Wyatt Earp Essays

  • What Was The Real Wyatt Earp A Hero

    1440 Words  | 6 Pages

    The movie Tombstone is based on the legendary historical event that made Wyatt Earp famous, the shooting at the O.K. Corral. But what if the movies got it wrong, history has just been altered to fit the big screen, that’s the real question. Tombstone is a small town in Arizona. People believed the only thing you would find there was your own grave. Tombstone was founded in 1877 when Edward Schlieffen “discovered a motherlode of sliver eventually yielded millions of dollars in silver; soon the

  • Wyatt Earp: Cross The Line Between Law Or Outlaw?

    498 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp was a western lawmen that on multiple times cross the line between law and outlaw. Wyatt Earp was “born on March 19, 1848 in Monmouth, Illinois” (Unknown 2). Wyatt was the third of five sons of Nicholas and Virginia Ann Earp, his early life was spent in Illinois. When Wyatt was young he tried repeatedly to run away to fight in the Union with his three brothers but was caught every time. When he was 17 he left home but came back in “1869 in Lamar, Missouri, and taking the job

  • Wyatt Earp Analysis

    1190 Words  | 5 Pages

    “Tombstone”, the Wonderful Western About Wyatt Earp “You’ve called down the thunder, well now you’ve got it,” yelled Wyatt Earp to the cowboys, in the movie about his life, called Tombstone. As you can tell by Wyatt Earp’s famous quote, Tombstone is a violent, interesting, and crazy movie. Tombstone is a movie full of fighting, death, reckless cowboys, guns, and more, in the city of Tombstone. It is attention grabbing, and once you start watching it, you won’t ever want to stop. Although Tombstone

  • Famous Quotes From Doc Holliday Allusion

    405 Words  | 2 Pages

    because there is dryer air there. This makes it less likely to get tuberculosis. After charged with murder, Holliday went on the move. Holliday went to a number of different cities before settling down in Dodge City, Kansas. In Kansas, he befriended Wyatt Earp. They both then went to Tombstone, Arizona. Doc Holliday’s

  • Tombstone Thesis Statement

    1419 Words  | 6 Pages

    cinema. Film Summary: Tombstone is a classic western film released in 1993, directed by George P. Cosmatos and written by Kevin Jarre. The movie tells the story of Wyatt Earp (Kurt Russell) and his brothers, Virgil (Sam Elliott) and Morgan (Bill Paxton), as they move to the town of Tombstone, Arizona, to start a new life. The Earp brothers quickly become involved in a feud with a group of outlaws known as the Cowboys, led by the notorious Ike Clanton (Stephen Lang). The film is based on real-life

  • Thesis And Main Ideas: Wyatt Earp

    568 Words  | 3 Pages

    Thesis Statement and Main Ideas: Wyatt Earp I was the only man to walk away from that gunfight not injured or dead. Some call that gun fight the most famous gunfight in American history. I was born March 19th, 1848 in Monmouth, Illinois. I was a middle child, being the third of Nicholas and Virginia Ann Earp’s five sons. I ran away several times in my childhood to join the Union army, but never succeeded. I got married in 1870 to a woman by the name of Urilla Sutherland. I was an expecting father

  • Dead Wood: A Short Story

    549 Words  | 3 Pages

    There is a little town in Oregon called Dead Wood. We will start our story in a decent looking bar. In this bar there is a sheriff by the name of Wild Bill. He is what the town calls the fastest gun in the west. He has been in many gun fights. Even when he was out numbered he still won. Well besides the good about the sheriff, Wild Bill slept with alot of women and had glaucoma. Sohe was loosing his eye site little by little. Our man will be focused on is Fred. He works in California as a banker

  • Research Paper On Wild Bill Hickok

    306 Words  | 2 Pages

    A widely recognized and romanticized figure from Old West legend and lore is Wild Bill Hickok (May 27, 1837 – August 2, 1876); Through Harper 's Magazine, exaggerated accounts of Wild Bill 's exploits served to inflame the publics ' imagination . On July 12, 1861, old Wild Bill Hickok was recorded to have engaged in his first gun battle. He was quoted afterward as saying, "I was wild and I struck savage blows." This statement ultimately led to his nom de plume of 'Wild Bill. ' Bill was born

  • Wild West California Gold Rush

    743 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Gold Rush sparked a mad dash for riches, sending thousands of men crisscrossing across the Wild West in search of the big score. As rumors of wealth in new places came about, whole towns were deserted and alas, the Wild West ghost town was born. Today, hundreds of ghost towns lie scattered throughout the Old West, here are 5 worth a visit: 1. Bodie, California Head East of the Sierra Nevada, about 75 miles South-East of Lake Tahoe, and you 'll stumble upon the abandoned ghost town of Bodie

  • Earvin's Room: A Narrative Fiction

    1639 Words  | 7 Pages

    A breeze flew by, scraping past Earvin’s face like sandpaper. The stale air reeked from the smell of death and rot. Earvin was accustomed to it by now, just like any man who had stayed in the Capitals long enough. He shot a gaze at his surroundings. The stone walls stood by both his sides like a couple of Giants. The grey of the sky, similar to that of the walls, did a great job of sucking away all joy and hope from Earvin. The ground was patchy with grass and the dirt, which made up most of it,

