an unlikely friendship (Wyatt more even-tempered and controlled, Doc more hot-headed and impulsive). This friendship was cemented in 1878 in Dodge City, Kansas, where both Earp and Doc had traveled to make money from the gambling of the cowboys driving cattle up from Texas. Doc was still practicing dentistry on the side from his rooms in Dodge City, as we know from an 1878 Dodge newspaper advertisement (he promised money back for less than complete customer satisfaction), but this is the last known time he attempted practice. In an interview printed in a newspaper later in his life, he said that he only practiced dentistry "for about 5 years."

The dedicated gambler
In September, 1878 an incident occurred in which Wyatt, a deputy city Marshal, was surrounded by men who had "the drop" on him. Doc, coming up from another angle to cover the group with a gun, either shot one of these men or threatened to, and Wyatt afterwards always credited Doc with saving his life that day.

Professional comic Eddie Foy was a friend of Doc in Dodge City, and remembered Doc trying in 1879 to get him to join the "Royal Gorge War", a railroad right-of-way dispute into which the Santa Fe Railroad sent a private posse led by Bat Masterson. Foy said that he couldn't hit anything with a gun, and from his comedian's ear, we get the only known rendition of Doc's Georgia-accented speaking voice:

"Oh, that's all right. The Santy Fee won't know the difference. You kin use a shot-gun if you want to. Dodge wants a good showin' in this business. You'll help swell the crowd and you'll get your pay anyhow."
Doc knew his politics and he also knew the value of a shotgun.

Tombstone, Arizona Territory - Main article: Gunfight at the O.K. Corral

Dodge was not a frontier town for long, and by 1879 became too respectable for the kinds of people who had seen it through its early days. For many, it was time to move on to places where money was being made and hadn't yet been reached by the civilizing railroad. Holliday by this time was as well known for his gunfighter reputation as he was for being a gambler, although the latter was his trade, and the former simply a reputation. Through his friendship with Wyatt, Doc eventually made his way to the silver-mining boom town of Tombstone, Arizona Territory, in September 1880 (Wyatt had been there since December, 1879). There, Doc quickly became embroiled in the local politics and violence that led up to the famous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in October, 1881. Doc was certainly a key element in this.

The gunfight happened the next day following a late-night argument between Holliday and Ike Clanton, and it happened in the vacant lot and street immediately next to Fly's boarding house where Holliday had a room. The Clantons and McLaurys had collected in the lot before being confronted by the Earps, and Holliday must have thought they were there specifically to assassinate him. See O.K. Corral for details of this conflict.

Testimony from an eyewitness who saw the fight begin with a "nickle plated pistol" and a blast of unusual smoke, suggests that Doc could have started the gunfight, despite town marshal Virgil Earp's attempts to calmly disarm the cowboys. Ike Clanton was never hit. It is known that Holliday carried Virgil Earp's double-barreled short (messenger-type) shotgun into the fight, having been given the weapon just before the fight by Virgil, because Doc was wearing a long coat which could conceal it. Virgil took Doc's walking stick. By not going conspicuously armed Virgil Earp was seeking to avoid panic in the citizenry of Tombstone, and in Clantons and McLaurys.

The strategy failed, for while Virgil held up the cane, one witness saw a man who was almost certainly Doc poke a cowboy in the chest with the shotgun, then step back. Shortly thereafter, Doc certainly used this weapon to kill Tom McLaury, the only man to sustain shotgun wounds—a fatal buckshot charge to the chest. This probably happened quite early in the fight, and for reasons of handling familiar to any shotgun user, before Holliday fired a pistol. Scenarios in which the slight and tubercular Doc held a pistol with one hand and a double-barrelled shotgun in the other during a gunfight (using the pistol first, then the shotgun, then the pistol again) do not seem likely.

Despite Doc Holliday's reputation for deadliness over the years, which has grown in the telling, Tom McLaury remains the only man that there is contemporary historical evidence that Holliday killed up to that point. There is little doubt that there were later victims of Holliday during the Earp Vendetta Ride, but evidence is sketchy.

Following an inquest and arraignment hearing that determined the gunfight was not a criminal act on the part of the Earps and Holliday, the situation in Tombstone grew worse when Virgil Earp was ambushed and permanently injured in December, and Morgan Earp ambushed by assassins and killed in March, 1882. After Morgan's murder, the Earps, their families, and Holliday fled town. In Tucson, while Wyatt, Warren Earp, and Doc Holliday were escorting the wounded Virgil Earp and his wife Allie back to California, they prevented another ambush and began the Earp Vendetta against the cowboys they believed were responsible for Morgan's death.

