What Really Happened at the O.K. Corral? - podcast episode cover

What Really Happened at the O.K. Corral?

Oct 19, 20219 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:
Metacast
Spotify
Youtube
RSS

Episode description

The gunfight in Tombstone in 1881 between some tough-nosed lawmen and hard-headed outlaws went down in history -- thanks to Hollywood. Learn the story behind it in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://history.howstuffworks.com/american-history/gunfight-ok-corral.htm

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff. Lauren Vogel bomb here, the romanticized version of the American cowboy tin stars, quick draw gunfights, saloons on dusty streets, and unending desert landscapes wouldn't hold such a firm place in her consciousness if not for the infamous showdown now known as the Gunfight at the Okay Corral. You know, the one between tough nosed law men and some hard headed outlaws in the town of Tombstone near

the Mexican border in the Arizona Territory. But just to clarify, the shootout wasn't even in a corral at all. It took place in a vacant lot next to a photo

studio in a boarding house. The second point of clarification, nobody ever called the standoff the Gunfight at the Okay Corral until Hollywood sunk its claws into the story with seven Burt Lancaster Kirk Douglas blockbuster titled Gunfight at the Okay Corral, which you have to admit, does sound way cooler than gunfight in a vacant lot, But in true Wild West movie fashion, the cast of the real life

fight is easily broken into two groups. The good guys were the lawman in an otherwise lawless part of the Arizona territory. They were Tombstone Marshall Virgil Earth, his brothers Morgan and Wyatt, both officially special policeman, and temporary policeman John Henry doc Holiday. The bad guys were a group known as the Cowboys cal russelan horse thieven group of no good cusses. They were Billy Clayborne, brothers Ike and Billy Clinton, and brothers Frank and Tom McClory, and these

two groups hated each other. Long story short. Between eighteen seventy nine and eighteen eighty, Tombstone's population exploded with prospectors searching for silver ore and the town needed law enforce sment. The town leaders wanted men like Virgil and Wyatt Earth because they had solid reputations as gunfighters and lawmen, but the Clayton and mclory families, who were prominent ranchers, formed

their own coalition known as the Cowboys. The Cowboys didn't recognize Virgil Earp as marshal or his legal authority, and the Cowboys despised the fact that eurpened his lawmen often used possibly extra legal methods to enforce the law. In late eighty one, it was against the law to carry weapons within the Tombstone town limits. A Virgil earp let that be known to the cowboys, and that's how things

started that day. After some threats and two pistol whippings by the Earps, the two groups squared off at about three pm on October. Most estimates put the two groups not much farther than six ft or two meters apart. There were plenty of handguns present. Holiday carried a shotgun before the article. This episode is based on How Stuff Works.

Spoke with Marshall Trimble, Arizona's official state historian. He said, when the cowboys came into town and Billy Clinton saw his brother Ike had been hit, and Frank saw his brother Tom had been cocked, they were spoiling for a fight. Then they made open threats that they were going to kill the Earth's They were overheard, and that's what saved the earps and Doc from maybe going to a murder trial. And here we jump ahead to the first hand witness

account of John H. Bean. He was the sheriff of Cochise County, a political rival to the Earps, and a friend too many of the cowboys, and one of many interviewed afterward during a hearing into the gunfight. This transcript is courtesy of the Arizona Memory Project. Quote when they got to the party of cowboys, they drew their guns and said, you sons of you have been looking for a fight, and you can have it. Someone of the party, i think Marshall Arp, said throw up your hands. We

are going to disarm you instantaneously. With that, the fight commenced and there was around some thirty shots fired. Dozens and dozens of accounts have been written on the fight, and many relying on firsthand accounts like this. Some say that at least one of the cowboys was unarmed. Others refute that claim. The questions arose as to who fired the first shot and who shot whom, but the toll

of the gunfight is not in question. Once everything had quieted down, three cowboys, Billy Clinton, just eighteen or nineteen years old at the time, and both McClory brothers were dead. The fight lasted no more than thirty seconds. The lawmen weren't without their injuries, though Tremble said In the end, Morgan Earp almost had a fatal wound. The bullet just missed his spine, but it went right clear through his back. Virgil took a hit in his leg, and Doc just

got a scrape. Why it came through without a scratch, just like he does in the movies. Four days after the fight, Mike Clayton, who had fled once bullets started flying, accused the Earps and Holiday of murder and Tombstone Justice of the Peace Wells Spicer held a hearing into the throw down being back to the cowboys, but others supported

the Earps and Holiday. The verdict may have hinged on the testimony of one Addie Borland, a local dressmaker, who contradicted the cowboys claim that they had their hands up and should not have been fired upon. The Spicer eventually found that the Earps and Holiday were well within their

rights and declared that no trial was necessary. Mike Clayton, bent on revenging the death of his brother and the other cowboys, is generally thought to be behind the assassination attempt on Virgil Earp in December of that year and the murder of Morgan Earp, who was gunned down in a Tombsdown billiard club in early two After Morgan's killing, Wyatt Earp tracked down some of the Clayton's cohorts when killing a couple. Clayton was killed by a detective in Springerville,

Arizona Territory in eighteen eighty seven while resisting arrest. Wyatt was the last of the Ok Corral survivors. He died in Los Angeles in nineteen twenty nine at age eighty. The gunfight gained near mythic status in nineteen thirty one after Stuart Lake, a former press agent for President Theodore Roosevelt, and a Hollywood writer, interviewed Wyatt and published a loose biography titled Wyatt Earp Frontier Marshal. Then came the movie and a TV series on Why Earp's life and times

ran from nineteen fifty five to nineteen sixty one. Among the actors who have portrayed Wyatt are Henry Fonda in My Darling Clementine from nineteen forty six, A Burt Lancaster in the nineteen fifty seven movie James Garner An Hour of the Gun in nineteen sixty seven, Kurt Russell in Tombstone in ninetee, Kevin Costner in Wide Earp in ninety four,

and Bell Kilmer in wyatt Earp's Revenge in twelve. Trimble said, I think it's the psychology that people like to believe that a good guy can't be that good and why it wasn't why it had a little shady past all of them? Did I tell people these were sporting men. They ran around with prostitutes, gambled, hung out with an unsavory lot. But why it came from a good family A why it was a whole lot better than the others and he was just a product of his time.

Tourists now streamed Tombstone to see re enactments, and beyond Tombstone, that face to face showdown between a lawless bunch of cowboys and a hardened bunch of law men has given Arizona and the entire West a huge part of its identity, a larger even than that for many visitors, the gunfight is a snapshot of America. A Tremble said, A gunfighters are America's rendition of King Arthur's Knights of the Round Table.

People are fascinated by them because they had a code of their own and It's an independence, of free spirited independence. It's what everybody wishes they could be, but aren't y. Today's episode is based on the article The Okay Corral, the Gunfight of All Gunfights on how stuff works dot Com, written by John Donovan. Brain Stuff is production of iHeart Radio in partnership with how stuff works dot Com and

is produced by Tyler Klain. Four more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
Open in Metacast