Allen Street in Tombstone
August 1877 Silver is discovered in the San Pedro River valley. Prospector Ed Schieffen names the settlement near the site of the strike "Tombstone."
November 24, 1879 Tombstone elects its first mayor.
December 1, 1879 Wyatt and Virgil Earp arrive in Tombstone, where Virgil assumes the position of deputy marshal..
February 10, 1881 Johnny Behan (who the Earps believed had a too lax attitude toward law enforcement) becomes sheriff of Cochise County, which includes the town of Tombstone.
March 15, 1881 The Tombstone stage is robbed and its driver and a passenger killed. A posse led by the Earps captures one of the robbers, but he escapes from jail, further souring the Earps on Behan's leadership.
June 2, 1881 Wyatt Earp secretly offers Ike Clanton the $6,000 reward offered by Wells Fargo if he will lead him to the men suspected in the March stagecoach killings. Earp does so because the capture of the men would aid in his campaign to be elected sheriff.
June 6, 1881 Clanton asks Earp whether he will receive the reward whether the fugitives are dead or alive. Earp wires Wells Fargo the next day to see if the money would be awarded either way--the answer is "yes." (As it turns out, all the fugitives die before Clanton can trap them and claim his reward.)
September 8, 1881 The stagecoach from Tombstone to Bisbee is robbed, and a posse including Wyatt and Morgan Earp arrest two men, who were released for lack of evidence following a preliminary hearing. The arrested men are friends of the Clantons and McLaurys, adding to the antagonism they feel toward the Earps.
October 25, 1881 Ike Clanton and Tom McLaury ride into Tombstone with a wagonload of beef. They plan to meet their brothers, Billy Clanton and Frank McLaury, the next day. In the evening, Clanton begins roaming from saloon to saloon, card game to card game.
October 26, 1881 am Around 1:00 am, a well-oiled Clanton exchanges words with Doc Holliday at the Alhambra Saloon. Clanton suspects Holliday of spilling the beans about his secret agreement on the Wells Fargo reward with Earp, which threatens his standing in the "cowboy" (outlaw) community. Each men threatens the other, and Virgil Earp, the town marshal, is called to separate the two men. Clanton spends much of the night wandering around Tombstone and issuing threats against Holliday and the Earps. Wyatt brushes off a threat from Clanton and tells him to go home.
October 26, 1881 pm Frank McLaury and Billy Clanton arrive in town. The two Clantons and two McLaurys are observed loading bullets into their belt at a gun shop. The four men go to the O. K. Corral, where they are overheard making threats against the Earps, and then to a vacant lot off Fremont Street. Virgil Earp calls on brothers Morgan and Wyatt, as well as deputized Holliday, to help disarm the men who were openly carrying weapons in violation of the law. Approaching the men, Virgil calls on the Clantons and McLaurys to turn over their guns, but soon a shot is fired and the "shooting becomes general." Within 30 seconds, the two McLaurys and Billy Clanton are dead, and Virgil and Morgan Earp seriously wounded.
October 28, 1881 Coroner Henry Matthews convenes a formal inquest relating to the Clanton-McLaury killings. Sheriff Behan testifies that the shooting starting before the Clantons and McLaurys had adequate time to comply with Virgil Earp's demand that they disarm. Matthews concludes only that the men were killed by the Earps and Holliday, and does not assess blame.
October 29, 1881 Ike Clanton files murder charges against the Earps and Holliday. Virgil Earp is suspended from his job as Chief of Police.
October 31, 1881 Judge Wells Spicer opens a preliminary hearing to determine whether any of the Earps or Holliday should be tried on murder charges.
November 4, 1881 Will McLaury, brother of two of the deceased men, arrives from Texas to join the prosecution.
November 7, 1881 Wyatt Earp and Holliday are arrested and lodged in a jail on Sixth Street, where they will remain for the next sixteen days.
November 16, 1881 Wyatt Earp is called to the stand as the first witness for the defense. He testifies that the firing began after Billy Clanton and Frank McLaury drew their pistols.
November 19, 1881 Virgil Earp, still seriously injured, testifies from his bedside at the Cosmopolitan Hotel.
November 30, 1881 Judge Spicer issues a decision exonerating the Earps and Holliday of criminal wrongdoing in the gunbattle.
December 28, 1881 Virgil Earp is ambushed by several cowboys (including, it is generally believed, Ike Clanton, whose hat was discovered at the scene) in Tombstone while walking down Fifth Street at night. Earp survives the attack, but his arm is nearly ripped off by buckshot, leaving it nearly immobile for the rest of his life.
February 2, 1882 A preliminary hearing is held to consider charges against Ike Clanton for assault on Virgil Earp, but the case is dismissed for lack of evidence.
March 18, 1882 While playing pool in Tombstone, Morgan Earp is shot and killed by a rifle shot fired through the pool hall window. In the next week, Wyatt Earp and others carried out a merciless vendetta against those suspected in the attacks on his brothers. Among the victims were Frank Stilwell (shot in Tucson), Florentino Cruz (shot in a wood camp), and Curly Bill Brocius (shot in Iron Springs).
April 1882 Wyatt Earp and Holliday travel to Colorado, where the state's governor, Frederick Pitkin, denies Arizona's request that the two men be extradicted to that state to face murder charges resulting from the vendetta.
November 8, 1887 Doc Holliday dies of tuberculosis in Glenwood Springs, Colorado at age 36.
1905 Virgil Earp dies. After the trial, Virgil had worked as a policeman, run a saloon, and dug for gold in California before returning to work in law enforcement in Arizona.
January 1929 Wyatt Earp dies at age 80. In the years since the trial he had lived in San Francisco, Texas, Mexico, Alaska (where he ran gambling halls and taverns from 1897 to 1901), and Idaho, among other places. Earp appeared on the sets of early Hollywood westerns, refereed boxing fights, prospected for gold, and worked on a never-completed autobiography.