In the 1993 movie Tombstone, Doc Holliday
(portrayed by actor Val Kilmer) is depicted
as a good guy at heart, helping Wyatt Earp
to keep order and law in the dangerous old
west town of Tombstone, Arizona.
As is the case with Earp, there is a mound
of evidence that the real Doc Holliday wasn’t
nearly so squeaky clean.
Here is the truth behind the legend of the
“slickest gunslinger in the west,” Doc
Holliday.
Born John Henry Holliday on August 4, 1851
in Griffin, Georgia (today, a suburb of Atlanta),
“Doc” was the second child born to his
parents, Henry (“Major”) and Alice Jane
Holliday, but his older sister passed away
during childbirth.
He would remain an only child.
His father was a veteran of several wars,
including the Cherokee Indian War and the
Mexican-American war.
When he returned in 1848 from the Mexican-American
war, he brought with him an orphaned Mexican
boy named Francisco Hidalgo.
It is said when John Henry was a young child,
Francisco taught him how to become “the
quickest draw in the west.”
Growing up on a “Southern frontier” farm
was tough living, with humid air and erratic
weather.
John’s family was Scottish-Irish, like many
in the region, and he was raised Protestant.
His mother taught him manners and etiquette,
while his father regaled him with war stories
and survival skills.
John was but nine years old when the Civil
War broke out and his father once again left
for war, but not before moving his family
even further south, to the Georgia-Florida
border.
John attended school and was a good student,
though he was noted as being somewhat rebellious.
Quickly after his mother’s death in May
of 1866 from consumption (a.k.a. tuberculosis,
see: Why Tuberculosis was Called “Consumption”),
Major remarried to a neighbor’s daughter
(who was 23, eight years older than John).
John’s relationship with his father became
strained and he left home to attend the Pennsylvania
College of Dental Surgery in 1869, one of
the best dental schools in the country.
Seemingly, he did quite well at school and
graduated with a license in 1872.
He moved to St. Louis for a period of time,
to join a friend’s dental practice, before
moving back to Georgia.
Now, here begins the more interesting part
of Holliday’s life.
In 1872, in a story recounted in a Doc Holliday
biography written by Gary Roberts, Doc Holliday:
The Life and Legend, (but first conveyed in
1907 by noted writer Bat Masterson) Holliday
first killed a man in Georgia during a racial
dispute.
Holliday and a few friends were at a watering
hole when a group of African-American men
joined them as well.
Holliday did not approve and told them to
leave.
They didn’t.
He produced a gun and shot one to three men
(reports vary) to death.
Now, a few historians think this story may
not be entirely accurate due to discrepancies
in the 1907 version, but it wouldn’t have
been too out of character for Holliday given
his preponderance towards violence.
Also around this time, he was diagnosed with
tuberculosis just like his mother, who he
watched die from the disease.
With no effective cure, it was thought that
a dry climate could at least alleviate the
symptoms.
Either because he was run out of town or due
to his sickness, or maybe both, he moved to
the dry air of Dallas, shortly thereafter
in 1872.
He opened a dental practice in Dallas, but
it wasn’t for long.
According to True West Magazine, Doc’s constant
coughing and illness kept patients away, so
he had to learn how to make money another
way – card games and gambling.
Refined, intelligent, and good at keeping
a poker face, Doc excelled at Faro, where
he became a dealer (or “banker”) at several
saloons across Dallas.
Faro was a game which pitted the banker against
the other players.
It was also a game that could be easily rigged.
Doc was extremely good at Faro, or at least
extremely good at cheating, earning himself
a lot of money – and a lot of enemies.
Throughout the next few years, Doc was regularly
arrested and fined for his gaming in Dallas.
To avoid charges, he went on the run throughout
the Southwest, dealing Faro at saloons all
along the way.
He got into more than one disagreement that
required the use, or at least the threatening
of, the skills he learned from Fransisco so
many years back.
He seems to have gotten into gunfights throughout
Texas, Kansas, Wyoming, and New Mexico.
He also is known to have sliced open a man’s
stomach when the man refused to follow the
Faro rules that Doc had “implemented.”
