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It is fair to say that Will
McLaury's view of the tragic consequence to his brothers is biased.
But the opposing viewpoints are also. However, it still gets better...because
we have the action of Big Nose Kate, Doc's girlfriend!
Though most women in that
day and age probably knew very little about what their men were
doing, Kate was in a unique position. Wives and sweethearts of
the menfolk of that day would be more submissive and less likely
to make inroads into a mans' world. But Kate, ever plying her
trade in the saloons, would not only be less submissive but also
able to pick up on a lot of talk and action in the environment
she breathed in. And as Doc likely treated her more as a concubine
than a wife, he probably talked pretty freely around her as well.
She would not be as sheltered from language and back-street talk
as would the more respected wife. And so it is reasonable to assume
that Kate knew what was going on with the Benson stage robbery
and Doc's involvement with it, and by extension, the Earps' activity
as well. Her association with the group via Doc had to have allowed
her to be privy to some things she had best not share with the
general public.
Kate was a drinker. And
she started drinking heavily after some sort of argument with
Doc that may or may not have gotten physical. She no doubt complained
about her treatment to anyone in the saloon who would listen to
her, as drunken women are reputed to do. Johnny Behan listened
and got an earful. Talk about a happy man! At the time, there
was a great deal of suspicion that Doc had been involved in the
hold-up and was indeed the triggerman. Therefore, when Kate began
to complain about Doc's abuse, which she often claimed came from
his association with the much-disliked Earps; she also voiced
her belief about Doc's contribution to the tragic bloodletting.
Could this actually be the chance to incarcerate the unpopular
Holliday... maybe even hang him? Behan had to be beside himself
with joy.
Never one to miss such an
opportunity, Behan likely bought a few more rounds for Kate before
giving her pen and paper. Just a little insurance! Only a woman
scorned and mistreated and tending toward drowning her sorrows
would take such a risk. Kate was indeed a sad creature. Angry
and hurt, the alcohol caused her to throw caution to the winds
and lose sight of any immediate consequences. She signed a complaint
against Doc.
The Nugget of July 6th,
1881, reported that Holliday was arrested on July 5th; charged
with complicity in the Benson stage hold-up on the complaint of
Kate Elder. But, he was freed on a $5000 bail that was put up
by Wyatt Earp and friends.
Then Kate was arrested the
following day by Virgil Earp. She was arrested for drunk and disorderly
conduct in one of the town's saloons. For some reason, Virgil
did not feel compelled to arrest all the other likely drunken
patrons of the saloon. No cell room, I guess.
Kate was held for several
days without any formal charges. The Earps were not above 'framing
mischief by law,' so to speak, and though this seems like a relatively
small but uncomfortable situation, it was a frightening one for
Kate. It would be naïve to think that the jail time did not include
some sage advice about travel arrangements and even some threats
from the Earp faction. Kate knew these men and she didn't like
them. She complied and recanted for her release. Doc's appearance
in court was short as Kate now refused to testify. The case was
thrown out
But we get a good look at
the way the Earps operate. It should not be forgotten.
Now I want to get back to
Doc's hasty ride into Charleston right after the stage was attacked.
I am very concerned about his desire to find Billy Clanton. And
from what Will McLaury had to say in his letter to his brother-in-law
about the whole episode, there's good reason to be. Doc hated
the cowboys and just did not associate with them at all. Why go
looking for a young cowboy late at night, lathering up his horse
to do it, when he had never met the boy? In my mind... why else
but to threaten or kill him! Either Doc or someone of his group
saw the young man in the vicinity of the hold-up. One of the group
recognized him. They knew he had seen them commit the crime, just
as Will McLaury wrote in his letter. Billy Clanton had been working
cattle in the area all day. He was heading home to the ranch and
was either on the Charleston road or cutting across it. He may
even have come close to the group in the dark after they took
off their hemp rope masks, for that evening there was a bright
moon. At any rate, he knew who pulled off the attempt and he told
his brother and the McLaurys. And possibly sealed his fate!
That is how the circumstantial
evidence stacks up. Billy's witnessing what happened and then
Kate backing it up. Witnesses saw Doc in Charleston right after
the stick-up and others saw him race into town to a back-street
saloon he likely never frequented, his horse totally winded and
lathered when he had said he was off for a few days to Mexico!
And, interestingly, Doc was spotted on the road from Charleston
that evening by another almost unimpeachable witness, John Slaughter,
who was driving with his wife in a buggy. Slaughter said there
was no doubt in his mind it was Doc Holliday he saw in the moonlight.
Slaughter is a tough one to deny!
But there is yet another
suspicious act on the part of the not-too-clever Holliday. On
October 26th, 1881, as Billy Clanton and Frank McLaury were leaving
the Grand Hotel to go hunt up their brothers, Doc Holliday approached
Billy, introduced himself and shook hands with the puzzled boy,
saying that he was "glad to meet him". He didn't approach Frank
McLaury or Billy Allen or Major Frink, those who were with Billy.