  • The Day The Cowboys Quit Analysis

    1186 Words  | 5 Pages

    The novel, The Day the Cowboys Quit, by Elmer Kelton is not a typical cowboy story filled with waving guns and violent fights. Instead, this story shows what the real life of a cowboy would have been like through the story of Hugh Hitchcock. The Day the Cowboys Quit is based on a cowboy strike that occurred in Tascosa, Texas in 1883. Kelton based his fictional story on the causes of the strike and what became as a result of the strike. This paper will explain historical events concerning the cowboys

  • The Bride Comes To The Yellow Sky Analysis

    791 Words  | 4 Pages

    Kamel Alghiryafi ENGL 2328 Rachel Hebert 18 November 2017 Themes, Metaphors and Symbolism in “The Bride Comes to the Yellow Sky” The short story "The Bride Comes to the Yellow Sky" by Stephen Crane is an ironic proof of the unavoidability of the American progress around the finish of the twentieth century. Set in the Texas' tough plains, the story gives a record of the ironic idea of progress. From one perspective, it guarantees the future achievement and satisfaction, at the same time; it pushes

  • Sonnet 144 Rhetorical Analysis Essay

    1403 Words  | 6 Pages

    Introduction This paper aims to investigate the language variation and changes and the rhetorical analysis of the poem ‘Sonnet 144’ by William Shakespeare. By using language variation it will help me understanding the language used in the poem, and how language has changed through the years. To get at good insight of the meaning of the words there are used I will do a rhetorical analysis to look at metaphors in the poem. The Poem ‘Sonnet 144’ by William Shakespeare was first published in 1599 together

  • Jesus Bettelt Analysis

    852 Words  | 4 Pages

    “Jesus bettelt” is like “Erwartung” taken from Weib und Welt. The title “Jesus begs” implies that Jesus is the speaker of the poem. He asks someone, who at the end of the poem is identified as Mary Magdalene, to give everything of herself to him, including her heaviest burden. The poem consists of two stanzas, each containing seven verses. Compared to “Erwartung”, it has a very strict form. In each stanza, two rhyming tercets in trochaic tetrameter are followed by a thorn line. Each tercet starts

  • Analysis Of John Donne's Poem A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning

    735 Words  | 3 Pages

    John Donne’s poem “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning” dramatizes the conflict between one lover’s revelation of beginning a long-distance relationship however, he expresses that nothing will stop the love he has for his lover; Remarkably, “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” by Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, conveys a similar message in that there is nothing that can come between two lovers. To begin with, Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell sing, “No matter how far don’t worry baby / Just call my name

  • Todd Boss Poem

    1004 Words  | 5 Pages

    Groundling, where fore art thou groundling. In the epitaph, “My Love for You Is So Embarrassingly” by Todd Boss, the speaker is stuck in an internal ponder between his head and his heart. The title alone emphasizes how grand his love is for the auditor. Then, as the poem progresses he makes a point to show how devotion is taken for granted. This poem differs from your traditional love poem because the speaker challenges his feelings. He is essentially questioning love’s worth because of the other

  • Wyatt Jarp Research Paper

    891 Words  | 4 Pages

    popular gunfighters came into Dodge City, one of them being Wyatt Earp (33). When Rebein declares that Wyatt was the best at what he did, he explained that he gained this title at his previous positions in other towns acting as a peace officer, in his book (79). The Wyatt Earp heard of today has been manipulated with different views of our history. According to Carter, “Exaggerated and belittled, twisted by fiction and sometimes lost in legend, Wyatt Earp’s character and career have been variously represented

  • Edgar Allan Poe's The Earp Curse Myth

    651 Words  | 3 Pages

    when Sheriff Wyatt Earp perished, he cursed his tormentors and murderers, to long lives of misery and anguish, and promised that one day an heir- an Earp heir- would avenge his ancestry. While only ashes were discovered to confirm the sheriff’s death, several letters of correspondence believed to be Wyatt Earp’s own writings, have only helped the Earp Curse myth persist- writings of a Lead, who brings the Key, where a great battle between good and evil will take place- one that Wyatt Earp says he himself

  • The Last Gun Delight Chapter Summary

    1551 Words  | 7 Pages

    The book “The Last GunFight: The Real Story of the Shootout at the O.K. Corral- And How It Changed the American West” by Jeff Guinn is a history narrative about how the Earp brothers and Doc Holiday took on the Clanton brothers and changed the way Americans’ in the future perceived what the West was really like. In the book Guinn describes the many events that contributed and lead up to the incident at the O.K. Corral that occurred on October 26, 1881 in Tombstone, Arizona. The story begins by

  • Johnny Ringo Research Paper

    363 Words  | 2 Pages

    John Peters Ringo aka Johnny Ringo, was part of the outlaw group of Cochise County Cowboys in Tombstone, Cochise County, Arizona Territory. Johnny Ringo was born on May 3, 1850. He was born in Greens Fork, Indiana, him and is family moved to Liberty, Missouri in 1856. Ringo first moved to Cochise County in 1879 with his friend Joseph Graves Olney aka Joe Hill. In December of 1879, Ringo shot an unarmed man named Louis Hancock just because he denied a free drink of whiskey and preferred