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P.O. Box 19423
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KS 66285
913-708-5119
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Tombstone,
Arizona Historical Text |
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November
14, 1882, James Coyle testifying at the inquest into
Billy Claiborne's death
"My back was toward the Oriental
Saloon. I heard a shot fired and turned. I saw
Frank Leslie close to the sidewalk with a pistol in his hand. He fired
and I ran towards him. Before I got to him he fired again. He was standing
on the sidewalk when I came up to him. He said, "Jimmy, here is my pistol;
be careful, it is cocked.' He laid the hammer down and gave it to me. He
said, 'I will go with you.' He said, 'Jimmy, I could have done more, but
could not have done less. I did not want to kill him. He was laying to
kill me.' I picked up a rifle that was lying on
Claiborne's knees across his thighs. I took
Leslie as far as the police court-room."
November 18, 1882, Statement
of
Frank Leslie regarding the killing of
Billy Claiborne
"I was talking with some friends in the Oriental
Saloon when
Claiborne pushed his way in among us and began using very insulting
language. I took him to one side and said, "Billy,
don't interfere, those people are friends among themselves and are not
talking about politics at all, and don't want you about." He appeared
quite put out and used rather bad and certainly very nasty language
towards me. I told him there was no use of his fighting with me, that
there was no occasion for it, and leaving him I joined my friends. He came
back again and began using exceedingly abusive language, when I took him
by the collar of his coat and led him away, telling him not to get mad,
that it was for his own good, that if he acted in that manner he was
liable to get in trouble. He pushed away from me, using very hard
language, and as he started away from me, shook a finger at me and said,
"That's all right
Leslie, I'll get even on you," and went out of the
saloon. In a short time a man came in and said there was a man waiting
outside to shoot me, but I didn't pay much attention to it. A few minutes
later another man came in looking quite white and said
Claiborne was waiting outside with a rifle.
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Buckskin Frank Leslie shot and killed
Billy Claibourne
in
Tombstone,
Arizona.
This image available for photographic prints
HERE.
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I then went out, and as I stepped on the
sidewalk, saw about a foot of rifle barrel protruding from the end of the
fruit stand. I stepped out in the street and saw it was
Claiborne, and said, "Billy,
don't shoot, I don't want you to kill me, nor do I want to have to shoot
you." Almost before I finished he raised the gun and shot, and I returned
the fire from my pistol, aiming at his breast. As soon as I shot I saw him
double up and had my pistol cocked and aimed at him again, when I saw, or
thought I saw, another man by him putting his arms around him, and lowered
the pistol, and when it was discharged the bulled went in the sidewalk.
After I fired, I advanced upon him, but did not shoot, when he said,
"Don't shoot again, I am killed," which I didn't but watched him, with my
pistol at full cock, as I didn't know what game he might play to get me
off guard. At that moment Officer Coyle came up and took hold of my pistol
hand. I told him to be careful as it was at full cock. I then uncocked it
and gave it to him , and said I would go with him. I told him I was sorry;
that I might have done more, but I couldn't do less. He then placed me
under arrest."
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February 24, 1884, New York Times
How An Arizona Mob Disposed Of One Of The Bisbee Murderers:
Tombstone,
Arizona,
Feb. 23. -- At 9 o'clock on Thursday morning Judge Pinney sentenced
John
Heath to confinement in Yuma Penitentiary for life for complicity in
the Bisbee murders. Twenty-four hours later the dead body of
Heath
dangled from the cross bar of a telegraph pole near the foot of Toughnut
Street, where it was suspended by a rope. The following are the
particulars of the occurrence as near as can be gathered: About 8:30
yesterday morning a crowd of men, mostly miners, numbering about 150,
proceeded to the Courthouse. Arriving there they detailed seven of their
number from Bisbee, who entered and demanded that
John
Heath be turned over to them. The seven men approached the door
leading to the corridor of the jail and one of them knocked. Being about
time for the Chinaman who brings food for the prisoners to arrive, Jailer
Ward opened the door unsuspiciously, and was immediately covered by
weapons and told to give up the keys of the jail.
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John Heath was hanged by
vigilantes
in
Tombstone,
Arizona.
This image available for photographic
prints
HERE!
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Seeing any
attempt at resistance would be useless he did as requested, and in a few
minutes the deputation was in the presence of the sought-for man. The
crowd, which by this time had filled the spacious hall, started for the
street. At the door they were met by Sheriff Ward, who called on them in
the name of the law to desist. The Sheriff was picked up and gently
removed down the steps out of the way, while the crowd started down the
street on a run. The rope had been placed around
Heath's
body, and about 20 men had hold of it. It never became taut during the
run, the prisoner keeping up with the crowd, and showing no signs of the
white feather.
Arriving at
the place selected for the hanging one of the party climbed a telegraph
pole and passed the rope over the cross-bar. Heath
pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and, placing it on his knee, coolly
and deliberately folded it, and, placing it over his eyes, asked someone
in the crowd to tie it. This being done, he informed the crowd they were
hanging an innocent man, and would find it out when the others (meaning
Dowd and his companions) were hanged. He told them he had faced death too
often to be afraid, and had but one request to make, namely, that they
would not shoot into his body. He was told his last wish would be
respected and he told them he was ready. Countless hands grasped the rope.
A run was made, and in a twinkling the man was suspended to the pole. The
news spread about town rapidly, and in a few minutes an immense crowd of
men, women, and children congregated on the scene. The universal
expression was, "Served him right." That this opinion should be so
prevalent is no doubt the result of the testimony at the trial, which was
convincing to any mind of ordinary intelligence, that
Heith
was a guilty accessory to the Bisbee murders.
The
Coroner's jury found as a verdict that Heath
came to his death from "emphysema, which might have been caused by
strangulation, self-inflicted or otherwise." A placard was posted on the
telegraph pole where Heath
was found suspended and dead with the following inscription: "John
Heath was hanged to this pole by citizens of Cochise County for
participation in the Bisbee massacre as a proved accessory at 8:20 A.M.,
Feb 22, 1884 to advance
Arizona."
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Also See:
John Henry
"Doc" Holliday - Deadly Doctor of the Frontier
Tombstone -
The Town Too Tough to Die
Tombstone Photo Gallery
Wyatt Earp -
Frontier Lawman of the American West
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Note: These are not always exact quotes, as spelling
errors and minor grammatical changes have been corrected.
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