At one point, it is thought that US Marshals
and Texas Rangers were even after him.
In 1879, he had made enough money to open
his own saloon in New Mexico.
He spent his time dealing Faro and drinking
heavily, until one night a former army scout
put up a fuss when one of Holliday’s saloon
girls (possibly a prostitute) told him that
she wasn’t in love with him.
The army scout went outside and began to fire
shots into Holliday’s establishment.
So, Doc went outside and killed the man.
The following year, he found himself in Tombstone,
Arizona where history was waiting for him.
Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday first became familiar,
where else, but at a Faro gaming table.
As the deputy of Dodge City, Earp was on the
trail of well-known train robber Dave Rudabaugh
and was venturing way out of his jurisdiction
in pursuit, nearly 400 miles and into Fort
Griffin, Texas.
Historians believe Earp wasn’t doing this
out of any sense of justice, but rather for
the considerable reward money.
Either way, he was directed to the Faro table
of Doc Holliday, who had dealt with Rudabaugh.
Normally, Holliday would never talk to a lawman,
but upon hearing about the reward over a game
of Faro, he spilled the beans that he had
heard that Rudabaugh was hightailing it back
to Kansas.
Earp wired the information to a friend there
and Rudabaugh was soon captured.
It is not known if Earp shared the reward
money with Holliday, nor who won that game
of Faro.
Also, according to a story supposedly told
by Earp (possibly just a legend, given Earp’s
and his many biographers’ known propensity
to make up such stories), Holliday once saved
Earp’s life.
In 1879, with Holiday paying a visit to Dodge
City with his girlfriend “Big Nose Kate,”
the noted cowboy Tabo Driskell pulled a gun
on Earp and was about to shoot him when Holliday
came up behind him and placed a gun at his
temple.
Driskell dropped his gun and from then on,
Earp credited Holliday with saving his life.
Whether true or not, in 1881, Earp wrote a
letter to Holliday asking him to join him
in Tombstone, saying they could use a dentist
in those parts.
More likely, Earp probably just wanted his
favorite Faro dealer by his side to help fleece
the denizens of the then prosperous silver
mining town.
So, Doc Holliday moved to Tombstone and that
was where his legend was made and why anybody
still remembers who he was.
It seems Holliday’s participation in the
showdown at the OK Corral (or rather in a
vacant lot next to the OK Corral) against
Ike Clanton and his men had more to do with
his loyalty to Earp, and the fact that he
rarely said no to a gunfight, than upholding
the law.
There is also some evidence that Clanton may
have been spreading rumors about Holliday
robbing a stagecoach and that his girlfriend,
“Big Nose Kate,” was a prostitute.
There is also a story that Clanton called
Holliday and the Earps out for the fight over
they having cheated Clanton in a Faro game.
On the other hand, this all may have been
said after the fact to give Holliday reason
to be in the gunfight.
The violence only took thirty seconds, left
three men dead, and several men injured.
While no one knows for sure who fired first,
it was Doc’s bullet that first rendered
a fatal shot.
It is even written in some accounts that Clanton
was not armed.
But finding the truth about what happened
in that gunfight is about as difficult as
finding Bigfoot.
In the end, Holliday, along with Earp, was
put on trial for murder.
He was exonerated, but several attempts were
made on his life over the next few years.
He eventually made his way to Colorado where
he increasingly became dependent on alcohol
and opium as his health deteriorated.
He died in 1887 at the young age of 37 in
Glenwood Springs, Colorado, from the same
illness that claimed his mother – tuberculosis.
Wyatt Earp lived on and moved to Los Angeles
in the early 20th century where his story
got the Hollywood treatment, most prominently
in the largely fictitious, but ever popular,
“biography” Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshall.
Always loyal to his friend, Earp perpetuated
the myth that his card shark, gun fighter
pal, Doc Holliday, was an old west hero.
It seems, if we are taking real historical
accounts and evidence into consideration,
this is actually quite false.
But, as with Earp’s Hollywoodized tale,
it sure makes a great story.
