By David Lauterborn Andrew Isenberg presents compelling arguments about celebrated lawman Wyatt Earp’s flawed character, but he falls short of proving his premise that Earp led a vigilante life.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History Net
By David Lauterborn Andrew Isenberg presents compelling arguments about celebrated lawman Wyatt Earp’s flawed character, but he falls short of proving his premise that Earp led a vigilante life.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History Net
By hnn
One of the world’s largest collections of Wild West memorabilia, including a poker table that belonged to Wyatt Earp and weapons from Custer’s Last Stand at the Battle of Little Bighorn, is to be auctioned off next week, to help pay down a Pennsylvania city’s burgeoning debts.
A former mayor of Harrisburg, Stephen Reed, amassed the artefacts with a view to displaying them in a museum he wanted to build, in order to draw in history-seeking visitors and help revitalise the fortunes of the economically depressed city. But with Harrisburg’s debts passing $370m, city leaders voted to put the collection under the hammer. The auction represents an attempt to recover $8m in redevelopment funds that Reed spent on about 10,000 items, during a buying spree in western states.
“Every item you’re able to purchase is an investment in our future,” said Linda Thompson, the city’s new mayor, who is a vocal opponent of Reed’s museum project. “These artefacts had been in the city’s archives for a very long time. Here we are at that important moment to see what Harrisburg’s history looks like and the opportunities ahead.”…
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University
By David Lauterborn In the April issue of Wild West, readers share dispatches about Arizona Territory Sheriff Glenn Reynolds, as well as Wyatt Earp‘s gun-handling skills and the gun he used in that 1881 fight on Tombstone’s Fremont Street.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History Net