Just Billy Clanton. Billy rarely came into town, so it seems obvious
to me, at any rate, after his seeking the young cowboy in Charleston
that night unsuccessfully, that Doc wanted to identify the boy...
make sure he shot the right one... the eye witness. He did! Billy
Clanton was mortally wounded at the onset of the fight on Fremont
Street in another hour or so. Many witnesses testified that Doc
and Morgan Earp shot first, and one of the first ones shot was
Billy Clanton, despite his hands raised and his statement that
he did not want to fight.
One other little thing of
note to throw in the pot; Holliday was a close personal friend
of Billy Leonard, one of the robbers. They had known each other
before either one came to Tombstone, and the story goes that Doc
was known to go and visit Leonard out of town several times before
the robbery took place. Though Leonard was a friend of Doc's,
he didn't hesitate to describe him as a "shiftless, bagged-legged
character; a killer and professional cut-throat and not a wit
too refined to rob stages or even steal sheep..."
So what do we make of all
this? Did the Earps know what Doc had done? Almost surely! Were
they in on it? That's up for debate but it seems possible. For
sure they wanted to protect Doc from his own folly and protect
themselves from the damning fallout. Wyatt had a burning ambition
to be the next sheriff of Cochise County, a real money-maker of
a job. The kickback from collecting taxes and other fees was considerable,
to say the least. But this stuff with Doc Holliday and murder!
That could really kill his chances if Doc couldn't be cleared
in some way. Wyatt's brain was buzzing!
And of course, the crafty
Wyatt came up with a plan. His posse had chased the outlaws all
over creation for more than three weeks trying to catch them.
It was important that they be apprehended, and in the course of
their capture, likely be shot for resisting arrest. That way they
would never spill the beans about Doc's (or the Earps) complicity
in the botched hold-up. Why would I think that? Well, I am going
to rely on the newspaper account in the Star again. The 'Vendetti'
article explains it.
"...So matters rested
for some time, until, as Ike Clanton swears, Wyatt Earp called
him aside and told him that he would guarantee him (Ike) all of
the Wells, Fargo & Co.'s reward and one thousand dollars more
on top of it, if he would induce Leonard and Head to come to some
ranch in the neighborhood of Tombstone so that he (Wyatt) could
surprise and kill them. He gave as his reasons that they had failed
to realize anything from the attempted robbery and they might
squeal sometime. Crane had been killed by the Mexicans with 'Old
Man Clanton,' so there was nothing to fear from him. To satisfy
Clanton that he meant business, Earp had Wells Fargo's agent telegraph
to San Francisco asking whether the reward would be paid dead.
The answer came back yes. But while negotiations were pending
Leonard and Crane were both killed in New Mexico for cattle stealing..."
This is really interesting
and falls right in line with Earp's ambitions. He'll deal with
anyone to attain his ends. At the time, it would seem he was on
some sort of friendly terms with Ike Clanton or he wouldn't have
approached him. Ike was the man in the valleys who had his finger
on the pulse. He was well connected and well informed about everything
going on in the surrounding environment of the outlaws. If anyone
could help with the capture certainly Ike could... but would he?
There is not one writer
I have read that didn't think Ike greedily jumped at the chance
and even dragged in his equally greedy companions, the McLaurys.
I just don't buy it. It doesn't fit. Ike was a wheeler-dealer
of sorts, a businessman more than anything else, though a rough-edged
cowboy for sure. But it seems he was a broker for the ranchers
and butchers and even the army in dealing with the stolen cattle
market. He had a strong business relationship with the rustlers
who supplied a very demanding meat market. Ike was the go-between,
the buffer. Would he jeopardize that for a deal that would benefit
no one but Wyatt Earp? I don't think so. Ike was not short of
cash. He handled huge amounts for the people he did business with
and made a fat profit or he wouldn't be doing it. $6000 split
three ways (Earp says the McLaurys were in on it) was not enough
for any of them to take the risk of being found out. There's no
doubt they would be killed. It has become apparent in different
accounts that Frank McLaury was very cautious in crossing some
of those men as he helped out Billy Breakenridge with one or two
problems. Such a treacherous act as setting up some 'friends'
of his would definitely be disastrous for any of them as it would
be sure to leak out eventually. No, I don't believe Ike went for
it at all.
But many people do because
that's the way Wyatt Earp tells it. It seems that Ike told of
the proposition that Earp made him, and when Earp heard about
it, it made bad blood between them. Couple that with Doc's finding
out that the Clantons and McLaurys knew of his involvement in
the Benson stage hold-up and you can see where this is going.
Those cowboys were ruining everything for the Earps and their
plans to become rich and powerful in Tombstone. Something had
to be done!
It was. The chips all fell
into place for the Earps when all the parties came together on
October 26th, 1881 in the vacant lot off Fremont Street. But it
was no real benefit to the Earps after all. As usual, they made
the wrong play and short sightedly botched their long term plans
to be big players in the territory.
Joyce Aros ~ joyce@tombstonetimes.com
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