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Big Nose
Kate - Holliday's Sidekick |
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Hiding out during the
night, they headed to
Dodge City,
Kansas on
stolen horses the next morning, registering at Deacon Cox’s Boarding House
as Dr. and Mrs. J.H.
Holliday.
Doc so
appreciated what
Kate did
for him, that he was determined to make her happy and gave up gambling,
hanging up his doctor’s shingle once again. In return,
Kate
promised to give up the life of prostitution and stop hanging about the
saloons.
Consequently, the two
split up, as they were destined to do many times during the remainder of
Doc's
life.
Doc headed to
Colorado
leaving Kate
in Dodge City. |

Front Street, 1874,
courtesy Ford County
Historical Society,
Dodge City,
Kansas
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Later
Doc
wound up in Las Vegas,
New Mexico
where he got into an argument with a local gunman named Mike Gordan. The argument inevitably lead to a gunfight in the street and Gordan
was left dead. When a lynch mob formed
Holliday
hightailed it back to
Dodge City
to find that not only was
Wyatt Earp
gone, but
Kate
was no where to be seen.
Learning that
Wyatt
had headed to
Tombstone,
Arizona
to a new silver strike,
Doc
headed in the same direction. Unknown to
Doc,
“Big
Nose” Kate was also in route to the new boom town of
Tombstone
and the two ran into each other in Prescott,
Arizona.
Doc
was winning heavily at the tables and pocketing $40,000 in winnings,
Kate
was happy to keep him company. In the early summer of 1880, the
two reached
Tombstone.
Shortly afterwards,
Kate was running a boarding house in Globe, Arizona, some 175
miles away from
Tombstone. However, she was known to often stay with
Doc
when she visited.
Many times when
“Big
Nose” Kate visited
Holliday,
they were known to have frequent arguments, most of which were not
serious until
Kate
got drunk. Often, her drunkenness would escalate to abuse, and
in early 1881,
Doc
had finally had enough and threw her out.
On March 15, 1881, four masked men attempted a hold up on a stagecoach
near Contention and in the attempt, killed the stage driver and a
passenger. The Cowboy faction of
Tombstone
immediately seized upon the opportunity and accused
Doc
Holliday of being one of the holdup men. The sheriff who was
investigating the hold-up, found
Kate
on one of her drunken binges, still berating
Doc
for throwing her out. Feeding her yet even more whiskey, the
sheriff persuaded her to sign an affidavit that
Doc
had been one of the masked highwaymen and had killed the stage driver.
While
Kate was sobering up, the
Earps
were rounding up witnesses who could verify
Doc's
whereabouts on the night in question. When
Kate
realized what she had done, she repudiated her statement and the
charges were thrown out. But, for
Doc,
this was the “last straw” for
Kate,
and giving her some money, he put her on a stage out of town.
From 1882 until the
time of his death in 1887,
Doc
Holliday was in
Colorado. During this time,
Kate
was apparently also in the state, at least part of the time, as her
brother owned property in Glenwood Springs. According to some
reports, Doc may have actually spent time with
Kate
and her family as her brother's home was very near to the Sulfur
Springs that
Holliday
visited to try to help his tuberculosis.
Kate stayed in
Colorado
until after
Holliday's
death.
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Tombstone,
Arizona,
1882 |
In 1888,
Kate
married a blacksmith by the name of George M. Cummings, and the two moved
to Bisbee,
Arizona, only a few miles from
Tombstone.
They also lived for a time in Pearce,
Arizona. In
1889, Kate
left her husband and moved to the tiny railroad town of Cochise,
Arizona at
the junction of the
Arizona
Eastern and Southern Pacific railroads. John J. Rath hired
Kate to
work in his Cochise Hotel in 1899, although the customers never knew her
true identity. She left the Cochise Hotel in the summer of 1900, and moved
in with a man named Howard, from the mining town of Dos Cabezas.
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She lived with Howard
until his death in 1930, inheriting his property. In 1931, she wrote to
the Governor of
Arizona, George W.P. Hunt, requesting admission to the "Arizona
Pioneers Home." Being foreign born, she was not eligible for
admission, but claiming she had been born in Davenport, Iowa, she was
accepted to the home.
Kate
stayed at the Pioneers Home until her death on November 2, 1940. She
was just five days shy of her 90th birthday.
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Wyatt Earp
This image available for
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West Books -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Old West
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only one available. To see this varied collection, click
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