Earp vendetta ride
The lawless killing started with Frank Stilwell, a former deputy of Johnny Behan's, who was in Tucson to answer a stage-robbery charge, but who wound up dead on the tracks in the train yard near the Earps' train. What Stilwell was doing in the train yard has never been explained (he may have been waiting to pick up another man who was supposed to testify in his favor), but Wyatt Earp certainly thought Stilwell was there to do the Earps harm. In his biographies, Wyatt admitted shooting Stilwell with a shotgun, but along with Earp's two shotgun wounds, Stilwell was also found with three bullet wounds. Doc Holliday, who was with Wyatt that night, and said that Stilwell and Ike Clanton were waiting in the trainyard to assassinate Virgil Earp, is a prime candidate for the second shooter. Doc never directly acknowledged his role in Stilwell's killing, or those that followed.

After the Earp families had left for California and safety, Doc and Wyatt, along with Wyatt's younger brother Warren Earp and Wyatt's friends Sherman McMasters, Turkey Creek Jack Johnson and Texas Jack Vermillion, rode on a vendetta for three weeks, during which Curly Bill Brocius and at least two other men thought to be responsible for Morgan's death, were killed. Eventually, with warrants on six of the vendetta posse (including Wyatt and Doc) in the Arizona Territory for the killing of Stilwell, the posse moved to New Mexico, then Colorado, in mid-April, 1882. Along that journey, while in New Mexico, Wyatt and Doc had a minor argument, and parted ways before going separately to different parts of Colorado.

After the vendetta ride, neither Doc nor the rest of the vendetta party ever went back to Arizona to live. In Doc's case, Colorado refused to extradite him (due to lack of evidence) when he was arrested for the Stilwell killing in Denver in May, 1882 (Doc spent the last two weeks of that month in jail while that issue was decided). Doc and Wyatt would meet again in June of 1882 in Gunnison, after Doc was released. There is controversy about whether or not any of the Earp vendetta posse slipped briefly back to the Tombstone area to kill Johnny Ringo on July 12-13, 1882. Biographers of Ringo do not believe it is very likely.

Final illness
Holliday spent the rest of his brief life in Colorado. After a stay in Leadville, Colorado, he suffered from the effects of the high altitude, and his health and evidently his gambling skills began to deteriorate badly. In August, 1884, he shot Billy Allen, a man who was threatening him with a beating in the collection of a loan to Doc of just five dollars, which Doc didn't have the money to repay. (Holliday and Allen were not strangers, since the same Billy Allen in 1881 had testified unfavorably in the Spicer Hearing regarding the Earp's role in the O.K. Corral gunfight).

According to his own court testimony, given while pleading self-defense, Doc was then down to just 122 pounds in weight. Allen recovered from his bullet wound, which was to the arm (Doc had been tackled and prevented from doing worse), and the jury ultimately found Doc not guilty.

According to Wyatt's wife Josie/Sadie, Doc and Wyatt met for the last time in late 1885, in Denver, Colorado. Holliday by then was very ill, but still able to walk and gamble.

In 1887, now prematurely gray and ailing badly, Doc made his way to a hotel (the Hotel Glenwood) near the hot springs of Glenwood Springs, Colorado, hoping to take advantage of the reputed curative power of the waters. However, the sulfurous fumes from the spring may have done his lungs more harm than good, and Holliday eventually died in his hotel room, after being bedridden for two months.

In the end, it was tuberculosis that got Doc Holliday, at the age of 36. Fifteen years after the doctors gave him only months to live, he died peacefully in his hotel bed. There is controversy about whether he formally converted to Catholicism first. He is known to have seen a priest in his final illness, but it is known that his funeral services were conducted by a Presbyterian minister (Holliday's father was Presbyterian), which makes it less likely that Doc received sacraments as a Catholic. Doc had been raised as a Methodist by his mother, and attended Methodist services as an adult, but his friend and first cousin Martha Anne "Mattie" Holliday, with whom he regularly corresponded throughout his life, had years earlier become a Catholic nun, and this may have been an influence. Doc's long-time companion Big Nose Kate had also attended a convent school, and was probably Catholic. Kate helped care for Doc in the last months of his life, and was with him at the end.

Dying, Holliday asked for a drink of whiskey, and his reputed last words were "This is funny." Perhaps he was looking at his bootless feet. No one ever thought that he would die with his boots off, or in bed. Doc's dying words, however, are also a matter of speculation, and they are not reported by Kate or any contemporary account of his death.

Doc Holliday's grave is in Glenwood Springs cemetery. There is dispute about whether he is actually buried in his marked grave, or even in the cemetery itself. He died in deep winter when the ground was frozen and was buried the same day in what was probably a temporary grave. This grave may not have been in the old cemetery, which was up a difficult road on the mountain. It is thus possible his body was never later relocated, but the truth is not known, since no exhumation has been attempted. If Doc is not in Glenwood Cemetery, he may be in somebody's back yard in modern Glenwood Springs city, at a lower altitude.