When Wyatt Earp came to
Tombstone in 1879 with his common-law wife, Mattie Blaylock, and his two brothers, Virgil and Morgan, Arizona was a U.S. Territory. Tombstone was a fast-growing, silver-mining town (population 900) where men (like John Heath) were sometimes lynched before they could be legally hanged.
Not long after he arrived, Tombstone's population doubled and Wyatt was appointed Deputy Sheriff (follow this link to his
oath of office). The job was short-lived. (Follow this link to his
signed resignation). Wyatt wanted a different, more prestigious job. He wanted to fill the new position of Cochise County Sheriff, but the job went to a newcomer, Johnny Behan, with whom Wyatt was soon at odds.
How did Behan and Wyatt Earp get off to a bad start? Both wanted to be the law of Tombstone. Both fell in love with the same woman -
Josie Marcus, a beautiful showgirl. Even worse, Behan reneged on a deal he had made with Wyatt and was a friend of "The Cowboys," a group of mostly honest ranchers with cattle rustlers in their midst.
It wasn't just that folks believed some of the Cowboys (like
Tom and Frank McLaury, Ike and Billy Clanton) were rustlers. There was bad blood between the Earps, the Clantons and the McLaurys. Both sides had verbally threatened each other while Virgil Earp, a Deputy U.S. Marshall, got physical with the McLaurys and Ike Clanton.
And then there was "Doc Holliday," who made matters worse. Doc, a dentist back east, but a professional gambler out west, became close to the Earps. Doc was
known for his bad health (tuberculosis) and his quick draw. At the time, and later, folks in Tombstone said Doc was the real source of trouble between the Earps and the Cowboys, despite his "gentlemanly ways."