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Talk:Wyatt Earp: Difference between revisions
(New page: In the section on the Stevens double barrel shotgun, it incorrectly states that Holliday killed Curly Bill Brocius at the OK Corral ambush with one. That is incorrect, Curly Bill was not a...) |
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==Some Inaccuracies== | |||
In the section on the Stevens double barrel shotgun, it incorrectly states that Holliday killed Curly Bill Brocius at the OK Corral ambush with one. That is incorrect, Curly Bill was not at the OK Corral fight. Holliday murdered an unarmed Tom McClaury with the 10 gauge; McClaury was wearing no sidearm and when the Earps and Holliday appeared, armed, at the vacant lot by the corral where the gunfight actually occured, he knew they came for murder and reached across the saddle on a horse he was holding for a rifle in a scabbard on the other side of the horse. That's why Holliday's shotgun blast caught him in the side, under the arm, killing him instantly. Ike Clanton and Billy Claiborne, or at least Ike, were also unarmed and after seeing Tom McClaury murdered by Holliday they fled the scene. Frank McClaury and Billy Clanton stood and fought it out, the two of them hitting (and unfortunately only wounding) two of the Earps and Holliday. Curly Bill was killed with a shotgun later, out of town, in battle near a river. The Earps and Holliday were the real criminal element in Tombstone, far more than the Clantons/McClaurys. Dennis Quaid's performance as Holliday, losing a lot of weight to look gaunt and sickly as someone suffering from TB would, should have won an Oscar. He also showed just what an awful actor Kevin Costner really is, too. | In the section on the Stevens double barrel shotgun, it incorrectly states that Holliday killed Curly Bill Brocius at the OK Corral ambush with one. That is incorrect, Curly Bill was not at the OK Corral fight. Holliday murdered an unarmed Tom McClaury with the 10 gauge; McClaury was wearing no sidearm and when the Earps and Holliday appeared, armed, at the vacant lot by the corral where the gunfight actually occured, he knew they came for murder and reached across the saddle on a horse he was holding for a rifle in a scabbard on the other side of the horse. That's why Holliday's shotgun blast caught him in the side, under the arm, killing him instantly. Ike Clanton and Billy Claiborne, or at least Ike, were also unarmed and after seeing Tom McClaury murdered by Holliday they fled the scene. Frank McClaury and Billy Clanton stood and fought it out, the two of them hitting (and unfortunately only wounding) two of the Earps and Holliday. Curly Bill was killed with a shotgun later, out of town, in battle near a river. The Earps and Holliday were the real criminal element in Tombstone, far more than the Clantons/McClaurys. Dennis Quaid's performance as Holliday, losing a lot of weight to look gaunt and sickly as someone suffering from TB would, should have won an Oscar. He also showed just what an awful actor Kevin Costner really is, too. | ||
==Doc Using the Shotgun (moved from main page)== | |||
God knows how such a small, sickley man could handle the vicious recoil of such a gun.-In real life, Doc Holliday hated heavy shotguns and in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, according to Wyatt Earp's Testimony, he was given a shotgun by Virgil and Wyatt Earp to carry down to the Corral in hopes of intimidating the Cowboys and avoiding a fight but when that didnt work and the fighting broke out-he fired one barrel into Tom McClaury, shredding him from armpit to heart with a dozen buckshot pellets, but the recoil "disgusted" him and he threw it to the ground in favor of the Nickel [[Colt SAA Calvary]] that he carried everyday of his life, after firing only one of the two barrels. (Every day of the metallic cartridge era atleast, he carried a [[1851 Colt Navy]] for the first part of his life-a gift from his favorite uncle who had four nice Colts but only three sons so he gave his 4th Colt Navy to his favorite nephew, John "Doc" Holliday.)]] | |||
[[Image:WEshotgun-8.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Doc fires the 10 gauge.]] | |||
== The Stevens 10-Gauge == | |||
Why does it have a 3rd trigger? Does it fire both barrels simultaneously or something? - [[User: 2wingo]] |
Latest revision as of 05:18, 1 January 2013
Some Inaccuracies
In the section on the Stevens double barrel shotgun, it incorrectly states that Holliday killed Curly Bill Brocius at the OK Corral ambush with one. That is incorrect, Curly Bill was not at the OK Corral fight. Holliday murdered an unarmed Tom McClaury with the 10 gauge; McClaury was wearing no sidearm and when the Earps and Holliday appeared, armed, at the vacant lot by the corral where the gunfight actually occured, he knew they came for murder and reached across the saddle on a horse he was holding for a rifle in a scabbard on the other side of the horse. That's why Holliday's shotgun blast caught him in the side, under the arm, killing him instantly. Ike Clanton and Billy Claiborne, or at least Ike, were also unarmed and after seeing Tom McClaury murdered by Holliday they fled the scene. Frank McClaury and Billy Clanton stood and fought it out, the two of them hitting (and unfortunately only wounding) two of the Earps and Holliday. Curly Bill was killed with a shotgun later, out of town, in battle near a river. The Earps and Holliday were the real criminal element in Tombstone, far more than the Clantons/McClaurys. Dennis Quaid's performance as Holliday, losing a lot of weight to look gaunt and sickly as someone suffering from TB would, should have won an Oscar. He also showed just what an awful actor Kevin Costner really is, too.
Doc Using the Shotgun (moved from main page)
God knows how such a small, sickley man could handle the vicious recoil of such a gun.-In real life, Doc Holliday hated heavy shotguns and in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, according to Wyatt Earp's Testimony, he was given a shotgun by Virgil and Wyatt Earp to carry down to the Corral in hopes of intimidating the Cowboys and avoiding a fight but when that didnt work and the fighting broke out-he fired one barrel into Tom McClaury, shredding him from armpit to heart with a dozen buckshot pellets, but the recoil "disgusted" him and he threw it to the ground in favor of the Nickel Colt SAA Calvary that he carried everyday of his life, after firing only one of the two barrels. (Every day of the metallic cartridge era atleast, he carried a 1851 Colt Navy for the first part of his life-a gift from his favorite uncle who had four nice Colts but only three sons so he gave his 4th Colt Navy to his favorite nephew, John "Doc" Holliday.)]]
The Stevens 10-Gauge
Why does it have a 3rd trigger? Does it fire both barrels simultaneously or something? - User: 2wingo